How to Make a Pickle Shot (The Bar Trend You Need to Try)

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Four short shot glasses filled with pale green pickle brine and tiny bubbles, each topped with a small cornichon, arranged on a rustic wooden tray scattered with coarse salt and cracked black pepper. Soft warm bar-side lighting and a shallow depth of field create creamy bokeh and glossy condensation on the glasses, with a jar of brine and a whole pickle blurred in the background.

Listen up, you glorious flavor adventurers: the pickle shot is the buzzy, briny bar trick that somehow makes whiskey friendlier and your tastebuds instantly less predictable. Equal parts rowdy and sophisticated, a pickle shot is basically a whiskey shot followed by a chaser of dill pickle brine — but we’re not stopping there. This is a guide to the classic pickleback, plus a few chaos-approved variations (brine-rimmed shot glasses, pickle-brine gimlets, and a spicy smoky option). Bring a sense of mischief and a good bottle of booze.

Ingredients

  • 4 oz (120 ml) whiskey (bourbon or rye recommended; 1 oz/30 ml per shot)
  • 4 oz (120 ml) dill pickle brine (from a good-quality jar of dill pickles)
  • Ice (for chilling glasses and whiskey)
  • Optional: coarse salt or smoked salt for rimming, lemon or lime wedge for brightness
  • Optional: 4 small dill pickle spears or chips for garnish
  • Optional variations ingredients (choose one):
    • For the Spicy Brine: 1 tsp hot sauce added to the brine
    • For the Pickle Martini Shot: 2 oz gin + 1 oz brine
    • For the Candy Brine Shot (yes!): 1 tsp honey stirred into warm brine

Instructions

  1. Chill everything. Put your shot glasses in the freezer for 10 minutes or fill them with ice water while you prep. Cold glasses make shots sharper and cleaner.
  2. Prep the brine. Pour the dill pickle brine into a clean measuring cup. If the brine is too vinegary for your taste, stir in 1–2 teaspoons of water to mellow it, or add a pinch of sugar/honey for a sweet-sour balance.
  3. Measure your whiskey. Pour 1 oz (30 ml) whiskey into each shot glass. Bourbon gives a warm caramel hug; rye is peppery and fun. If you prefer vodka or gin, see the variations below.
  4. Serve the chaser. Pour an equal measure (1 oz/30 ml) of pickle brine into small shooter glasses or into shot glass chasers. The traditional move is to take the whiskey shot first, then chase it immediately with the brine.
  5. Optional rim & garnish. Rub a lemon or lime wedge around the rim and dip in coarse or smoked salt for an extra layer of flavor. Add a tiny pickle spear to each glass for drama.
  6. Execute like a pro. Knock back the whiskey shot, then slam the brine like a water slide for your mouth. The brine cleanses the palate and softens the burn — it’s weirdly satisfying.
  7. Try variations: swap in spicy brine by stirring hot sauce into the brine for a chile kick, or mix gin + brine for a pickle martini-style shooter. You can also serve the brine chilled or at room temperature depending on your vibe.
  8. Store leftover brine. Keep unused brine in the fridge for up to 2 weeks. It’s magic in Bloody Marys, potato salad dressings, and even in cocktails where you want briny umami.

Tips & Notes

– Classic etiquette: whiskey first, brine second. But if you’re feeling rebellious, swap the order and report back.

  • Pickle type matters: dill brine is king. Bread & butter brine will make shots sweet-and-sour rather than tangy.
  • Brine quality: use brine from a jar with natural vinegar, garlic, and dill — fewer weird additives = better flavor.
  • Upscale it: infuse brine with smoked paprika or charred scallion for a smoky twist that pairs wonderfully with bourbon.
  • Non-alcoholic version: swap whiskey for cold-brew iced tea or ginger beer for a briny, refreshing shooter with no booze.

Weird fact: sailors once drank briney liquids to ward off scurvy? Okay, not exactly — but pickled foods were crucial on long voyages. Today, a pickle brine does something different: it tricks your palate into loving brash flavors by combining acid, salt, and a little fat from whiskey. Science + chaos = delicious.

Ready to wreak delicious havoc at your next happy hour? The pickle shot is the kind of tiny ritual that turns an ordinary night into a story. Gather your friends, pick a bottle, and let the brine do the talking.