Born from Bad Booze
The Bee’s Knees—gin, lemon juice, honey—became one of the most popular cocktails of the speakeasy era for one simple reason: it worked.
Bootleg gin was notoriously rough. Often homemade, sometimes poisonous, it needed help. Honey softened the burn. Lemon masked impurities. Together, they turned something barely drinkable into something fashionable.
This wasn’t culinary creativity—it was survival.
In speakeasy mob connections, drinks like the Bee’s Knees allowed bars to stretch inferior supply while maintaining reputation. The cocktail wasn’t about taste alone. It was about keeping customers alive, loyal, and quiet.
The mob didn’t invent the drink.
They perfected the necessity.