14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (2024)

Rain, wind, probably snow...we’re all going to need a little cosiness and merriment to get through the long, dark winter! Well, if you're going to be cooped up indoors, why not warm your co*ckles with some hot gin co*cktails? Yes, that’s right - gin is not just for summer, people!

You’ve probably tried mulled wine, hot whisky toddies and warming buttered rum; well, here are some delicious alternative drinks starring our favourite tipple: gin! And they’re perfect for keeping warm on bonfire night…

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (1)

Can I heat up gin?

You can indeed heat up gin and it will still taste delicious, especially if mixed into one of the co*cktails below.

So grab a cosy jumper, your best mates, and throw one of these easy warm co*cktail recipes together - we’ll see you on the other side!

14 easy hot gin co*cktails to get you through winter!

Mulled Sloe Gin

50ml sloe gin
150ml apple juice
50-100ml freshly squeezed orange juice, to taste
1 tsp cranberry jelly (optional)
Cinnamon stick
Any additional festive spices of your choice: try star anise, cloves or cardamom pods
Orange slices and/or fresh cranberries, to garnish

Add the juices, jelly and spices to a pan, then heat gently (stirring occasionally) for a few minutes, until the jelly has dissolved. Remove from the heat, strain into your drinking glass, then top up with sloe gin.

Garnish with a slice of orange and/or a few fresh cranberries; you can also pop a fresh star anise or cinnamon stick in, for added flavour.

Ginny Orange Hot Chocolate co*cktail

35ml gin per mug
100g orange chocolate
300ml milk
100ml cream
Whipped cream, to garnish
Toasted marshmallow, to garnish

Stir the chocolate, milk and cream in a pan on medium-hot heat until the chocolate has completely melted. Pour into a mug. Add the gin. Garnish, serve and enjoy!

Gin, Baileys & Amaretto Hot Chocolate co*cktail

50ml gin per mug
25ml Baileys per mug
25ml Amaretto per mug
Whipped cream, to garnish
Marshmallows, to garnish

Stir the chocolate and milk in a pan on medium-high heat until the chocolate has completely melted. Pour into a mug. Add the gin, Baileys and amaretto. Garnish, serve and enjoy!

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (2)

Hot Gin Toddy

40ml London dry or spiced gin
1 tsp honey, sugar or simple syrup
20ml fresh lemon juice
50ml hot water
Slice of lemon, orange, ginger and/or a cinnamon stick, to garnish

Add the gin, honey and lemon juice to your glass and stir until the honey has dissolved. Pour in the hot water. Garnish, serve and enjoy!

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (3)

Mulled Gin & Juice

25ml London dry or spiced gin per cup
200ml orange juice (or another fruit juice of your choice)
10g caster sugar
1 star anise
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
6 allspice berries
6 clives
1 whole chilli (optional, to taste)
Ground nutmeg, to garnish

Add the juice, sugar and spices to a pan on medium. Stir for ten minutes, without letting the liquid boil. Once the liquid is spiced and the sugar completely dissolved, strain the mixture and pour into mugs. Add the gin to the mug and stir. Garnish, serve and enjoy.

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (4)

Gin Irish Coffee

50ml gin
1 tsp brown sugar
150ml freshly brewed black coffee
2 tbsp lightly whipped double cream, to garnish

Stir the gin, sugar and coffee in an Irish coffee glass until the sugar has dissolved. When the liquid has stopped spinning, hold the tip of the teaspoon to the surface of the coffee, facing downward. Pour the cream onto the back of the spoon and let it slip onto the coffee to create a layer. Serve and enjoy!

Hot Gin Apple Toddy

Serves 4

1 cinnamon stick
A sprinkle of cloves
½ grated nutmeg
200ml gin
800ml apple juice
50g demerara sugar (optional)
Juice of half a lemon or orange

Add all the ingredients except the gin into a saucepan and heat gently for five minutes, stirring occasionally. You may not want to add the sugar if your apple juice is already sweetened - taste to see if you want to include it! You could also add a dash (about 15ml) of ginger syrup, for added kick.

Remove from the heat and add the gin and the juice of half a fresh orange or lemon, then strain into glass mugs. Garnish with a fresh slice of apple, orange and a star anise and/or cinnamon stick to serve.

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (6)

Yuletide Gin Flip

30ml gin
20ml triple sec (or other orange liqueur)
20ml Irish cream liqueur
1 whole egg
1 heaped teaspoon of caramel (e.g. Bonne Maman)

Add your ingredients into a co*cktail shaker and shake vigorously (without ice). Strain into a small saucepan and heat VERY gently, never allowing to boil, before pouring into your serving glass or mug. Garnish with a twist of orange peel or a cinnamon stick and serve!

Created for Craft Gin Club by JJ Goodman of London co*cktail Club

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (7)

Hackney Homebrew

40ml gin
20ml sweet vermouth
10ml sugar syrup
2 cinnamon sticks
2 star anise
Fresh nutmeg
Orange zest, to garnish

To make sugar syrup, combine one part sugar and one part water to a saucepan, simmer until combined and allow to cool.

In a new saucepan, combine your gin, vermouth and sugar syrup. Simmer on a low heat. Break the cinnamon and add to the pan. Add 20 grates of fresh nutmeg, followed by the star anise. Sieve into your serving vessel, then grate over orange zest and serve.

Created for Craft Gin Club by co*cktail Kate

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (8)

Chamomile Hot Toddy

1 chamomile teabag
1 cup of water
1 tbsp honey
50ml gin
25ml lemon juice
Chamomile flowers, to garnish

In a saucepan, gently infuse your chamomile tea with hot (but not boiling) water for a few minutes. Discard the teabags and stir in your honey. Remove from heat and add the gin and lemon juice. Garnish with a sprig of chamomile or a slice of lemon and serve immediately.

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (9)

Hot Spiced Gin & Ginger

30ml ginger syrup (we used 3/4 Oz Ginger Ale syrup)
125ml apple juice
½ cinnamon stick
1 star anise
Walnut bitters (optional)
45ml gin

Add the ginger syrup, apple juice, cinnamon stick, star anise and bitters to a saucepan and simmer over medium heat for five minutes. Pour into your favourite mug or heat-resistant glass, stir in your gin and serve.

Hot Gin Punch

(Makes approximately 6 servings)

480ml gin
480ml sweet Madeira wine
1 tablespoon dark brown sugar (or more if you prefer)
Peel and juice of 1 lemon (or more if you prefer)
Peel and juice of 1 orange
1 pineapple, peeled, cored, and sliced
3 whole cloves, 3 cinnamon sticks
Pinch of ground nutmeg

Put all the ingredients in a medium-sized pan over a low heat. Bring to a simmer and cook gently (without boiling) for thirty minutes. Taste and adjust the balance of flavours with more brown sugar or more lemon juice as you prefer. Pour the mixture into a jug, punch bowl or teapot and serve!

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (11)

White Chocolate Gin Flip

30ml gin
30ml Crème de Cacao Blanc (white chocolate liqueur)
15ml brown sugar syrup
1 large egg yolk
20ml double cream
2 dashes chocolate bitters
Nutmeg and dark chocolate, grated, to garnish

Add your ingredients into a co*cktail shaker and shake vigorously (without ice). Strain into a small saucepan and heat VERY gently, never allowing to boil, before pouring into your serving glass. Grate over a little nutmeg and chocolate, then serve.

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (12)

Sloe Gin Hot Chocolate co*cktail

25ml sloe gin per mug
3 blackpepper corns
2 cloves
1 cinnamon stick
1 vanilla pod (or 1 tsp of vanilla extract)
1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
100ml double cream
300ml milk
75g chocolate

Stir the milk, cream, chocolate and spices in a pan on medium-high heat until the chocolate has completely melted. Bring the mixture up to a boil, stirring continuously, then strain into two mugs. Add the sloe gin and stir. Serve and enjoy!

Is hot gin good for a cold?

Unfortunately, hot gin will not help you get rid of a cold. So we do not recommend that you try to use hot gin as a remedy for cold.

When you are feeling better, we recommend trying out one of the co*cktails above!

14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (13)

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14 easy hot gin co*cktail recipes to get you through winter! - Craft Gin Club | The UK's No.1 gin club (2024)

FAQs

What is Craft gin Club December co*cktail of the Month? ›

Craft Gin Club's Santa's Spritz is the ultimate Christmas co*cktail!

What is the most famous gin drink? ›

Gin and Tonic

The classic G&T is one of the most beloved and easy-to-make co*cktails on earth.

Is it good to drink gin in winter? ›

You might think of gin as something you drink only on hot summer nights or in a classic Martini, but you can take this spirit to new levels all winter long. With notes of pine, purple flowers, lemons, roots and warming spices, gin is perfect for cold-weather-inspired co*cktails.

What is the most popular co*cktail in London? ›

Arguably London's most famous drink, the Vesper Martini rose to fame after it was first made for James Bond author Ian Fleming in the 1950s. Fleming sampled the co*cktail in the bar at the Duke's Hotel and enjoyed it so much that he included it in his 1953 thriller, Casino Royale.

How do the British drink their gin? ›

Across the country, sophisticated drinkers splash it over ice and a slice (or one of the many other fun gin garnishes out there) for a gin and tonic at home, bartenders pour out perfect measures in local pubs and mixologists in the trendy upscale bars of London, Leeds and beyond assiduously combine the botanical spirit ...

Why is craft gin so expensive? ›

Craft distillers who care about the quality of their product, go through 2 to 3 rounds of distillation. This costs more and gives you lesser quantity at the end, but produces a significantly purer, and better quality spirit, like the earl grey gin. Other reasons include the type of distillation.

What is a magical gin? ›

No, not Harry Potter style magic: when we talk about magic gins we're talking gins that either do something that well and truly wows, or we're talking about gins whose ingredients or distillation process are so darn off-the-charts unique that we had to put them in a magic gins category all of their own.

What is the difference between craft gin and regular gin? ›

Craft gins are, in essence, spirits that are created in small batches by a small team or singular person. Unlike large gin companies, they'll have a face behind them, and that person will have handcrafted the gin themselves. Essentially, craft gin is the opposite of mass produced, commercial gins.

What nationality drinks the most gin? ›

Which country drinks the most gin? Per capita, people in the Philippines drink more gin than any other country in the world.

What is a good gin drink for beginners? ›

Make a classic G&T by combining one part gin with two parts tonic, then garnish with a lime slice, if you like (or, use cucumber slices, herb sprigs or berries).

Is it OK to drink gin every night? ›

The Bottom Line. To be clear, gin isn't a miracle food, and any alcohol should be consumed in moderation—two drinks or less per day for men and one drink or less per day for women, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Should gin be refrigerated? ›

Must I Refrigerate Gin? You should! Many experts suggest that the best way to store gin is in the fridge, especially if you do not have ice to keep your drinks cool. Of course, since they have a lot of alcohol, you don't have to put them in the fridge.

Why do people put gin in the freezer? ›

Those who enjoy drinking gin neat or over ice will often store their gin in the freezer or put it in the freezer and hour before serving it as the lower temperature softens the harshness of the alcohol. Can you store gin on its side? Gin can typically be stored on its side without changing the quality or flavour.

What is the most popular gin in the UK? ›

Leading brands of 'Gin' in Great Britain based on the number of consumers are 'Gordon's' with 7,155,000 consumers, followed by 'Bombay Sapphire' with 4,231,000 consumers and 'Tanqueray' with 3,518,000 consumers in 2022.

What gin is only found in England? ›

The London Nº1 is a unique gin.

Distilled in small batches in the heart of London, this gin's unique flavour is the result of the quality of the raw ingredients used, as well as its distillation in Pot Stills (traditionally the only stills used for distillation in small quantities).

What was the gin craze in England? ›

London's gin consumption peaked in 1743 and despite the Gin Act of 1751 these high levels lasted until 1757 when a series of crop failures forced distillation of grain to be banned. Gin allowed the 18th century poor to forget the squalor and hardship in which they lived.

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