Founding Father or one-termer, Democrat or Republican, almost every president shared something in common: They drank.

In his new book, “Mint Juleps with Teddy Roosevelt: The Complete History of Presidential Drinking” (Regnery), journalist Mark Will-Weber tells the history of presidency through booze. Here, he tells The Post what the favorite tipple was for every chief executive.

George Washington

Washington sold whiskey (made near Mount Vernon), but he probably rarely, if ever, drank it. The formula was about 60 percent rye, 3 percent corn and a very meager amount of malted barley. As for his favorite drink — he loved dark porter (laced with molasses) that was made in Philadelphia.

John Adams

Adams loved alcohol, starting almost every morning with a hard cider. Then porter beer, rum and copious amounts of Madeira.

Thomas Jefferson

Jefferson’s huge wine purchases helped bring him to the brink of financial ruin.

James Madison

Champagne may have been among his favorites, but he once advised guests that it “was the most delightful wine when drank in moderation, but that more than a few glasses always produced a headache the next day.”

James Monroe

A small scandal occurred during Monroe’s stint in the Executive Mansion when 1,200 bottles of Burgundy and Champagne from France were charged to an account that Congress had earmarked for furniture.

John Quincy Adams

There are some claims that JQA once conducted a blind taste test of 14 different kinds of Madeira and correctly identified 11 of them.

Andrew Jackson

When he wasn’t fighting Indians or the British, the Hero of New Orleans made and sold whiskey. He offered and drank whiskey as a matter of social routine when guests visited him.

Martin Van Buren

Drank so much whiskey that it earned him a nickname, “Blue Whiskey Van.” He also enjoyed something called Schiedam (a gin-like Dutch specialty unique to New York’s Hudson River Valley).

William Henry Harrison

“Old Tipp” rode to the White House on the strength of the “Long Cabin and Hard Cider” campaign in 1840.

John Tyler

In a letter to his daughter, Tyler recorded a dinner visit to President and Mrs. Madison, noting: “They have good drink . . . Champagne . . . of which you know I am very fond.”

James K. Polk

Polk drank very modest amounts of wine, Champagne, and brandy.

Zachary Taylor

During the Mexican War, a political aide reportedly visited to inform Taylor that the Whig party wished to nominate him for president. Taylor allegedly replied: “Stop your nonsense and drink your whiskey!”

Millard Fillmore

Fillmore rarely drank wine or served it to others. However, this lightweight once admitted sampling enough old Madeira that he was “slightly fuddled.”

Franklin Pierce

Pierce drank a lot of everything and died of cirrhosis of the liver at age 65. When Democrats failed to support him for re-election in 1856, he allegedly said: “What can an ex-president of the United States do except get drunk?”

James Buchanan

A friend of his once wrote: “The Madeira and sherry that he has consumed would fill more than one old cellar.”

Abraham Lincoln

One of our driest presidents, he rarely if ever drank.

Andrew Johnson

Lincoln and other political big shots were appalled when Johnson showed up loaded (and slurring his words) for his vice presidential inauguration in 1865; he had tried to treat a cold with whiskey.

Ulysses S. Grant

When Grant did drink, he did not do it well. He reportedly suffered from low tolerance. In office, one of Grant’s White House entertaining bills included $1,800 for Champagne alone.

Rutherford B. Hayes

His wife, “Lemonade Lucy,” pushed for a no-booze White House. Staffers sympathetic to visitors who might want some alcohol tried to infuse some oranges in the punch with rum — but Hayes claims to have discovered the ploy and substituted rum flavoring for the real stuff!

James Garfield

A friend of Garfield’s, Thomas Donaldson, once noted in his diary: “Garfield . . . liked beer and drank but little else.”

Chester A. Arthur

When a representative of the Temperance movement tried to pressure Arthur into a no-liquor policy in the White House, he thundered: “Madam, I may be the president of the United States, but what I do with my private life is my own damned business!”

Grover Cleveland

Grover mostly drank beer, and lots of it. He and a fellow politician once took a vow to hold themselves to four beers a day. When they found this too arduous a task, they simply switched to larger beer steins.

Benjamin Harrison

Benjamin leaned more toward God than Demon Alcohol.

William McKinley

A drink popular during his election campaign was called McKinley’s Delight:

3 oz. rye whiskey (shoot for at least 100 proof)

1 oz. sweet vermouth

2 dashes of cherry brandy

1 dash absinthe

Teddy Roosevelt

Teddy liked mint juleps and used them to entice his cabinet to come play tennis with him at the White House. He used fresh mint from the White House garden:

10 to 12 fresh mint leaves “muddled” with a splash of water and a sugar cube

2 or 3 oz. of rye whiskey

¼ oz. of brandy

Sprig or two of fresh mint as a garnish

William Howard Taft

Because of his size, people might assume the 300-pound-plus Taft drank a lot. He did not, especially when he was in the White House and was trying to lose weight. He did, on occasion, celebrate with a glass of Champagne.

Woodrow Wilson

Wilson loved Scotch. His campaign song — “Wilson! That’s All!” — actually came from a brand of whiskey that was popular early in the 20th century.

Warren G. Harding

Even though Harding was president during Prohibition — and it was unlawful to transport liquor — he habitually stashed a bottle of whiskey in his golf bag and thought nothing of taking a pop before he teed up. (He rarely broke 100, so that might explain it.)

Calvin Coolidge

“Silent Cal” drank very little, but he was very fond of Tokay wine. The Coolidge Cooler was concocted by Vermont Spirits on Cal’s birthday:

1.5 oz. of Vermont White vodka

½ oz. of American whiskey

2 oz. of orange juice

Club soda

Herbert Hoover

Hoover supposedly had a fantastic wine collection, but his wife allegedly dumped it down the drain when Prohibition hit. While suffering from pneumonia at the age of 80, he did have one request — a good, dry martini.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

FDR is most associated with cocktails. He enjoyed mixing gin-based martinis (and occasionally whiskey-based Manhattans). His favorite thing to sip while sailing was the Bermuda Rum Swizzle:

2 oz. dark rum

1 oz. lime juice

1 oz. orange juice

1 generous dash of Falernum (a sweet syrup)

Harry Truman

Truman loved bourbon and quite often knocked down a shot of it in the morning, part of his routine that also involved a brisk walk and a rubdown. He also liked a very strong Old Fashioned and would complain if his staff made it too weak.

Dwight D. Eisenhower

Because of several heart attacks (probably due to his habitual chain-smoking), Ike was limited to just a few drinks by his doc. He typically chose Scotch, and sometimes would overrule his doctor and have a second one.

John F. Kennedy

JFK drank lots of different stuff, so it’s hard to pick a favorite. Some were trendy drinks of the rich — daiquiris, Bloody Marys, and (considered at the time a big deal because it was imported) Heineken beer.

Lyndon B. Johnson

LBJ loved Scotch whiskey and enjoyed driving (at high speeds) around his Texas ranch while drinking it out of a plastic cup.

Richard Nixon

Nixon would drink expensive bottles of Chateau Lafite Rothschild (costing hundreds of dollars); at the same time, he instructed his staff to serve mediocre red wine to his guests — with towels wrapped around the bottle’s label so they did not know what they were getting. Tricky Dick indeed!

Gerald Ford

Ford grew accustomed to a few martinis, sometimes even at lunch, when he was in the House of Representatives. When he became president in the aftermath of Watergate, Ford’s staff had to suggest he cut back.

Jimmy Carter

Carter drank very sparingly. When he had an arms summit with Soviet leaders, Carter arranged to get a very small glass of white wine for the obligatory toasts — so he could avoid downing powerful Russian vodka.

Ronald Reagan

Reagan liked California wines and an occasional Orange Blossom Special made with vodka:

1 oz. (or slightly less in Reagan’s case) vodka

1 oz. of either grenadine or sweet vermouth

2 oz. fresh orange juice

All brought together in a barroom glass filled with ice.

George H.W. Bush

“41” drank a little bit of everything, including beer and vodka martinis.

William Clinton

As a scholar at Oxford, Clinton reportedly indulged in the Snakebite:

8 oz. hard cider

8 oz. lager beer

(Add ¼ oz. black currant liqueur for a Snakebite variation the Brits

call Diesel.)

George W. Bush

Bush “retired” from drinking years before he became president.

Barack Obama

The current president likes beer. The Executive Mansion also features White House Honey Ale (with honey from the White House hives) for special guests.