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Aberdeen Angus Cocktail

Two ounces of Scotch whisky stirred with honey and lime juice in a coffee mug, topped with a final ounce of Scotch lit on fire. A spicy hot toddy from the Highlands, named for the cattle breed and built for cold-weather drinking. Sweet, citrus-bright, and slightly smoky from the whisky burn-off.

4.34 from 27 votes
Calories: 232kcal
Prep Time: 3 minutes
Total Time: 5 minutes
The Aberdeen Angus Cocktail is a bold and dramatic drink that combines the rich flavors of scotch whiskey with the sweetness of honey and the tang of lime juice. This cocktail is perfect for those who enjoy a warm and fiery beverage with a touch of elegance.

Ingredients

Instructions

Combine Ingredients:

  • In a coffee mug, stir together 2 oz scotch whiskey, 1 tbsp honey, and 2 tbsp lime juice.

Prepare the Drambuie:

  • In a separate container, warm 1 oz scotch whiskey.

Ignite and Pour:

  • Carefully ignite the warmed scotch whiskey and pour the burning liqueur into the mug.

Stir and Serve:

  • Stir rapidly to mix the ingredients and extinguish the flame. Serve immediately and enjoy the warm and fiery flavors.

Notes

The Aberdeen Angus Cocktail is a stunning drink that combines the smooth, smoky taste of scotch whiskey with the sweetness of honey and the zing of lime juice. The dramatic flaming finish not only adds a visual spectacle but also enhances the aromatic experience of the drink.
This cocktail is ideal for special occasions or whenever you want to impress your guests with a bold and memorable drink. For safety, ensure you ignite the scotch whiskey in a controlled environment and handle the flame with care.
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Estimated Nutrition:

Calories: 232kcal (12%)Carbohydrates: 10g (3%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.01gPotassium: 48mg (1%)Sugar: 10g (11%)Vitamin A: 15IUVitamin C: 9mg (11%)Calcium: 6mg (1%)Iron: 0.1mg (1%)
CourseBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
CuisineBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
KeywordBeverage Recipe, Cocktail Recipe, Drink Recipe

Where it came from

The Aberdeen Angus is a Scottish flaming hot whisky cocktail in the toddy family. The build is older than the name: warmed Scotch with honey and citrus has been a Highlands-and-Islands cold-cure for centuries. The Aberdeen Angus name fixed the recipe to a specific build with the flaming float of overproof Scotch in the early 1900s.

It sits in the hot-whisky family with the Hot Toddy, the Glayva Coffee, and the Robert Burns. All four use Scotch and a sweetener over hot water or warmed citrus. The Aberdeen Angus picks honey instead of sugar, lime instead of lemon, and adds the flaming Scotch float as theatrical signature.

Best ordered on a cold winter evening, in front of a fire, after a long walk. Not a summer drink and not a brunch cocktail.

What it tastes like

Honey sweetness on the nose, lime brightness through the middle, deep Scotch warmth on the finish. The flaming float adds a faint smoke note as the alcohol burns off. The overall impression is rounded, warming, and clean.

Around 30 percent ABV in the mug once the flaming float burns off. The honey and lime soften the read of the alcohol; the cocktail drinks gentler than the proof suggests.

The technique

In a heatproof mug, stir together two ounces of Scotch whisky, one tablespoon of honey, and two tablespoons of fresh lime juice until the honey dissolves. Warm gently in the microwave for thirty seconds or in a saucepan over low heat (do not boil).

Pour an additional one ounce of Scotch into a small ladle or spoon, ignite with a long match or barbecue lighter, and pour the flaming Scotch over the back of a bar spoon onto the surface of the mug. Wait for the flame to settle and burn off. Drink slowly while still warm.

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Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

The Scotch whisky

Use
A blended Scotch like Famous Grouse, Johnnie Walker Red, or Bell's for the base. A single malt like Bowmore or Talisker for the float (the smoke complements the burn-off).
Skip
Heavily peated Islay malts for the base. Smoke fights the honey.
Why
The base needs to carry the honey and lime without overpowering them; a blend works best. The float is where the smoke can come through, since the burn-off concentrates the flavour.

The honey

Use
Heather honey, Manuka honey, or any single-flower honey.
Skip
Processed honey blends. Different sugar curve.
Why
The honey is the load-bearing sweetener. A flavoured single-flower honey adds character; processed honey just adds sugar. The tablespoon is enough to round the lime.

The lime juice

Use
Fresh-squeezed lime juice, two tablespoons.
Skip
Lemon juice. Wrong fruit profile.
Why
Lime is the brightener. The Aberdeen Angus uses lime instead of the more common lemon to give the cocktail a sharper, more tropical citrus note that works against the honey.

Three Variations

Three real ways bartenders riff on this drink. Same idea, three different jackets.

The standard build

Aberdeen Angus, flaming float
Two ounces of Scotch warmed with honey and lime in a mug, topped with a flaming float of one ounce more Scotch.

The non-flaming build

Aberdeen Angus, no fire
Skip the flaming float. Stir three ounces of Scotch with the honey and lime in the mug. Same flavour, no stagecraft.

The Aussie summer build

Aberdeen Angus, on the rocks
Cold version: build the same ingredients in a rocks glass over crushed ice and stir gently. Drinks closer to a Whisky Sour with a honey edge.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No Scotch?

Bourbon or Irish whiskey. The cocktail loses the smoke note from the float; bourbon brings sweetness, Irish brings smoothness.

No honey?

Maple syrup or simple syrup. Maple adds its own character; simple syrup is neutral.

No fresh lime?

Bottled lime juice plus a few drops of fresh lemon. The cocktail loses brightness, gains pantry convenience.

No mug?

A heatproof glass, a teacup, or a small heat-resistant tumbler. The mug is convention; the heat resistance is what matters.

Frequently Asked Questions

Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.

What is in an Aberdeen Angus cocktail?

Two ounces of Scotch whisky, one tablespoon of honey, two tablespoons of fresh lime juice, warmed and stirred in a mug, topped with one ounce of additional Scotch lit on fire.

How strong is an Aberdeen Angus?

Around 30 percent ABV in the mug once the flaming float burns off. Three ounces of Scotch in roughly six ounces of total liquid; the honey and lime soften how the alcohol reads.

What does it taste like?

Honey sweetness on the nose, lime brightness through the middle, deep Scotch warmth on the finish. The flaming float adds a faint smoke note.

Why is it called Aberdeen Angus?

Named for the famous Scottish cattle breed from Aberdeenshire. The cocktail is a Highland tradition; the Aberdeen Angus name fixed it to a specific recipe in the early 1900s.

Is the flame necessary?

No. The flame is the stagecraft. Stir three ounces of Scotch with the honey and lime to skip the float. The flavour is similar without the smoke note from the burn-off.

What kind of Scotch should I use?

A blended Scotch for the base; a single malt with some smoke for the float. Avoid heavily peated Islay malts as the base because the smoke fights the honey.

Why lime instead of lemon?

Tradition. The Aberdeen Angus uses lime where most hot toddies use lemon, which gives the cocktail a sharper, more tropical citrus character that works against the honey.

Should I serve it hot or cold?

Hot is the standard. The cocktail is a winter drink and the warmth lets the honey-and-Scotch combination sit on the palate. A cold version exists; it drinks closer to a Whisky Sour.

What glass should I serve it in?

A heatproof mug or a heat-resistant glass. The flaming float makes a thick-walled glass safer than a thin-walled one.

What other cocktails are similar?

A Hot Toddy, a Glayva Coffee, a Robert Burns, and a Penicillin. All four use Scotch and a sweetener over warmed citrus or coffee.

DL
From the Drink Lab catalogue

Drink Lab has been collecting cocktail recipes since 2013. Some we wrote ourselves, plenty came in from readers, and the rest got passed across a bar somewhere along the way.

Last updated May 8, 2026 · 1 min read

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