-
📌 Pin

Frosty Night Cocktail

A gin and triple sec sour over crushed ice, with fresh lime juice for the citrus snap. Two ounces of gin, one of triple sec, one of lime, packed onto crushed ice in a rocks glass. Drinks like a frozen White Lady cousin: dry, citrus-forward, with the crushed ice doing the dilution work as it melts.

Frosty Night Cocktail
4.62 from 34 votes
Calories: 221kcal
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Total Time: 5 minutes
The Frosty Night Cocktail is a winter wonderland captured in a martini glass. Its perfect blend of gin, triple sec, and lime or lemon juice evokes the refreshing chill of a frosty evening. Served over crushed ice, this cocktail brings a unique, invigorating touch to your holiday festivities or cozy nights by the fireplace. Whether you're hosting a grand Christmas party or ushering in the New Year, the Frosty Night Cocktail is a versatile, elegant choice that promises to add a splash of icy zest to any winter celebration.

Ingredients

Instructions

Combine Ingredients:

  • Pour 2 oz gin, 1 oz triple sec, and 1 oz lime juice or lemon juice into a cocktail shaker filled with ice.

Shake:

  • Shake well to mix and chill the ingredients.

Strain:

  • Strain the mixture into a martini glass filled with crushed ice.

Serve:

  • Serve immediately and enjoy your Frosty Night Cocktail.

Video

Notes

For the best Frosty Night Cocktail, use freshly squeezed lime or lemon juice to enhance the citrus flavor. The combination of gin and triple sec creates a crisp and refreshing base, while the citrus juice adds a zesty kick. Adjust the amount of crushed ice to suit your preference for a colder, more refreshing drink.
This cocktail is perfect for winter parties, holiday gatherings, or any occasion where you want to enjoy a refreshing and elegant drink. Its simple preparation and delightful taste make it a standout choice for any celebration.
Join our Drink Buddy community today and discover more exclusive cocktail recipes and special offers!

Estimated Nutrition:

Calories: 221kcal (11%)Carbohydrates: 8g (3%)Saturated Fat: 0.002gPolyunsaturated Fat: 0.01gMonounsaturated Fat: 0.002gPotassium: 35mg (1%)Sugar: 8g (9%)Vitamin C: 11.6mg (14%)
CourseBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
CuisineBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
KeywordBeverage Recipe, Cocktail Recipe, Drink Recipe

Where it came from

The Frosty Night is a White Lady descendant from the modern cocktail revival of the early 2010s. Gin, triple sec and lime juice in a two-one-one ratio, packed onto crushed ice in a rocks glass instead of shaken with cubed ice. The crushed-ice format is what gives the cocktail its name and its frosty visual.

It sits in the gin-sour family with the White Lady, the Gimlet and the Bee's Knees. All four lean on gin plus citrus plus a sweetener for the cocktail balance. The Frosty Night separates itself with the crushed-ice serve, which keeps the drink colder and more diluted across the pour than a standard shaken cocktail.

Best ordered on a hot summer afternoon as a long sipping cocktail, not as a quick aperitif. The crushed ice means the drink lengthens as it melts and is built to be enjoyed slowly.

What it tastes like

Sharp lime up front, dry gin through the middle, soft triple sec sweetness on the finish. The crushed ice softens the alcohol burn and keeps the cocktail clean and refreshing without diluting the flavour too quickly.

Around 22 percent ABV in the glass once packed onto crushed ice. Two ounces of gin and one of triple sec gives the cocktail a moderate punch; the lime juice and the melting ice keep the drink approachable across the pour.

The technique

Combine two ounces of London Dry gin, one ounce of triple sec and one ounce of fresh lime juice in a shaker with cubed ice. Shake hard for ten seconds. Strain into a rocks glass packed with crushed ice. Garnish with a lime wedge.

The crushed ice is the technique. Use freshly crushed ice or a high-quality kitchen-grade pebble ice; cubed ice changes the cocktail format. The shake pre-chills and dilutes the cocktail before the crushed ice takes over the cold-and-dilution work.

Drink Buddy Exclusive

Tell us what's in your cabinet.

Our Cocktail Builder takes whatever bottles you've got and hands you every drink you can actually make tonight.

Open the Builder →

Get the Drink Buddy newsletter

One drink, one tip, one Tuesday a month.

Plus the recipes we drop before they hit the site. Zero spam.

Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

The London Dry gin

Use
Beefeater, Tanqueray London Dry, or Bombay Sapphire.
Skip
Old Tom or Plymouth gin. Sweeter or softer profile fights the cocktail balance.
Why
London Dry is the load-bearing spirit. The juniper-forward dry character carries the citrus and the triple sec without going soft; sweeter gin styles tilt the cocktail off-spec.

The triple sec

Use
Cointreau or any 40 percent ABV orange liqueur.
Skip
Curacao or grand marnier. Different sweetness curve and colour.
Why
Triple sec is the sweetener and the orange-aromatic. Cointreau at 40 percent ABV holds its character against the gin; cheaper triple sec brands at 20 percent ABV go too sweet too fast and break the dry-cocktail brief.

The crushed ice

Use
Freshly crushed ice from a Lewis bag or a quality countertop crusher.
Skip
Standard cubed ice. Different cocktail format.
Why
Crushed ice is what turns the cocktail from a White Lady cousin into a Frosty Night. The high surface area chills the cocktail faster and dilutes it more across the pour, which is the cocktail's defining character.

Three Variations

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

The standard build

Frosty Night, on crushed ice
Two ounces gin, one ounce triple sec, one ounce fresh lime juice, shaken and strained over a rocks glass packed with crushed ice.

The cucumber build

Frosty Night with cucumber
Add three thin cucumber wheels to the shaker. Pulls the cocktail toward a Hendrick's gin and tonic profile and adds a vegetal lift.

The frozen build

Frosty Night, blended
Combine the same ingredients with crushed ice in a blender. Blend smooth and pour into a rocks glass. Drinks like a slushie cousin of the standard build.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No London Dry gin?

A botanical-forward gin like Hendrick's or Plymouth. Different flavour profile but holds the citrus-cocktail brief.

No triple sec?

A teaspoon of simple syrup plus a quarter ounce of orange juice. Loses some of the orange aromatic; holds the sweetness and citrus.

No fresh lime juice?

Bottled lime juice as a last resort. Different acidity curve. Avoid lime cordial; too sweet for this cocktail balance.

No crushed ice?

Cubed ice in a rocks glass. Different cocktail format; closer to a White Lady on the rocks than a Frosty Night.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

What is in a Frosty Night cocktail?

Two ounces of London Dry gin, one ounce of triple sec and one ounce of fresh lime juice, shaken and strained over crushed ice in a rocks glass.

Why is it called a Frosty Night?

The crushed-ice serve gives the cocktail a frosty look in the glass, with the ice forming a dome above the rim as the drink melts. The name describes the visual and the cold-and-citrus character.

How strong is a Frosty Night?

Around 22 percent ABV in the glass once packed onto crushed ice. Two ounces of gin and one of triple sec gives the cocktail a moderate punch; the dilution from the melting crushed ice softens the strength across the pour.

What does it taste like?

Sharp lime up front, dry gin through the middle, soft triple sec sweetness on the finish. Reads like a colder, more diluted White Lady; clean, dry and citrus-forward.

What gin should I use?

London Dry gin like Beefeater, Tanqueray or Bombay Sapphire. The juniper-forward dry character carries the citrus and the triple sec without going soft; sweeter Old Tom or Plymouth gin tilts the cocktail off-spec.

Can I shake it without crushed ice?

Yes, but it changes the cocktail. Without the crushed ice the drink is closer to a standard White Lady served up. The crushed ice is the defining feature of a Frosty Night.

What glass should I use?

A rocks glass packed with crushed ice. The wide mouth lets the ice form a dome above the rim, which is the visual signature of the cocktail.

What other cocktails are similar?

A White Lady, a Gimlet, a Bee's Knees and a Last Word. All four lean on gin plus citrus and sit in the dry-sour cocktail family.

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

More Like This

More drinks in the same family when the night calls for them.