A Shirley Temple is the red fizzy drink that made a plain soda feel like an occasion. It is the glass with the cherry on top, the drink kids ask for when adults are ordering cocktails, and the no-alcohol mocktail that still looks cheerful on a party table.
But it is also easy to get wrong. Too much grenadine and the bottom tastes like syrup. Warm soda goes flat before the cherry is gone. The best version is cold, bubbly, cherry-red, and balanced enough that the last sip still feels refreshing.
This Shirley Temple recipe starts with the simple classic version, then shows you how to make it sweeter, lighter, more old-school with ginger ale, brighter with lemon-lime soda, or easy to pour as a party pitcher.
Quick Answer: What Is a Shirley Temple?
A Shirley Temple is a fizzy non-alcoholic drink made with lemon-lime soda or ginger ale, grenadine, ice, and maraschino cherries. Sprite or 7UP gives the familiar restaurant-style sweetness, while ginger ale makes the drink softer and a little more old-school.
Best starting ratio: use 1 cup / 240 ml soda and 1 tablespoon / 15 ml grenadine. Add more syrup only when you want the sweeter, brighter red version.
Shirley Temple Recipe Card
Classic Shirley Temple Mocktail
A cold, fizzy Shirley Temple made with lemon-lime soda or ginger ale, grenadine, ice, and maraschino cherries. This balanced version tastes classic without turning the last few sips heavy.
- Prep time: 3 minutes
- Cook time: 0 minutes
- Total time: 3 minutes
- Servings: 1 drink
- Yield: 1 tall glass
- Method: Built in the glass
- Glass: Tall glass, highball glass, or Collins glass
- Equipment: Tablespoon or jigger, long spoon or straw
Ingredients
- 1 cup / 8 oz / 240 ml chilled lemon-lime soda or ginger ale
- 1 tablespoon / 15 ml grenadine, or up to 2 tablespoons / 30 ml for a sweeter bright-red version
- 1 teaspoon / 5 ml fresh lime juice, optional
- Ice, enough to fill the glass
- 1 to 3 maraschino cherries, for garnish
- Optional: 1 teaspoon syrup from the maraschino cherry jar for extra cherry flavor
Instructions
- Fill a tall glass with ice.
- Add the grenadine.
- Pour in the chilled lemon-lime soda or ginger ale slowly.
- Add lime juice if using.
- Stir gently, just until the syrup blends into the soda.
- Garnish with maraschino cherries and serve immediately.
Recipe Notes
- For a lighter version, use 1 teaspoon / 5 ml grenadine and add lime.
- To create a red layered look, add soda first and drizzle the grenadine last so it sinks.
- Serve right away. The fizz is part of the drink.
- A cherry on top is fun, but the real win is the balance underneath it.

Part of the charm is the little ceremony: the ice, the red syrup, the slow pour, and the cherry dropped on top. Even when a Shirley Temple takes only three minutes, it feels like someone made you something on purpose.
Choose Your Shirley Temple Version
Making one glass? Use the recipe card above. Want it sweeter, lighter, more classic, or party-ready? This quick guide gets you there faster.
| For This Kind of Drink | Use This | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Classic flavor | Ginger ale + 1 tbsp grenadine | Softer, slightly warmer, less candy-like |
| Restaurant-style sweetness | Sprite or 7UP + 2 tbsp grenadine | Bright red, sweet, nostalgic |
| Balanced everyday version | Any soda + 1 tbsp grenadine | Sweet, fizzy, but not heavy |
| Less-sweet mocktail | Ginger ale or club soda blend + 1 tsp grenadine + lime | Lighter, cleaner, more grown-up |
| Party pitcher | Mix syrup base first, add soda last | Fresh bubbles and better serving texture |
| Fruitier version | Add 1 tbsp to ¼ cup orange juice | More brunch or punch-style |
If you just want the drink, stop at the recipe card. To tune the sweetness, soda choice, syrup, or party amounts, use the notes below to make the cherry-red mocktail fit your table.
For festive but lighter options, these keto mocktails and sugar-free drink ideas are a good next stop.
Back to recipe card · See the exact ratio
Best Shirley Temple Ratio
The ratio is what separates a refreshing Shirley Temple from a syrupy one. Too little grenadine and the drink tastes like plain soda with a red tint. Go too far, and the bottom turns heavy.
Best ratio: start with 1 cup / 240 ml soda and 1 tablespoon / 15 ml grenadine. From there, go lighter or sweeter depending on who is drinking it.

| Style | Soda | Grenadine | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light | 1 cup / 240 ml | 1 teaspoon / 5 ml | Less-sweet mocktail |
| Balanced | 1 cup / 240 ml | 1 tablespoon / 15 ml | Best first drink |
| Classic sweet | 1 cup / 240 ml | 2 tablespoons / 30 ml | Bright-red nostalgic drink |
| Extra sweet | 4 to 6 oz / 120 to 180 ml | 1 oz / 30 ml | Only when you already like a very syrupy glass |
Start balanced. Taste once. Add another teaspoon of grenadine only when the drink needs more color or sweetness. If you grew up with very red Shirley Temples, the sweeter version may taste familiar. When you are making it for yourself now, the balanced pour usually holds up better after the first few sips.
Success cue: the drink should look red and cheerful, but the soda should still feel lively. When the bottom tastes thick, use less grenadine next time or stir before serving.
Back to recipe card · Choose Sprite or ginger ale · Make it less sweet
How to Make a Shirley Temple
Build the drink directly in the glass. No shaker, blender, saucepan, or bar setup is needed.
- Start cold. A chilled glass is optional, but cold soda is not. Warm soda melts ice faster and loses fizz.
- Fill the glass with ice. The drink should feel crisp from the first sip.
- Add grenadine. Use 1 tablespoon for a balanced pour.
- Pour the soda slowly. Lemon-lime soda, Sprite, 7UP, or ginger ale all work.
- Add lime if using. A little citrus makes the sweetness feel brighter.
- Stir gently. Mix the syrup through without flattening the bubbles.
- Finish with cherries. Serve immediately while the drink is still fizzy and cold.

For a red gradient, change the order. Add ice and soda first, then slowly pour grenadine down the inside of the glass. It will sink because it is heavier than soda. That layered look is pretty, but the drink tastes more even once stirred.
Back to recipe card · Use the ratio guide
Sprite vs Ginger Ale for Shirley Temple
After the syrup amount, the soda choice is the next big decision. Neither option is wrong; they just make different memories.
Best soda: use Sprite or 7UP for the sweet restaurant-style version. Use ginger ale for a softer, more classic version.
| Soda | Flavor | Use It When |
|---|---|---|
| Sprite or 7UP | Sweet, bright, lemon-lime | You want the familiar restaurant-style Shirley Temple |
| Ginger ale | Warmer, softer, lightly spiced | You want a more classic mocktail flavor |
| Half lemon-lime soda + half club soda | Lighter and less sweet | You want a cleaner non-alcoholic drink |
| Ginger beer | Sharper and spicier | You want a bold variation, not the soft classic version |
| Cola | Cherry-cola flavor | You are making a Roy Rogers, not a Shirley Temple |

For kids, birthdays, and the version most people expect from restaurants, lemon-lime soda is usually the easiest win. A less sugary pour works better with ginger ale. The cleanest version splits the cup between lemon-lime soda and club soda, then adds lime.
Make it less sweet · Scale it for a party
How to Make a Shirley Temple Less Sweet
A Shirley Temple should still taste like a treat, but it should not feel like syrup with bubbles on top. For a lighter glass, keep the fizz, pull back the grenadine, and let lime do some of the balancing.
- Use 1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon grenadine instead of 2 tablespoons.
- Choose ginger ale instead of Sprite or 7UP.
- Use half club soda and half lemon-lime soda.
- Add 1 to 2 teaspoons fresh lime juice.
- Fill the glass with plenty of ice.
- Skip extra cherry syrup from the jar.
- Use zero-sugar lemon-lime soda or diet ginger ale when you want a lighter drink.

This lighter version will not be neon red, and that is okay. It should taste like a drink, not a melted candy. You still get the nostalgia without the sugar-rush feeling.
Shirley Temple Pitcher for Parties
For a party pitcher, protect the bubbles. You can make the red syrup base ahead, but the soda should go in at the end. The syrup base can wait; bubbles cannot.
Pitcher rule: mix the grenadine and lime ahead, chill that base, then add the soda right before serving.

Pitcher for 8 Drinks
- 8 cups / 64 oz / 1.9 L chilled lemon-lime soda or ginger ale
- ½ cup / 120 ml grenadine for a balanced pitcher
- ¾ cup / 180 ml grenadine for a sweeter but still easy-drinking pitcher
- 1 cup / 240 ml grenadine for a very sweet party-style pitcher
- 2 to 3 tablespoons / 30 to 45 ml fresh lime juice, optional
- Maraschino cherries, to serve
- Orange or lime slices, optional
- Ice, added to glasses instead of the pitcher
Mix the grenadine and lime juice in the pitcher first. Keep that base chilled when preparing ahead. Add the soda just before serving, stir gently, and pour over ice-filled glasses with cherries.
Do not add ice directly to the pitcher unless the drinks will be served immediately. Ice melts, waters down the syrup, and flattens the soda faster.
This is the kind of pitcher that disappears quickly because everyone can pour from it: kids, non-drinkers, drivers, and adults who just want something cheerful.
Party cue: the soda should still sound lively when it is poured. If the pitcher has been sitting open for a while, the drink will taste sweeter and flatter.
Back to recipe card · What to serve with Shirley Temples
Why the Ratio Works + Ingredient Notes
Because the ingredient list is short, every part has a job. Cold soda brings lift, grenadine adds the red fruitiness, ice keeps the drink crisp, and the cherry makes it feel complete.
- Grenadine: Start with 1 tablespoon per cup of soda. It gives color and flavor without making the drink heavy.
- Lemon-lime soda: Best when you want the bright, sweet, birthday-party version.
- Ginger ale: Softer and more old-school, especially when you want a less candy-like mocktail.
- Lime juice: Optional, but useful when the drink tastes too sweet or flat.
- Maraschino cherries: One is enough, but two or three make the glass feel more generous.
- Ice: Use more than you think. A cold drink tastes lighter and stays fizzy longer.
What makes a Shirley Temple work is that it gives the non-drinker a glass that still feels chosen, garnished, and worth raising. Kids usually chase the cherry. Adults get a festive drink that does not have to taste cloying.
What Is Grenadine?
Grenadine is the red syrup used in a Shirley Temple. It adds color, sweetness, and fruity flavor. Traditional grenadine is pomegranate-based, though many modern store-bought versions taste more like cherry or mixed fruit.
So if you always thought grenadine was cherry syrup, you are not alone. It looks red, tastes fruity, and is served with a cherry, so the confusion makes sense. Still, cherry syrup is not the same thing, even though it can help when grenadine is missing.
Grenadine Substitutes for Shirley Temple
Without grenadine, the drink will not taste exactly classic, but you can still make something close. If grenadine is missing, decide what matters most: the red color, the fruitiness, or the sweetness.

| Substitute | Works? | What to Know |
|---|---|---|
| Homemade grenadine | Best option | Closest to classic sweet-tart flavor |
| Maraschino cherry syrup | Good in a pinch | Sweeter and more candy-like |
| Pomegranate juice | Works lightly | Less sweet and less syrupy |
| Cherry juice | Works for color and flavor | Not classic grenadine, but useful |
| Raspberry syrup | Possible | Changes the flavor noticeably |
The easiest quick substitute is syrup from the maraschino cherry jar. Start with 1 teaspoon, taste, and add more only when needed. Cherry syrup can make the drink sweet very quickly.
Back to recipe card · Make it less sweet
Shirley Temple with Orange Juice
Orange juice is not required for a classic Shirley Temple, but a small splash can make the drink fruitier and more party-style. This version works especially well for brunches, birthdays, baby showers, and punch bowls.

For a light citrus note, add 1 tablespoon / 15 ml orange juice. A fruitier punch-style drink can use up to ¼ cup / 60 ml orange juice. More than that moves the mocktail away from a classic Shirley Temple and closer to fruit punch.
Lemon-lime soda usually works better than ginger ale here because the citrus flavors blend more naturally.
Classic vs Modern Shirley Temple
Older-style Shirley Temples often lean on ginger ale, while modern restaurant versions usually use Sprite, 7UP, or another lemon-lime soda. The drink’s exact origin story is a little messy, but the idea stayed simple: bubbles, red syrup, ice, and a cherry.
Shirley Temple Variations
Once the basic drink tastes right, variations are just small turns. Keep it cold, control the grenadine, and use citrus when the sweetness needs balance. For more red, bubbly ideas in the same lane, browse these mocktails with grenadine.
- Orange juice Shirley Temple: Add 1 tablespoon to ¼ cup orange juice for brunches, baby showers, and punch bowls.
- Frozen Shirley Temple: Blend ice, lemon-lime soda, grenadine, and a little lime juice until slushy, then serve immediately with cherries.
- Holiday Shirley Temple: Add extra cherries, orange slices, lime wheels, or a sugared rim for Christmas, New Year’s Eve, Valentine’s Day, birthdays, and family parties.
- Cherry-lime Shirley Temple: Add extra lime and a small spoon of maraschino cherry syrup for a sharper cherry-lime version.
Dirty Shirley vs Shirley Temple vs Roy Rogers
A classic Shirley Temple is non-alcoholic. These two related drinks are useful to know, especially when serving a mixed group:
- Shirley Temple: lemon-lime soda or ginger ale, grenadine, ice, and cherries. No alcohol.
- Dirty Shirley: the adult cocktail version, usually made with vodka, grenadine, lemon-lime soda or ginger ale, and a cherry.
- Roy Rogers: a non-alcoholic cola drink made with grenadine and a cherry.
For a mixed group, keep the main pitcher alcohol-free and let adults prepare a separate Dirty Shirley only as needed. That keeps the drink family-friendly and avoids confusion.
Back to quick answer · Back to party pitcher
Troubleshooting Shirley Temples
Most problems come from one of three things: too much syrup, warm soda, or mixing too early. Match the problem to the fix before changing the whole drink.

| Problem | What Happened | How to Fix It |
|---|---|---|
| Too sweet | Too much grenadine or cherry syrup | Add more soda, a splash of club soda, and lime |
| Flat | Soda was warm, old, or mixed too early | Use chilled soda and serve immediately |
| Grenadine sank | Grenadine is heavier than soda | Stir for even flavor or leave layered for looks |
| Weak flavor | Too little grenadine or too much ice melt | Add 1 teaspoon grenadine or cherry syrup |
| Too pale | Very little grenadine or a lighter syrup | Add grenadine 1 teaspoon at a time |
| Watery | Ice melted before serving | Use chilled soda and fresh ice |
| No grenadine | Missing the classic syrup | Use cherry syrup, homemade grenadine, or pomegranate juice with sweetener |
Need the short version again? Return to the recipe card or the ratio guide.
What to Serve with Shirley Temples
Think salty, crunchy, creamy, or citrusy. The drink is sweet and fizzy, so it does best beside foods that give it contrast. That makes Shirley Temples easy for birthday tables, family movie nights, brunches, holidays, and kid-friendly party spreads.
For Pizza Night and Movie Night
- Pizza
- Popcorn
- Chips and dips
- Fries or potato wedges
- Grilled cheese sandwiches
For Birthday Parties and Family Gatherings
- Burgers and sliders
- Crispy spring rolls
- Cream cheese ball with crackers
- Warm Rotel dip
- Grape jelly meatballs
- Snack boards and party appetizers
For Brunch or Holiday Tables
- Pancakes or waffles
- Egg dishes
- Fruit platters
- Chilled desserts like key lime pie
- Brunch sweets like soft homemade cinnamon rolls
For adults who are not drinking alcohol, a less-sweet ginger ale Shirley Temple can feel more thoughtful than plain soda. It still looks festive, but with less syrup it feels polished enough for adults too.
FAQs
Is a Shirley Temple alcoholic?
No. A classic Shirley Temple is non-alcoholic. It is made with soda, grenadine, ice, and cherries.
Is a Shirley Temple a mocktail?
Yes. It is one of the classic mocktails: mixed, garnished, and served like a cocktail, but made without alcohol.
What are the ingredients in a Shirley Temple?
The basic ingredients are lemon-lime soda or ginger ale, grenadine, ice, and maraschino cherries. Lime juice is optional, but it helps balance the sweetness.
Do you make a Shirley Temple with Sprite or ginger ale?
You can use either. Sprite or 7UP gives the sweet lemon-lime flavor many people associate with restaurant Shirley Temples, while ginger ale tastes softer and more classic.
Can 7UP be used for a Shirley Temple?
Yes. 7UP works just like Sprite here, so use whichever lemon-lime soda you already like or have chilled.
Is grenadine the same as cherry syrup?
No. Grenadine is traditionally pomegranate-based, while cherry syrup comes from cherries. Many store-bought grenadines taste cherry-like, which is why the two are often confused.
What can replace grenadine in a Shirley Temple?
Maraschino cherry syrup is the easiest substitute. Homemade grenadine, pomegranate juice with a little sweetener, or cherry juice can also work, though the flavor will be slightly different.
How do you make a Shirley Temple less sweet?
Use less grenadine, choose ginger ale instead of Sprite, add a splash of club soda, and squeeze in fresh lime juice. Start with 1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon grenadine per cup of soda.
What is a Dirty Shirley?
A Dirty Shirley is the alcoholic version of a Shirley Temple. It is usually made with vodka, grenadine, lemon-lime soda or ginger ale, and a cherry.
What is the difference between a Shirley Temple and a Roy Rogers?
Shirley Temples use lemon-lime soda or ginger ale. Roy Rogers uses cola. Both are non-alcoholic drinks made with grenadine and a cherry.
Can Shirley Temples be made ahead for a party?
Partly. You can mix the grenadine, lime, cherries, and garnishes ahead, but wait on the soda. The bubbles are what make the pitcher feel fresh.
Back to quick answer · Back to recipe card
Final Sip
A good Shirley Temple is not about pouring as much red syrup as the glass can take. It is about cold soda, enough ice, the right splash of grenadine, and a cherry that makes the drink feel special.
Use Sprite or 7UP for the familiar bright-red version, ginger ale for the more classic version, and lime or club soda when the drink needs to be lighter. Once the ratio feels right, you can make one glass in minutes or scale it into a party pitcher without losing the fizz.
