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If you’re hosting the cocktail party this holiday season, you need something more sophisticated than the standard hot chocolate bar. This Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini turns the beloved espresso martini into a seasonal showstopper without dumping a bottle of peppermint syrup into the mix. We’re talking about a balanced vodka cocktail that actually tastes like you know what you’re doing behind the bar.

Creamy peppermint mocha espresso martini in a coupe glass with a crushed candy cane rim and coffee beans, on a table with pinecones and holiday decor.

What Is a Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini?

Quick Answer: The Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini is a holiday variation of the espresso martini that layers vodka, coffee liqueur, crème de cacao, and peppermint schnapps with fresh espresso and cream.

London bartender Dick Bradsell created the classic espresso martini in the 1980s at Soho Brasserie when a model asked for a drink that would energize and inebriate in equal measure. This winter version swaps the simple syrup for peppermint schnapps and adds white crème de cacao for that mocha profile—giving you all the caffeine and sophistication with a seasonal twist.

A peppermint mocha espresso martini cocktail pours from a shaker into a sprinkle-rimmed glass, with a “Vanilla Vodka” bottle in the background.

What you’ll love about this recipe:


  • SUBTLE –  The peppermint and chocolate don’t overpower the espresso. You’re still drinking a vodka-forward martini that happens to taste like the holidays.
  • FESTIVE – That crushed peppermint rim and chocolate syrup detail make this look like you spent an hour on it when it takes ten minutes to make two drinks.

What You Need to Make a Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini

  • Vodka: The backbone of any espresso martini. We use 3 ounces for two drinks, which gives you structure without letting the vodka dominate. Use a clean, quality vodka—nothing flavored.
  • Kahlúa: Coffee liqueur brings sweetness and depth. Kahlúa works perfectly here, but you can use any coffee liqueur you prefer.
  • White Crème de Cacao: This is your chocolate component. White crème de cacao keeps the drink from looking muddy while giving you that mocha flavor without actual chocolate syrup.
  • Peppermint Schnapps: The seasonal element. One ounce for two drinks is enough to get that peppermint note without turning this into a liquid candy cane.
  • Freshly Brewed Espresso: The star ingredient. Use actual espresso, not regular coffee. Brew it fresh, then cool it completely before mixing—hot espresso will dilute your drink.
  • Half and Half or Heavy Cream: This gives you the creamy texture and that signature foam layer on top. Heavy cream creates a richer head, half and half keeps it lighter.
  • Chocolate Syrup and Crushed Peppermint: For rimming the glass. This isn’t just decoration—the chocolate and peppermint on the rim complement each sip.
  • Coffee Beans: Three per drink for garnish. Classic espresso martini presentation.

How to Make a Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini

  • Pour the chocolate syrup onto a small plate and spread the crushed peppermint candy onto a second plate. Dip each martini glass rim into the chocolate syrup, then press the coated rim into the crushed peppermint. Set aside.
  • Add 3 ounces of vodka, 1½ ounces of Kahlúa, 1 ounce of white crème de cacao, 1 ounce of peppermint schnapps, 2 ounces of cooled espresso, and 1 ounce of half and half to your cocktail shaker.
  • Fill the shaker with ice and secure the lid tightly. Shake hard for 15 to 20 seconds—you want that cream to emulsify and create foam.
  • Strain into your prepared glasses. The foam should sit on top with those signature tiny bubbles. Garnish each drink with 3 coffee beans arranged in a triangle.

Bartender’s Tips


  • Cool your espresso completely before mixing. If you add hot or warm espresso to ice, you’ll get a watered-down mess. Brew it, then stick it in the fridge or pour it over an ice bath until it’s room temperature or colder.
  • Shake longer than you think you need to. That 15-20 second shake window isn’t a suggestion. You need that aggressive shake to create the foam layer that makes an espresso martini worth photographing.
  • Try dark rum instead of vodka. If you want deeper molasses notes that play up the mocha flavor, swap the vodka for a quality dark rum. The coffee and chocolate components work beautifully with aged spirits.
  • Go darker with the chocolate if you’re a chocolate person. White crème de cacao keeps this elegant, but if you want a more pronounced chocolate hit, use dark chocolate liqueur instead.
  • Skip the schnapps for a lower-proof version. Replace the peppermint schnapps with peppermint simple syrup. You’ll still get the flavor but with less alcohol—useful if you’re making several rounds.
Two espresso martinis with peppermint rims sit on a wooden table amid pinecones, candy canes, ornaments, and liqueur bottles.

How to Serve This Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini

Serve this in chilled coupe glasses or traditional martini glasses—the wide rim shows off that peppermint candy detail. This is an after-dinner cocktail or a pre-dinner statement drink, not something you’re sipping poolside in July. Make these for holiday parties, Christmas Eve gatherings, or anytime you want to show guests you actually know how to make something beyond a vodka soda. The coffee beans arranged in a triangle on top aren’t optional—they’re the signature garnish.

More Cocktail Recipes

Love espresso cocktails? Check out our complete guide to classic espresso martinis or try our eggnog espresso martini recipe for another coffee-forward option.

Join our Facebook group to share your espresso martini variations with other cocktail enthusiasts, or sign up for our weekly newsletter—we send it out every Friday at happy hour with a new recipe and bartending tips.

Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini

The espresso martini for people who think seasonal cocktails are usually too sweet and boring. Fresh espresso, vodka, and peppermint schnapps shaken ice-cold with a candy cane rim that looks expensive but takes five minutes to make.
Print Recipe
A coupe glass peppermint mocha espresso martini with a crushed peppermint rim and coffee beans sits on a wooden table with pinecones and crushed peppermint.
Prep Time:10 minutes
Total Time:10 minutes

Ingredients

For the rim:

  • Chocolate syrup
  • Crushed peppermint candy or candy cane

For the cocktails:

  • 3 ounces vodka
  • ounces Kahlúa
  • 1 ounce white crème de cacao
  • 1 ounce peppermint schnapps
  • 2 ounces freshly brewed espresso cooled
  • 1 ounce half and half or heavy cream
  • 6 whole coffee beans for garnish

Instructions

  • Pour chocolate syrup onto a small plate. Spread crushed peppermint candy on a second plate. Dip each glass rim into the chocolate syrup, then press into the crushed peppermint.
  • Add vodka, Kahlúa, crème de cacao, peppermint schnapps, cooled espresso, and half and half to a cocktail shaker.
  • Fill shaker with ice and secure lid. Shake hard for 15 to 20 seconds.
  • Strain into prepared glasses. Garnish each with 3 coffee beans.

Notes

Variations: Use dark rum for deeper molasses notes. Swap white crème de cacao for dark chocolate liqueur for stronger chocolate flavor. Replace peppermint schnapps with peppermint simple syrup for lower alcohol content. Use cold brew concentrate if you don’t have an espresso machine.
Make Ahead: Scale ingredients and mix vodka, Kahlúa, crème de cacao, and peppermint schnapps in a pitcher. Keep chilled. Brew and chill espresso separately. When ready to serve, shake individual portions with ice.
Servings: 2 cocktails
Author: Dee Broughton

Recipe FAQs

Can I make this without an espresso machine?

Yes. Use strong cold brew concentrate or make a double-strength pour-over coffee and cool it completely. The flavor won’t be as intense as actual espresso, but it works in a pinch.

Can I batch this Peppermint Mocha Espresso Martini for a party?

You can scale the ingredients and mix the vodka, coffee liqueur, crème de cacao, and peppermint schnapps in a pitcher. Keep it chilled. Brew and chill the espresso separately. When you’re ready to serve, pour one portion of the base and one portion of espresso into a shaker with ice and shake each drink individually—you need that fresh shake for the foam.

Why isn’t my drink getting that foam layer on top?

Two reasons: either your espresso wasn’t fresh enough or you didn’t shake hard enough. Fresh espresso (or very strong cold brew) creates oils that emulsify with the cream when you shake aggressively. If you’re not seeing foam, shake harder and longer.

Can I use peppermint extract instead of schnapps?

Not recommended. Peppermint extract is far too concentrated and will make your drink taste like toothpaste. If you want to reduce alcohol, make a peppermint simple syrup by adding a few drops of extract to simple syrup and adjusting to taste.

What’s the difference between white and dark crème de cacao?

Both taste like chocolate, but white crème de cacao is clear and keeps your drink looking clean and elegant. Dark crème de cacao has a deeper chocolate flavor and will make your martini darker and slightly cloudier. It’s your preference—both work.

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