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Keep it simple with these 3-ingredient cocktails for Christmas


Read time 5 Mins

Posted 14 Nov 2024

By
Evan Jones


Holding the Rabo de Galo cocktail that's made from Brazilian spirit cachaca

Our gift to you is this collection of cocktail recipes that are big on flavour and low on effort.

Sitting at the bar is the greatest spectator sport. Being front row when you’re in the presence of the cocktail pros, it’s heaven watching those liquors and liqueurs whizzing from obscure bottles to cocktail shakers, citrus peels being singed and expressed of their oils, apothecary-like tinctures and foams and gels added for a grand finale. It’s a bloody craft is what it is. 

The thing is, though, while this sort of studied cocktail-making is a spectacle worthy of a night out, it’s not the way we’d choose to go when making our own cocktails this holiday season. For Christmas, we want the easiest cocktails possible so we can save money and, crucially, focus on family drama and eating. What the legends are doing at places like Byrdi and Maybe Sammy is something to be admired, but the other side of the coin – pure three-ingredient simplicity – is every bit as delicious and rewarding. In fact, many of the most iconic cocktails in the world are simple three-part recipes – think of the Negroni (gin, Campari, sweet red vermouth), the Manhattan (American whiskey, sweet red vermouth, Angostura bitters) or the ubiquitous Aperol Spritz (Aperol, prosecco, soda water). But what about if you want to stray from the obvious?

If you’re thinking of adding holiday cocktails to your Christmas entertaining line-up this year, consider the time- and budget-saving power of simplicity, but don’t sacrifice entertaining your guests. Below, we have 10 recipes that require just three ingredients and five seconds of prep to create one very delicious cocktail.

The classic Daiquiri is a simple three-ingredient cocktail
1. Daiquiri
Ingredients: white rum, lime juice and sugar syrup 
 
Cuba, we love you. The Caribbean island nation has given us more cocktails than we rightly deserve, with classics like the Mojito, Cuba libre, El Presidente and – best of all, if you ask us – the Daiquiri. Although the Daiquiri has evolved over the years (with the frozen, slushie-like version taking on a life of its own), the original is a simple blend of lime juice, white rum and sugar syrup shaken over ice that is fresh, zesty, sour and a little sweet. The fact that it was invented on a tropical island means this guy is a miracle for Australian Christmas cocktail parties, too. Oh, and, it’s worth remembering that the Daiquiri format is a bit of a blank canvas, so don’t be afraid to get creative. We’ve listed a few fruity twists on the classic to get you started, so have a bit of fun with it.
2. Gold Rush

Ingredients: Bourbon, lemon juice, sugar syrup 

The Whiskey Sour is a three-ingredient all-timer (if you omit the optional egg white, anyway) but the Gold Rush might just have it covered. It riffs on the OG Whiskey Sour format of bourbon whiskey, lemon juice and sugar syrup (plus the egg white if you like it fluffy), subbing in honey for sugar. The result is a rich, aromatic, sour cocktail that is dead simple and visually special enough to grace those Christmas-season tables. It’s easy to see why this was a bit of a cult hit when it landed at New York’s famed Milk & Honey cocktail bar – simple perfection.

Holding the Gold Rush cocktail, garnished with a lemon twist
Remember the Alimony is a twist on the Negroni cocktail
3. Remember the Alimony
Ingredients: Gin, dry sherry, Cynar
 
We said it before, but it’s worth repeating: the Negroni is one of the three-ingredient cocktail kings. But, much like the Daiquiri and Whiskey Sour, it’s also a template that offers endless scope for creative reinvention, as in Remember the Alimony. Another New York invention (this one from the now-closed bar The Beagle), Remember the Alimony keeps the gin but subs out vermouth (a botanically-infused fortified wine) for dry sherry (a straight up fortified), and trades bitter liqueurs, swapping Campari for the artichoke-based Cynar. It’s dry, bitter, complex and the perfect partner to salty pre-dinner nibbles this holiday season.
4. Tommy’s Margarita

Ingredients: Tequila, lime juice, agave syrup  

The Tommy’s Marg makes a strong case for messing with perfection. No one would rightly think that the original Margarita needed improving but, at the very least, the tweaks that turn the OG into Tommy’s have produced a cocktail of equal quality – and it only takes three ingredients to do it. The story is that Julio Bermejo created the cocktail at Tommy’s Mexican Restaurant in San Francisco, removing the triple sec (for cost reasons) and simple syrup (for flavour reasons) and replacing both with agave syrup. The result retains much of what’s great about the original Marg – namely, the zesty freshness of lime and subtle earthiness of tequila – but streamlines it all. 

The Tommy's Margarita swaps the sugar syrup and triple sec for agave syrup
The White Russian is made from just coffee liqueur, vodka and cream or milk
5. White Russian

Ingredients: Coffee liqueur, vodka, cream  

The White Russian occupies an interesting place in the cocktail world, sharing a corner with guys like the Brandy Alexander, Whiskey Flip and Eggnog – all creamy, silky and rich cocktails that just beg for cold nights by the fire. Like its Black Russian counterpart, the white Russian starts with a base of coffee liqueur and vodka but the addition of a little cream gives this its iconic smoothness. Thanks to the Coen brothers’ film The Big Lebowski, the White Russian has become synonymous with slackers who go bowling (it’s even on tap at The Keys in Melbourne) but we prefer to think of this as a nod to the sort of chilly northern hemisphere Christmas we’ll never get Down Under.

6. Mint Julep

Ingredients: Bourbon, mint, sugar syrup  

We haven’t been counting ice as an ingredient in this list but, with the Mint Julep, it almost qualifies as ingredient number four. The Kentucky Derby’s signature cocktail is a supernaturally fresh blend of muddled mint, sugar syrup and bourbon, traditionally served in a silver cup topped up with crushed or shaved ice. This preparation of the ice really is a key to the mint julep experience so we’d recommend bashing some up yourself – it adds a level of icy cold freshness that, along with the cocktail’s quickfire simplicity, makes it a dream for those sweltering Christmases.

The Mint Julep is a classic bourbon cocktail with just three ingredients
The bright red Bicicletta puts a twist on the Aperol Spritz
7. Bicicletta
Ingredients: Campari, white wine, soda water 
 
The Aperol Spritz has conquered us and, honestly, we all went willingly. Like flowers in spring, the sight of wine glasses topped with electric orange fizz seems to signify summer’s arrival each year and it makes sense – it is a fresh, easy-going and delicious drink. However, the format – Aperol, prosecco, soda water – is anything but set in stone and we’re big fans of the subtle changes made in the Bicicletta. Here, Aperol is swapped for the added bitterness of Campari and prosecco gets subbed out for dry white wine, while soda water stays. It’s somewhere between a Spritz, an Americano and White Sangria and we’re all about it.
8. Garibaldi
Ingredients: Campari, orange juice 
 
Surprise! This one has only two ingredients. This simple mix of Campari and orange juice bears a superficial resemblance to the Screwdriver but, while that drink’s vodka-and-OJ combo traces its origins to American GIs in World War II, the Garibaldi is a tribute to Italy’s 19th-century general Giusseppe Garibaldi. History aside, the Garibaldi is perfect for those looking for mixed drinks with a high flavour-to-effort ratio – although you can up the degree of difficulty by juicing the oranges yourself if you fancy getting the Garibaldi’s signature fluffy texture. 
The Garibaldi cocktail mixes just Campari and orange juice
Pickle brine makes all the difference in the Pickletini
9. PIckletini

Ingredients: Vodka, dry vermouth, pickle brine

Order a Martini at a bar and you’ll likely get a few follow-up questions: gin or vodka? Wet or dry? Dirty or not dirty? Where you fall on the Martini spectrum is absolutely a personal choice and it’s a big part of why the cocktail is such an enduring icon. The Pickletini adds another option in there and you’ve probably guessed what it’s based on by the name. Pickle brine – which is a vinegar-based brine – brings a mouthwatering zippiness that helps elevate the dry vermouth and vodka or gin. If you’re hoping to make an impression on your Chrissy guests, this is the way. If you’re feeling experimental, take a gander at some wilder Martini brine options here.

10. Rabo de Galo

Ingredients: Cachaça, sweet vermouth, Cynar  

Brazil’s most famous cocktail is arguably the Caipirinha – a Daiquiri-ish blend of lime, sugar and the country’s national spirit. Cachaça is distilled from sugar cane and a little similar to white rum – not least because it’s extremely versatile as a cocktail base. The Rabo de Galo (which translates as ‘tail of the rooster’) takes cachaça as its base, but goes more in a Negroni or Martini direction, adding sweet vermouth and Cynar – the same bitter artichoke amaro that pops up in the Remember the Alimony. 

The Rabo de Galo is made with the Brazilian spirit cachaça
For more Christmas cocktails ideal for your holiday table, check out our round-up of 12 festive cocktails for 2024.