Cocktail: Bitters — Chemistry, Composition, and Usage
Cocktail bitters average 35–45% ABV with a standard dash of 0.6–0.9 mL. Angostura is 44.7% ABV and contains gentian root as the primary bitterness agent alongside 40+ additional botanical ingredients.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angostura bitters ABV | 44.7 | % ABV | Trinidad & Tobago Distillers; original formula unchanged since 1824 |
| Peychaud's bitters ABV | 35 | % ABV | Anise-forward; essential to the Sazerac cocktail |
| Standard dash volume | 0.6–0.9 | mL | Varies by dasher bottle design; Angostura dasher typically 0.8 mL per dash |
| Orange bitters ABV (typical) | 28–42 | % ABV | Wide range by brand; Regan's Orange No. 6: 45%, Fees: 35% |
| Gentiopicroside (primary bitter compound) | 0.5–6 | % w/v in gentian root | Secoiridoid glucoside; EMA confirmed bitter tonic properties |
| Bitterness perception threshold (gentian) | ~5 | ppm gentiopicroside | Extremely bitter; detectable at very low concentrations |
| Typical botanical count in bitters | 5–40 | botanicals | Angostura reportedly uses 40+ ingredients; most small-batch 8–15 |
| Bitters usage per cocktail | 2–3 | dashes (1.6–2.7 mL) | Old Fashioned: 2 dashes Angostura; Manhattan: 1–2 dashes |
Bitters are the salt and pepper of cocktails — used in tiny quantities (0.6–2.7 mL per drink) but with outsized effect on flavor, aroma, and perceived balance. Their high ABV (35–45%) makes them effective botanical extractors and preserves their complex aromatic profiles indefinitely. Understanding their chemistry and composition allows bartenders to use them more deliberately than “just add 2 dashes.”
Common Cocktail Bitters Comparison
| Bitters | ABV | Primary Botanicals | Dash Volume (mL) | Primary Cocktail Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angostura | 44.7% | Gentian, clove, cinnamon, allspice | ~0.8 | Old Fashioned, Manhattan, Champagne cocktail |
| Peychaud’s | 35% | Anise, gentian, cherry | ~0.7 | Sazerac, Vieux Carré |
| Regan’s Orange No. 6 | 45% | Orange peel, gentian, spice | ~0.7 | Martini, Negroni |
| Angostura Orange | 28% | Orange peel, gentian | ~0.8 | Martini, spritz, G&T |
| Bittermens Mole | 35% | Cacao, cinnamon, chile | ~0.7 | Whiskey, chocolate cocktails |
| Fee’s West Indian Orange | 35% | Orange, allspice | ~0.8 | Tropical, citrus drinks |
| Hellfire Habanero | 40% | Habanero, gentian | ~0.7 | Mezcal, spicy cocktails |
| Walnut Bitters | 35% | Walnut, gentian | ~0.7 | Autumn whiskey drinks |
The Gentian Effect
Gentian root contains gentiopicroside, a secoiridoid glucoside with one of the highest bitterness potency-per-gram ratios of any plant compound. The European Medicines Agency’s monograph on gentian confirms its traditional use as a bitter tonic for digestive support — the same mechanism that makes bitters feel “settling” after a rich meal.
In a cocktail context, bitterness from gentian serves as a counterbalance to sweetness. The human palate perceives sweetness, sourness, bitterness, and salinity simultaneously; bitterness suppresses the cloying quality of excessive sweetness while extending the aromatic finish of the drink.
Bitters as Aromatic Delivery
The aromatic compounds in bitters (terpenes, esters, phenols) are highly concentrated precisely because they are extracted into a high-ABV base and used in small volumes. Two dashes of Angostura deliver the aromatic equivalent of a substantial volume of whole spices. This is why bitters are described as the “seasoning” of cocktails — they add depth, complexity, and integration without noticeably changing the drink’s volume, ABV, or fundamental flavor profile.
Related Pages
Sources
- DeGroff, D. (2008). The Essential Cocktail. Clarkson Potter.
- Bitters: A Spirited History of a Classic Cure-All. Clarke, B. (2012). Ten Speed Press.
- EMA (2015). Community herbal monograph on Gentiana lutea L., radix.
Frequently Asked Questions
What makes bitters bitter?
The primary bittering agent in most cocktail bitters is gentian root (Gentiana lutea), which contains gentiopicroside — one of the most intensely bitter compounds found in nature. At 5 ppm, it triggers bitterness receptors strongly. Other common bittering agents include quassia bark, wormwood (artemisia), and cinchona bark (source of quinine). Each contributes a distinct quality of bitterness — gentian is clean and dry; wormwood is bitter and herbal; quassia is very pure and intense.
Why are bitters so high in alcohol?
High ABV (35–45%) serves two functions: preservation and extraction. Alcohol is the superior solvent for extracting the aromatic, bittering, and flavoring compounds from botanicals. Most volatile aromatic compounds are alcohol-soluble but less water-soluble. High ABV also gives bitters essentially unlimited shelf life — no refrigeration needed. A bottle of Angostura lasts decades.
How much do 2 dashes of bitters affect cocktail ABV?
Very little. Two dashes of Angostura at 44.7% ABV = approximately 1.6 mL total. Added to a 2.5oz (74 mL) cocktail, this contributes 0.72 mL pure alcohol — raising the drink's ABV by roughly 0.3–0.5%. Bitters are functionally an aromatic seasoning, not an alcohol contributor.
Can you substitute one bitters for another?
Sometimes, but they are not interchangeable. Angostura bitters are intensely spiced (cinnamon, clove, gentian) and add warmth and complexity. Peychaud's are lighter, more anise-forward, and less intensely bitter. Orange bitters add citrus brightness. Using Peychaud's in an Old Fashioned instead of Angostura produces a noticeably different, lighter drink. In classic cocktails, use the specified bitters when authenticity matters.