Cocktails Served in a Highball Glass

highball-glass

Tall refreshing drinks where ice, carbonation and vertical dilution carry the serve

Discover highball glass cocktails built tall over ice, with soda, tonic, juice or long refreshing dilution.

146 cocktails found

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Page 3 of 8 Showing 41–60 of 146
Photo of Cuba Libre cocktail

Cuba Libre

Ingredients for Cuba Libre — 5 total (3 shown, 2 more hidden).

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Photo of Dark ‘n’ Stormy cocktail

Dark ‘n’ Stormy

Ingredients for Dark ‘n’ Stormy — 2 total (2 shown).

Photo of Dragonfly cocktail

Dragonfly

Ingredients for Dragonfly — 2 total (2 shown).

Photo of English Highball cocktail

English Highball

Ingredients for English Highball — 5 total (3 shown, 2 more hidden).

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Photo of Fahrenheit 5000 cocktail

Fahrenheit 5000

Ingredients for Fahrenheit 5000 — 5 total (3 shown, 2 more hidden).

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Photo of Figgy Thyme cocktail

Figgy Thyme

Ingredients for Figgy Thyme — 7 total (3 shown, 4 more hidden).

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Photo of Fruit Cooler cocktail

Fruit Cooler

Ingredients for Fruit Cooler — 7 total (3 shown, 4 more hidden).

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Photo of Fruit Flip-Flop cocktail

Fruit Flip-Flop

Ingredients for Fruit Flip-Flop — 2 total (2 shown).

Photo of Fruit Shake cocktail

Fruit Shake

Ingredients for Fruit Shake — 5 total (3 shown, 2 more hidden).

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Photo of Garibaldi cocktail

Garibaldi

Ingredients for Garibaldi — 2 total (2 shown).

Photo of Garibaldi Negroni cocktail

Garibaldi Negroni

Ingredients for Garibaldi Negroni — 4 total (3 shown, 1 more hidden).

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Photo of Gin and Soda cocktail

Gin and Soda

Ingredients for Gin and Soda — 3 total (3 shown).

Photo of Gin And Tonic cocktail

Gin And Tonic

Ingredients for Gin And Tonic — 3 total (3 shown).

Photo of Gin Fizz cocktail

Gin Fizz

Ingredients for Gin Fizz — 5 total (3 shown, 2 more hidden).

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Photo of Gin-Gin Mule cocktail

Gin-Gin Mule

Ingredients for Gin-Gin Mule — 6 total (3 shown, 3 more hidden).

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Highball Glass cocktails: key features

These notes explain why Highball Glass service changes aroma, temperature and presentation.

Tall shape for effervescence and balance

The Highball Glass is defined by its tall, narrow silhouette, which enhances carbonation, preserves bubbles and keeps long drinks crisp and refreshing. This structure supports cocktails built around spirit + mixer formulas where lift, length and drinkability matter.

Optimized for ice volume and controlled dilution

A Highball Glass is designed to be filled to the top with large, cold ice cubes to slow dilution and maintain a clean, extended flavor profile. Consistent ice structure ensures stable temperature and prevents the drink from becoming watery too quickly.

Perfect for carbonated mixers

The glass’s height allows carbonated ingredients—like soda, tonic or ginger beer—to rise and expand naturally, creating a bright, effervescent mouthfeel. Popular Highball cocktails include Mojito, Tom Collins and Dark and Stormy.

Effortless build and fast service

Highball cocktails are typically built directly in the glass, making them efficient for both home mixing and high-volume bar environments. Minimal technique ensures clarity, speed and consistent results even with simple tools.

Clean aromatics and refreshing profile

Because Highballs are light, tall and served with high carbonation, aromatics are lifted naturally and remain bright from first sip to last. The format emphasizes freshness, length and drinkability over strength or intensity.

Highball Glass cocktails: frequently asked questions

A highball glass is a tall, narrow glass designed for long drinks built over ice, often with carbonated mixers. Its structure preserves bubbles, enhances freshness and supports balanced dilution.

Classic Highballs include Mojito, Tom Collins and Dark and Stormy, all of which rely on carbonation and length for their signature profile.

Large, dense ice cubes slow dilution and maintain strong carbonation, ensuring that the drink stays crisp and refreshing.

Yes. Highballs perform best when the glass is filled to the top with ice, which keeps the drink cold and prevents watery dilution.

Only if the recipe specifies it. Most Highballs are built directly in the glass to preserve carbonation and avoid flattening bubbles.

Soda water, tonic, ginger beer, cola and flavored sparkling waters all work well, depending on the spirit base.

Add carbonated ingredients last, pour gently and avoid unnecessary stirring to maintain maximum effervescence.

The tall shape, abundant ice and lifted carbonation create a clean, elongated flavor profile that emphasizes freshness.

You can batch the non-carbonated components, but carbonated mixers should always be added à la minute.

Yes. Citrus wheels, long peels and fresh herbs enhance aromatics and complement the drink’s refreshing structure.

Because they offer instant drinkability, clean structure and excellent spirit expression without heaviness.

They are similar but not identical: Collins glasses are usually taller and narrower, while Highballs are slightly shorter and broader.

Yes, but they become lighter and more refreshing when lengthened with soda or tonic. The format softens intensity.

Only lightly—vigorous stirring breaks carbonation and increases dilution. A brief lift with a bar spoon is enough.

The full ice load stabilizes temperature, maintains structure and supports the vertical shape of the drink.

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