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If youâre from Americaâs heartland, youâre likely familiar with the âMidwest Martini.â This is generally a light beer served in a pint glass, with a few green olives bobbing on top, or served alongside, to be thrown in at leisure. Sometimes, thereâs a splash of olive brine or even a salted rim. Over the years, it has gone by a few different names, depending on the state itâs made in: the North Dakota, Wisconsin, or Minnesota Martini. Itâs also called the âBeertini.âÂ
In case youâve missed it entirely, the Martini is back, and its resurgence is fueling cocktail menus across the country. Rising alongside it, is its unlikely cousin: the Midwest Martini or Beertini. Equal parts kitsch and classic, itâs a drink thatâs unapologetically simple, unpretentious, and deeply regional.Â
âIâve seen the Beertini evolve from a quirky Midwest bar order into something guests now request with surprising enthusiasm, especially at summer events and backyard weddings,â says Karina Silvestre, founder of Wee Mixed, a Chicago-based mobile bartending company. âIn the Midwest, people love drinks that don’t take themselves too seriously, and the Beertini fits that vibe perfectly.â
Where did the Beertini come from?
At its core, a Beertini is just light beer and olives. Thatâs it. Think of it as a low-effort, high-reward hybrid: part beer, part salty snack. No one really knows when it was developed, or by whom â Midwesterners are just that deeply humble â but itâs been around for some time. You can find it in the more western of the Midwest states like North Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, and as far south as Oklahoma â technically not a Midwestern state, but one that enjoys a Beertini or two.
Courtesy of Nick Simonite
Like many Midwestern culinary traditions, the Beertini wasnât born out of trends, it evolved organically. Many surmise that it originated in supper clubs and family gatherings where beer was plentiful and olives were just there, often leftover from snack trays and boards. The drink likely developed as casually as putting pretzels in a bowl.
Evan Askey, general manager, Vast, Oklahoma City
âItâs probably the most unpretentious âTini you could make. It just works. Same idea as salting a cerveza. Youâre adding a savory note and some bonus electrolytes to something cold, crisp, and familiar.â
â Evan Askey, general manager, Vast, Oklahoma City
Most classic versions use a cold lager, something sessionable and familiar like Miller Lite, Coors Light, or Bud Light, poured into a pint or pilsner glass and garnished with two or three green olives. Some bars splash in a bit of the olive brine, which ups the salty factor. Others may go a step further, rimming the glass with salt or pepper or another seasoning. Â
Despite its name, it shares very little DNA with a traditional Martini beyond the garnish. There’s no gin or vodka (though some modern riffs add spirits or a shot alongside, akin to a boilermaker), no vermouth, and certainly no Martini or cocktail glass.Â
âItâs probably the most unpretentious âTini you could make,â says Evan Askey, general manager at Vast, in Oklahoma City, who remembers regulars dropping olives in their beers after long lake days. âIt just works. Same idea as salting a cerveza. Youâre adding a savory note and some bonus electrolytes to something cold, crisp, and familiar.â
Why the Beertini works, especially now
In a cocktail landscape obsessed with classic throwbacks, the Beertini fits in, almost accidentally. It has all the crisp brine and cold clarity that drinkers are chasing, but none of the fuss.
âItâs unexpected, but approachable. It hits all the right notes: light beer⌠and a salty pop,â says Silvestre.Â
That salty pop is no small thing. Salt enhances sweetness, smooths bitterness, and adds dimension, especially to an otherwise neutral lager. The olives add both umami and texture, while the brine (if included) introduces acidity. Itâs a flavor trifecta, dressed down in a pint glass.
This simplicity, paired with the drinkâs clear sense of place, makes it ripe for reinterpretation. (And add in that itâs affordable, and youâve got a clear winner.)Â
âThe Beertini reminds me of an El Camino,â says bartender Collin Minnis. âAwkwardly cool and unpretentious, kinda dumb, but makes you happy. The combination of beer and salt from the olive brine makes it completely chuggable. The ultimate crispy boi.â
At Jackie Oâs Pub and Brewery in Columbus, Ohio, Minnis introduced a Beertini to the menu as a nod to the barâs Midwestern roots. His version includes a mini Martini with gin, vermouth, and brine, topped with a golden ale. âSince the Beertini is a Midwestern staple, it seemed like a natural fit for our âBeer Before Liquorâ section on our cocktail menu, which includes beer cocktails and boilermakers,â he says.Â
The Beertini busts out of the Midwest
Beyond the Midwest, places like Biscayne Bay Brewing in Miami are exploring the Beertini. Theyâve given their version a tropical makeover by featuring a house-brewed IPA with notes of citrus and stone fruit. Laced with olive brine and topped with olives for garnish, this Miami Beertini is a mashup of breezy beach bar and Midwestern chill thatâs been a big hit with locals.Â
Courtesy of Biscayne Bay Brewing
At Aaron Franklinâs East Austin Uptown Sports Club, a beertini riff has become a fan favorite.Â
“At Uptown, we make them wet or dry with more or less olive juice, Filthy olives (you need a quality olive that wonât fall apart), and a salted or peppered rim if youâre feeling spicy,â says co-owner James Moody, who was introduced to the drink by his dad who called it a âBeertuni.â That name made it to the menu, where it has a permanent place.
âIt was my Aunt Shirley in Tulsa, Oklahoma [who] drank Beertunis before my dad did,â says Moody. âShe was a tiny lady and liked a cold beer in a small glass every now and again, but needed to âclass it upâ, so she dropped some olives in before socializing. My dad took note and started drinking them too, but his version was big beer, big glass, more olives, and more often. He liked them with a can of sardines or pretzels â definitely a salt thing.”Â
His dadâs beer of choice? Miller High Life or Miller Lite. âItâs so simple and stupid that itâs kind of perfect really. Like tomato toast,â says Moody. The Beertini reigns supreme really because of how simple and tasty it is. Itâs familiar and refreshingly unserious.