THE JOURNAL

Move over, mulled wine. Take a bow, eggnog. This holiday season, we think it’s high time that our go-to festive drinks got a bit of an upgrade. Even more so if you’ll be playing host at any point over the couple months. No shade to buck’s fizz, but surely, we can all do a tad better?
In that spirit, we reached out to some of the world’s top drinks experts and asked them to share their alternative holiday cocktails (including a non-alcoholic option for good measure), which they’re more than happy for you to plagiarise. Whip up the below for your guests, serve with a slice of panettone and prepare to take the crown for holiday host with the most.
01. The breakfast martini
By Mr Nick Jackson, group bar manager at Bar Daskal, Barrafina and Parrillan
“Most years, a variant on the breakfast martini will be served to my extended family on Christmas morning,” says Mr Nick Jackson of Bar Daskal, Barrafina and Parrillan. “It’s a wonderfully refreshing, dangerously easy sipping and, most importantly, can be made from readily available ingredients. Essentially, it’s a marriage of gin, lemon and marmalade – ideally with a triple sec or splash of the dusty bottle of Cointreau from the back of a kitchen cupboard.”
Ingredients
1 heaped tsp orange marmalade (good quality, and ideally fine cut)
50ml London dry gin
15ml lemon juice
15ml triple sec
Method
Stir and dissolve the marmalade in the liquid ingredients before shaking hard and fine straining into a glass. Serve long in a highball glass, topped with soda or sparkling wine.
02. The Zobo daiquiri
By Mr Ian Burrell, cofounder of Equiano Rum
“The Zobo daiquiri is our take on the traditional festive sorrel cocktails enjoyed in parts of West Africa and the Caribbean at Christmas time,” says Mr Ian Burrell, cofounder and global rum ambassador of The Equiano Rum Co, which takes its name from 18th-century abolitionist Mr Olaudah Equiano. “It’s a delicious way to use Equiano Light, which is a blend of lightly aged molasses rum from the Caribbean, fused with fresh sugar cane juice rum from Africa.”
Ingredients
50ml Equiano Light rum
25ml sorel liqueur
25ml lime juice
12ml sugar syrup
Method
Put all ingredients in a shaker with plenty of ice. Shake until cold and double strain into a stemmed cocktail glass or coupette. Garnish with a dehydrated lime wheel.
03. The Cheery Me Up
By Mr Anthony Callegari, bar manager at The London Edition
“Cheery Me Up does exactly that,” says Mr Anthony Callegari of The London Edition. “If you’re hosting at Christmas time, it’s the ideal welcome drink to put a smile on someone’s face. Adding a smoked rosemary and redcurrant garnish adds festive wow factor and smells incredible. And there’s no need to source anything you can’t find at the local supermarket.”
Ingredients
45ml Ketel One vodka
20ml Savoia
15ml Heering Cherry
15ml nutmeg syrup
25ml pear sherbet
Lemon juice
Egg white
Method
Add all ingredients into a shaker full of ice cubes. Shake for 10-15 sec, then strain it into a frozen rock glass filled with an ice block. Garnish with smoking rosemary and red currant.
04. The Pimless Pimm’s
By Ms Mélanie Masarin, founder of non-alcoholic aperitif brand Ghia
“I love to serve this drink during the holidays,” Ghia’s Ms Mélanie Masarin says. “Lemon, early-season orange and yuzu marmalade play excellently with spicy ginger and cucumber bitters for a complex, floral flavour profile. I like to make a pitcher of this when I host any seasonal gatherings.”
Ingredients
30ml Ghia
10ml lemon juice
20ml orange juice
1 tbsp yuzu marmalade (preferably Yakami Orchard)
15ml ginger syrup
4 dashes of cucumber bitters (preferably The Bitter Truth)
20ml seltzer
15ml ginger beer (preferably Fever Tree)
Method
Add Ghia, lemon juice, orange juice, marmalade, ginger syrup and cucumber bitters to a mixing tin and dry shake without ice to incorporate the marmalade. Add ice and shake until cold. Add soda and ginger beer to a rock glass over ice and strain in the Ghia and marmalade mixture. Garnish with a half orange slice and a slightly expressed mint crown.
05. Negroni sbagliato
By Mr Jasper Delemothe, founder of natural wine shop Oranj
“The negroni sbagliato translates to a ‘mistaken negroni’ as the bubbles take the place of the gin found in a classic Italian negroni,” Oranj founder Mr Jasper Delemothe says of the drink made infamous this year thanks to that Game Of Thrones meme. “Its taste is equally unique: bitter, sweet and earthy all at once, while the bubbles give the cocktail an irresistible effervescence perfect for the festive period.”
Ingredients
25ml Campari
25ml Antica Formula vermouth
Bertrand-Delespierre, L’enfant De La Montagne (or any champagne or prosecco), to top
1 slice of orange
Method
In a glass, pour the Campari and vermouth, add a couple of cubes of ice and stir. Gently pour the bubbles of your choice. Give the glass another stir. Top up further and garnish with a slice of orange.