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Espresso Martini

Invented in 1983 to wake someone up and mess them up, in that order. The Espresso Martini had a moment, then another moment, then a comeback, then it never left. Three hundred thousand people Google this drink every month. Done properly, it earns its place.

Espresso Martini
4.38 from 35 votes
Calories: 260kcal
Prep Time: 3 minutes
Total Time: 3 minutes
The Espresso Martini is a popular cocktail that is loved for its bold coffee flavor and energizing caffeine kick. The drink has a dark brown color, a smooth and creamy texture, and a strong coffee aroma that makes it irresistible to coffee and cocktail lovers alike.
The Espresso Martini is a classic cocktail that is loved for its bold coffee flavor and energizing caffeine kick. Whether you're looking for a morning pick-me-up or an evening treat, the Espresso Martini is sure to satisfy. With its unique combination of coffee and alcohol, it's no wonder why this drink has become so popular in recent years. So next time you're in the mood for a cocktail, consider giving the Espresso Martini a try.

Ingredients

Instructions

Prepare the Shaker:

  • Fill a cocktail shaker with ice cubes.

Combine Ingredients:

  • Add 2 oz of vodka, 1 oz of coffee liqueur, 1 oz of cold coffee, and 0.5 oz of sugar syrup to the shaker.

Shake:

  • Shake the mixture vigorously to combine the ingredients and chill the cocktail.

Strain and Serve:

  • Strain the mixture into a chilled cocktail glass.

Garnish (Optional):

  • Garnish with a few coffee beans for an elegant touch.

Video

Notes

The Espresso Martini is a classic cocktail that has earned its place in the hearts of coffee and cocktail lovers alike. Its bold flavor, creamy texture, and energizing caffeine kick make it a perfect choice for any time of day. Give this delicious cocktail a try and experience the perfect blend of coffee and vodka in every sip. Cheers!

Estimated Nutrition:

Calories: 260kcal (13%)Carbohydrates: 18g (6%)Saturated Fat: 1g (6%)Potassium: 23mg (1%)Sugar: 17g (19%)Calcium: 2mgIron: 1mg (6%)
CourseBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
CuisineBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
KeywordBeverage Recipe, Cocktail Recipe, Drink Recipe

Where it came from

London bartender Dick Bradsell created the Espresso Martini in 1983 at the Soho Brasserie. The story is that a young model walked up to the bar and asked for something that would ‘wake me up and then mess me up’. Bradsell delivered. The drink was originally called the Vodka Espresso, then the Pharmaceutical Stimulant, before settling on the Espresso Martini we know today.

It went mainstream in the 2000s, faded slightly in the 2010s as craft cocktails took over, then came roaring back from 2020 onwards. Three hundred thousand monthly searches in the US alone in 2025.

What it tastes like

Bitter coffee up front, sweet caramel coffee-liqueur in the middle, smooth vodka warmth on the finish. The signature is the foam: a creamy half-inch of crema sitting on top, made from the espresso oils and the air shaken into the drink.

Three coffee beans on the surface as garnish, traditional. The number is supposedly for health, wealth, and happiness. Mostly it just looks correct.

The technique

Pull a fresh single shot of espresso (30ml). NOT cold brew, NOT instant, NOT cooled coffee. The crema from the espresso shot is what makes the foam. Without it, the drink works but the crown disappears.

Combine 50ml vodka, 30ml fresh hot espresso, 25ml coffee liqueur, 10ml simple syrup in a shaker with plenty of ice. Shake hard for 15-20 seconds – longer than a typical cocktail. The shake is what builds the foam.

Double-strain into a chilled coupe or martini glass. Garnish with three coffee beans. Drink within five minutes – the foam settles fast.

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Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

Espresso

What it is
A 30ml shot of espresso pulled from real coffee beans through a real espresso machine. Either freshly pulled (best) or made from a high-pressure stovetop Moka pot (acceptable).
Why we use it here
It is half the flavour and 100% of the foam. Cold brew has no crema and produces a flat drink.
Drink Lab pick
Whatever your local roaster does well. Medium-dark espresso roasts work best. Avoid super-light coffee – too sour.
Substitute
Strong stovetop coffee made hot, then briefly chilled before shaking. Pour the espresso while hot if making a single drink, before shaking – the temperature shift creates better foam.

Coffee Liqueur

What it is
Most often Kahlua (Mexican, rum-based, sweetest), or Tia Maria (Jamaican, slightly drier). Mr Black is the modern premium option, drier and stronger.
Why we use it here
Adds depth, sweetness, and structure. Without it the drink is a vodka coffee, and vodka coffee is sad.
Drink Lab pick
Mr Black if you want craft-bar quality. Kahlua if you want classic. Tia Maria if you find Kahlua too sweet.
Substitute
Skip the coffee liqueur and double the simple syrup – works in a pinch, but the depth is gone.

Variations

Espresso Martini riffs that earned their menu spot.

What if I don’t have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No espresso machine?

Stovetop Moka pot. AeroPress works at a stretch. Instant coffee is a last resort and tastes like one.

No vodka?

White rum gives you a Carajillo-adjacent variation. Tequila is a bad idea here.

No coffee liqueur?

Double the simple syrup and add a teaspoon of cocoa powder. Not the same drink but rescues a craving.

No simple syrup?

5ml maple syrup, 5ml honey, or 5ml of any sweet liqueur (amaretto, Frangelico).

Frequently Asked Questions

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

What is in an Espresso Martini?
50ml vodka, 30ml hot fresh espresso, 25ml coffee liqueur (Kahlua or similar), 10ml simple syrup. Shaken hard with ice, strained into a chilled coupe.
Why does an Espresso Martini have foam on top?
The crema from a fresh espresso shot, combined with hard shaking, builds the foam. Cold brew or pre-cooled coffee will not produce the same crown.
Is an Espresso Martini strong?
Yes. ABV around 22% in the glass, plus around 65mg of caffeine from the espresso. The combination is the point.
Can you use cold brew in an Espresso Martini?
You can but it does not produce the iconic foam. Cold brew has no crema. If you must use cold brew, use a higher concentration and shake harder for longer.
What is the best vodka for an Espresso Martini?
Anything clean and neutral. Smirnoff, Absolut, Grey Goose all work. Premium vodka is wasted in this drink because the espresso dominates the flavour.
Who invented the Espresso Martini?
London bartender Dick Bradsell at the Soho Brasserie in 1983. He made it for a young model who asked for something that would ‘wake me up and then mess me up’.
Why three coffee beans on top?
Tradition. Three beans symbolise health, wealth, and happiness. Mostly it just looks right.
How do you keep the foam from collapsing?
Shake harder, shake longer, double-strain through a fine mesh. Drink within five minutes. The foam will always settle eventually – that is normal.
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 April 26, 2026 · 1 min read