Hot Drinks
Mulled Wine, Hot Cocoa, Eggnog
From cozy mugs of mulled wine to sparkling mocktails for the kids, discover the best festive drinks to make your holiday celebration truly unforgettable.
This page is built like a holiday drinks menu: start with the overview, jump to the category you need, then use the pairing guide and sidebar tools to make the whole thing practical.
Hot drinks do more than warm people up. They make a room feel hosted. The smell of citrus, spice, chocolate, and tea turns the kitchen or drinks table into part of the atmosphere, which is why these are some of the smartest first pours of the night.
Warming red wine simmered with cinnamon, cloves, star anise, and orange peel. The scent alone is pure Christmas magic.
Rich dark chocolate melted into whole milk with cinnamon, cayenne, and a hint of vanilla. Top with homemade marshmallows.
Creamy homemade eggnog with egg yolks, cream, nutmeg, and your choice of bourbon or rum. Far superior to store-bought.
Fresh-pressed apple cider simmered with cinnamon sticks, whole cloves, and orange slices. Serve in a slow cooker for parties.
Black tea brewed with cardamom, ginger, cinnamon, and black pepper, then frothed with steamed milk and honey.
Classic hot cocoa with a candy cane stirrer and peppermint extract. Topped with whipped cream and crushed candy cane.
The best Christmas cocktails do not need complicated technique. They just need balance, a seasonal colour story, and a garnish that signals “holiday” the second the glass lands in someone’s hand.
Gin, cranberry juice, lime, and sparkling water with a sugared rosemary sprig garnish. Elegant and effortlessly festive.
Bourbon muddled with fresh cranberries, rosemary, and honey syrup. Served over ice with a cinnamon stick.
Tequila, triple sec, cranberry juice, and lime with a chili-salt rim and sugared cranberry garnish.
Champagne or Prosecco with cranberry juice and a splash of Cointreau. Simple, stunning, and crowd-pleasing.
Dark rum stirred with orange bitters, brown sugar, and a cinnamon-infused simple syrup. Garnished with orange peel.
Vodka, elderflower liqueur, rosemary simple syrup, and tonic water. Light, herbal, and very pretty in a tall glass.
Vodka, crème de cacao, peppermint schnapps, and cream shaken with ice. Rim with crushed candy cane.
Every great Christmas party has a thoughtful non-alcoholic option, not just juice, but a proper crafted mocktail that feels as special as the cocktails. These are built for adults as much as for non-drinkers: clean acidity, seasonal garnish, and enough texture to feel deliberate.
Cranberry juice, fresh lime, ginger beer, and a rosemary sprig. Looks and tastes like a proper cocktail.
Orange juice, pomegranate juice, sparkling water, and sliced citrus fruits. Make a big pitcher the night before.
Fresh lemonade with peppermint syrup and sparkling water. Garnish with a candy cane and mint sprig.
Sparkling apple cider with cinnamon syrup, fresh ginger, and a star anise garnish. Festive and lightly warming.
Muddled strawberries and raspberries with lime juice, honey, and sparkling water. Vibrant red colour, bright finish.
Batch drinks are the host's best friend. Make a bowl before guests arrive and let everyone help themselves. The trick is building the base early, keeping the garnish dramatic, and holding back fizzy ingredients until the last minute so the bowl still tastes alive halfway through the evening.
Ginger ale, cranberry juice, pineapple juice, and a sherbet float. Add vodka or rum for an adult version.
Traditional spiced apple cider with orange juice, cinnamon, cloves, and allspice. Keep warm in a slow cooker all evening.
Champagne, orange juice, pineapple juice, and a frozen citrus ice ring. Elegant, bright, and endlessly refillable.
Cranberry juice, rosemary simple syrup, lime juice, and sparkling water. Alcohol-free and gorgeous in a glass bowl.
🧊 Ice Ring Tip: Freeze cranberries, orange slices, and rosemary sprigs in a bundt pan with water overnight. Float it in your punch bowl so the drink stays cold without tasting diluted after the first hour.
The little ones deserve festive drinks too. These are fully alcohol-free, easy to customise, and built to feel just as magical as the grown-up versions. In practice, the garnish station matters as much as the recipe, because decorating the drink becomes part of the entertainment.
Set up a DIY station with rich hot cocoa and toppings: mini marshmallows, whipped cream, sprinkles, candy canes, and chocolate chips.
Vanilla ice cream blended with milk and peppermint extract, topped with whipped cream and a candy cane.
Orange juice, cranberry juice, ginger ale, and a scoop of orange sherbet. Bright red and fizzy, with almost no effort.
Lemonade with a splash of sparkling water and edible gold glitter. Simple, bright, and instantly party-worthy.
Spinach, banana, pineapple, and coconut milk blended until smooth. Naturally green and surprisingly kid-friendly.
Matching the right drink to the right food lifts both. Use this as the fast version of menu planning, especially if you are building drinks around your christmas dinner rather than planning them as a separate event.
| Food | Best Drink | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Roast Turkey | Mulled Wine / Champagne Poinsettia | Spiced wine echoes the savoury roast while bubbles reset the palate between bites. |
| Glazed Ham | Spiced Apple Cider / Bourbon Smash | Apple loves pork, and bourbon adds enough oak and caramel to stand up to the glaze. |
| Prime Rib | Spiced Rum Old Fashioned / Red Mulled Wine | Rich beef needs something deeper, darker, and a little more structured than a bright fizz. |
| Mushroom Wellington | Rosemary Vodka Spritz / Virgin Sangria | Herbal, earthy notes play beautifully with mushrooms without flattening the pastry. |
| Christmas Pudding | Eggnog / Champagne | Creamy richness mirrors the dessert, while sparkling wine clears the sweetness afterward. |
| Gingerbread / Cookies | Spiced Chai Latte / Hot Cocoa | Spice-on-spice pairings feel warm and cohesive instead of competitive. |
| Cheese Board | Champagne Poinsettia / Cranberry Gin Fizz | Acidity and bubbles slice cleanly through creamy or salty cheeses. |
| Smoked Salmon | Rosemary Vodka Spritz / Sparkling Cranberry | Fresh herbal notes and brisk citrus balance the smoke without overwhelming it. |
Great holiday drinks are not just about recipes. They are about flow: where the ice lives, how the batch bowl is labeled, whether the zero-proof option looks intentional, and whether you can still enjoy your own party once guests arrive.
Plan on at least 1 pound of ice per guest. Then buy more, because punch bowls, shakers, and ice buckets drain it fast.
Group punch bowls, glassware, garnishes, napkins, and stirrers in one place so people can help themselves.
Mark every drink with its name and whether it contains alcohol. Guests choose faster and nobody has to guess.
Slice citrus, rinse cranberries, and trim rosemary the day before. Cold garnishes also look sharper in the glass.
Cinnamon, rosemary, and peppermint syrups can be made a week ahead and chilled until party day.
Keep red wine around 60 to 65°F, sparkling wine around 40 to 45°F, and hot drinks around 160 to 170°F.
At least two zero-proof drinks is the right standard. Water and supermarket juice do not count as hospitality.
Most adult guests average 2 to 3 drinks. A longer evening often lands closer to 1 drink per person per hour.