How to Make a Michelada (The Spicy Beer Cocktail)

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Cold Michelada in a frosty pint glass rimmed with coarse orange‑red chili‑lime spice, the deep tomato‑red drink topped with a frothy beer head and tiny bubbles. A lime wedge perches on the rim as a glossy hot‑sauce droplet slides down the glass, with blurred lime wedges, an unlabeled hot‑sauce bottle and a small bowl of spice on a weathered wooden table in warm backlight.

A Michelada is a spicy, savory Mexican beer cocktail made by mixing beer with tomato juice or Clamato, lime, hot sauce, and a salty, chile-sprinkled rim. It’s bright, tangy, and endlessly customizable — essentially a Bloody Mary’s breezier, beer-fueled cousin. I’ll show you how to make a classic Michelada with tips for dialing the heat and salinity to your taste.

This version makes two tall glasses and leans into the traditional flavors: tangy lime, punchy hot sauce, Worcestershire for umami, and a Tajín or chile-salt rim for that addictive first sip. It’s the perfect morning-after antidote, picnic companion, or patio cocktail when you want something savory instead of sweet.

Ingredients

  • 2 cold Mexican lagers (12 oz each) — Modelo, Pacifico, or your favorite light beer
  • 1 cup Clamato (or 3/4 cup tomato juice + 1/4 cup clam juice)
  • 1/4 cup freshly squeezed lime juice (about 2 limes)
  • 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 teaspoons soy sauce (optional — boosts umami)
  • 6–8 dashes hot sauce (Valentina, Tabasco, or your favorite)
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon celery salt or smoked sea salt
  • Ice cubes
  • Tajín, chile-lime salt, or coarse salt for rimming
  • Lime wedges for garnish
  • Optional: a slice of cucumber or pickled jalapeño for garnish

Instructions

  1. Prep the glasses: Pour a small amount of lime juice onto a shallow plate and spread some Tajín (or chile salt) on another plate. Run a lime wedge around the rim of two tall glasses, then dip each rim into the Tajín to coat. Fill the glasses halfway with ice.
  2. Make the mix: In a pitcher or mixing glass, combine the Clamato (or tomato + clam juice), lime juice, Worcestershire, soy sauce (if using), hot sauce, black pepper, and celery salt. Stir until well blended. Taste and adjust: add more hot sauce for heat, lime for brightness, or salt for savoriness.
  3. Create the base: Pour about 1/2 cup of the tomato-Clamato mixture into each prepared glass over the ice. This keeps the drink balanced so the beer doesn’t completely dilute the tomato base.
  4. Add the beer: Slowly pour 6 oz of beer into each glass. Pour gently down the side to preserve some foam. Stir once lightly with a long spoon to marry the beer and tomato mix without flattening it completely.
  5. Garnish and finish: Add a lime wedge, a cucumber slice, or a pickled jalapeño to the rim. Optionally give each glass one final tiny dash of hot sauce on top. Serve immediately while cold and fizzy.
  6. Variations: For a Chilito-style Michelada, invert the build: rim the glass with Tajín, add lime and beer, then top with the tomato mix to taste. For a Bloody-Michelada hybrid, add a shot of tequila or mezcal.
  7. Cleanup tip: If you made extra tomato mix, refrigerate it for up to 24 hours — it’s a handy mixer for more drinks or brunch dishes.

Tips & Notes

  • Choose a light, crisp beer. The beer should be cold and not overly bitter — lagers and pilsners are ideal.
  • Clamato vs. tomato juice: Clamato adds savory depth and a hint of the sea; use it if you like that umami note. Plain tomato juice makes a fresher, brighter Michelada.
  • Control the heat: Start with a few dashes of hot sauce and add more — it’s easy to make it spicier, impossible to un-spice.
  • Rim like a pro: For a thicker rim, moisten the glass with a lime half and press into a shallow pile of Tajín. For an extra kick, add a pinch of smoked paprika to the salt mix.
  • Serving sizes: This recipe is built for two. Double the tomato mix for a party and keep extra in the fridge.
  • Weird fact: In Mexico, Micheladas are as famously restorative as soup — many swear by them for hangovers and to cure a case of the Monday blues.

There you go: a Michelada that’s easy, tweakable, and gloriously savory. I love making a pitcher for friends and letting everyone doctor their own glass — it’s a ritual and a drink all at once.