ZingBing Syrup is built on contrast—sharp, aromatic ginger layered over the deep, slightly tart sweetness of Bing cherries. It’s not just a way to sweeten something. It’s a way to shape it. At its core, this syrup is about balance. The ginger keeps things lifted and bright, while the cherry brings body and depth. Together, they create something that feels clean, structured, and just a little bit unexpected.
What makes this syrup different isn’t just the ingredients—it’s how they come together from the start. Instead of dissolving sugar first and infusing afterward, the process begins by working the ginger and cherries directly into the sugar. As they’re muddled, the ginger releases its oils and the cherries give up their juice, staining the sugar and building flavor before any heat is applied.
By the time the water goes in, the base is already doing more than just sweetening. It’s carrying aroma, acidity, and a bit of bite—everything that gives the finished syrup its edge.
Simple syrup tends to lean one-dimensional if you let it. This one doesn’t. A few small choices make the difference:
The goal isn’t to overpower—it’s to layer. The ginger shouldn’t dominate, and the cherry shouldn’t feel heavy. They meet in the middle, supported by just enough sweetness to hold everything together.
When it’s done right, ZingBing lands in that space between sweet, tart, and sharp. The ginger hits first, the cherry follows, and the sweetness lingers just long enough to tie it together without flattening it. It’s the kind of syrup that doesn’t disappear into whatever you’re using it in—it actually defines it.
ZingBing is flexible, but it works best where contrast matters.
At the bar
In the kitchen
This recipe is straightforward, but a few details matter:
You’ll find the full method outlined below, from building the base in the sugar to simmering and straining the finished syrup.
