• Gold luster dust gives the classic Moscow Mule a warm shimmer — light green is a cooler, more dramatic alternative
• Use 1/8 tsp per drink. More than that and you’ll cloud the whole thing
• Add the luster dust last, right before serving, and give it one gentle swirl
• This works in any copper mug or clear glass — but clear glass shows off the shimmer better
Shimmery Moscow Mule
A Moscow Mule that actually earns the “wow.” Thirty seconds of extra effort, and your copper mug turns into something that looks like it was made by a mixologist who charges $22 a drink.
Ingredients
- 2 oz Vodka
- 1/2 oz Fresh lime juice (about half a lime)
- 4 oz Ginger beer
- 1/8 tsp Gold Luster Dust
- Ice (crushed or cubed)
- Fresh mint and a lime wheel, to garnish
Fill your copper mug (or a highball glass if you want to show off the shimmer) with ice. Add the vodka and fresh lime juice directly over the ice.
Pour in the ginger beer slowly, down the side of the mug. This keeps the carbonation intact — flat mules are sad mules.
Measure out 1/8 tsp of Gold Luster Dust and drop it right on the surface of the drink. Don’t stir yet.
Give the mug one slow, gentle swirl — like you’re coaxing it. The ginger beer’s carbonation does most of the work. The gold particles catch the light as they move through the drink. That’s the whole effect.
Slap a sprig of mint between your palms first (it releases the oils, makes it smell incredible), then tuck it in with a lime wheel. Serve immediately.
Color Variations
Gold is the classic move here — warm, celebratory, works with every lighting situation. But this recipe is genuinely great with Silver Luster Dust if you want something cooler and a little more understated. Silver reads almost platinum in a copper mug.
For something unexpected, try Light Green Luster Dust — especially for Halloween, St. Patrick’s Day, or any time you want the drink to look faintly poisonous (in the best way). The pale green shimmer against the ginger beer is actually stunning.
If you’re new to using luster dust for drinks, the key mistake to avoid is quantity. It’s tempting to add more, but 1/8 tsp is genuinely all you need per glass. We’ve tested this obsessively. More glitter doesn’t give you more shimmer — it gives you murky drinks. Our [full guide on edible glitter in drinks](https://lusterdust.com/how-to-use-edible-glitter-in-drinks-the-complete-guide/) breaks down exactly why, if you want the details.
Tips
Clear glass wins for shimmer visibility, full stop. The light passes through the drink and the glitter catches it from every angle. Copper mugs are iconic for the Moscow Mule, but they hide the effect a little. Our compromise: use the copper mug for the experience, but if you’re photographing it, switch to a clear glass. The shimmer photographs beautifully.
Mix the vodka and lime juice ahead in a pitcher — that part is fine. But don’t add the ginger beer or the luster dust until you’re building individual drinks. Luster dust settles over time, and flat ginger beer is a crime. At a party, set up a little station: pitcher of vodka-lime mix, chilled ginger beer, and the luster dust jar with a tiny measuring spoon. Guests can dust their own. They’ll love it.
Honestly, use whatever you like. The ginger beer is doing the heavy lifting flavor-wise, so this isn’t the place where your premium bottle makes a $15-per-drink difference. A clean, neutral vodka is all you need. Save the fancy stuff for a drink where it’s the star.
More shimmer drinks worth making: the Silver Shimmer Margarita uses the same technique with silver dust and looks incredible in a salted rim glass. And if you want something bubbly and celebratory, the Gold Shimmer Champagne Cocktail is five seconds of effort for maximum impact.


