Old Cuban
A bright rum, mint, lime, and Champagne cocktail with Mojito energy and coupe-glass manners.
A good Old Cuban looks like it dressed up before coming over. It has the mint-and-lime snap you expect from a rum drink, but the Champagne top turns it into something cleaner, taller, and a little more polished than the usual shaken backyard situation.
This one came from a set of cocktail cards a friend had, which is exactly the kind of low-pressure discovery I like. You see the card, realize you already have the ingredients, and suddenly a regular night has a coupe glass in it. The slogan practically writes itself: mojito energy, Champagne manners.
What makes the drink fun is that it feels familiar without being flat. The mint and lime make the first impression bright, Angostura gives the middle a little grip, and the sparkling wine keeps the finish from feeling syrupy. It is the kind of rum cocktail that works when you want something celebratory but do not want to get buried under juice.
The Old Cuban is mojito energy with Champagne manners.
The move I like here is tossing the squeezed lime shell into the mixing glass before muddling. It brings a little extra lime oil and peel character into the syrup and mint, which makes the finished drink taste more complete. Just do not punish the mint. A light muddle is enough; overdo it and the mint turns harsh in a way that bitters cannot rescue.
Champagne is great if you have it, but Prosecco is a practical substitute. The key is choosing something dry enough to keep the drink crisp. If the sparkling wine is too sweet, the simple syrup and rum can start pushing the whole thing into candy territory.
Why this works
The Old Cuban works because it treats mint and lime like aromatics, not just flavoring. Light muddling releases the fresh oils without dragging too much bitterness out of the mint. Rum gives the drink warmth, Angostura adds spice and structure, and the Champagne top lengthens everything so the cocktail finishes bubbly instead of heavy.
Tips & variations
- Use the lime shell: After juicing, toss the shell into the mixing glass before muddling. It helps pull more lime aroma into the drink without changing the measured juice.
- Muddle gently: Press the mint enough to wake it up, then stop. Over-muddled mint can taste sharp and vegetal.
- Use Prosecco when needed: A dry Prosecco is the substitute I would actually use if Champagne is not around.
Make it in Spritz
Spritz is handy for a drink like the Old Cuban because it keeps the details from turning fuzzy: save it to favorites, scale it for a few coupes, check whether your bar has rum, mint, bitters, and bubbles, and share the recipe when someone asks why their mojito never looked this put-together.


