French Martini with pink-red cocktail and a single raspberry.

French Martini

-

📌 Pin

French Martini

Vodka, Chambord, fresh pineapple juice. Pink, frothy, three ingredients. The 1980s vodka classic that survived the entire 2000s craft cocktail backlash because the recipe is too good to kill.

French Martini with pink-red cocktail and a single raspberry.
No ratings yet
Prep Time: 4 minutes
Total Time: 5 minutes
Vodka, Chambord raspberry liqueur, fresh pineapple juice. The 1980s pink-frothy classic that won't die.

Ingredients

  • 45 ml Vodka
  • 15 ml Chambord raspberry liqueur
  • 45 ml Fresh pineapple juice
  • 1 Raspberry, for garnish optional

Instructions

  • Add vodka, Chambord, and pineapple juice to a shaker with ice.
  • Shake hard for 15 seconds — the pineapple juice creates the signature foam.
  • Double-strain into a chilled coupe glass.
  • Garnish with a single fresh raspberry on the foam, or leave plain.

Notes

Fresh pineapple juice is the difference between a French Martini that tastes like a French Martini and one that tastes like a sad cocktail. Bottled pineapple juice doesn't foam properly. Fresh juice + hard shaking = the silky pink top.

Where it came from

The French Martini was invented in 1984 by Keith McNully (or popularised by him — the exact attribution is contested) at the Odeon and later at Balthazar in New York. It became one of the cocktails that defined 1990s and early 2000s vodka-cocktail culture, riding the wave of Cosmopolitans and Appletinis without ever being quite as ubiquitous.

It’s come back hard since 2020 because TikTok loves a pink drink and the recipe is so simple. Three ingredients, no specialist gear, and the colour photographs perfectly.

What it tastes like

Sweet pineapple up front, then the Chambord raspberry kicks in with cassis-and-blackberry depth, finishing with the vodka warmth. Frothy on top from the shaken pineapple juice. Sweet but the pineapple acidity stops it being cloying.

It’s an excellent gateway cocktail for people who think they don’t like cocktails. Sweet, fruity, accessible, photogenic. The kind of drink that converts wine drinkers.

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 Chambord

Use
Chambord (the original)
Try
Briottet Crème de Mûre (blackberry) for darker character
Why
Chambord is the canonical pour. The bottle shape is part of the brand recognition.

The pineapple juice

Use
Fresh-pressed pineapple juice (chunks blitzed in a blender, strained)
Skip
Bottled pineapple juice (won’t foam, tastes flat)
Why
Fresh juice has the enzymes that create the signature pink foam.

The vodka

Use
Smirnoff, Absolut, or any 80-proof neutral vodka
Try
Grey Goose or Belvedere for premium versions
Why
Neutral vodka lets the Chambord and pineapple do the flavour work.

Variations

Other vodka martinis and pink fruit-forward cocktails.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No Chambord?

Crème de Cassis (blackcurrant — sharper) or any raspberry liqueur (DeKuyper, Bols).

No fresh pineapple?

Tinned pineapple in juice (use the juice). Bottled pineapple juice is the worst option but better than nothing.

No vodka?

Gin makes it a French 75 (different drink). White rum makes it tropical-leaning.

Want it sweeter?

Add 7ml of simple syrup. The drink is already fairly sweet so most people don’t need this.

Want it drier?

Reduce Chambord to 10ml and pineapple to 30ml. Or add a 7ml dry vermouth.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

What is in a French Martini?

A French Martini is vodka, Chambord raspberry liqueur, and fresh pineapple juice, shaken with ice and double-strained into a chilled coupe. Standard build is 45ml vodka, 15ml Chambord, 45ml pineapple juice. Three ingredients.

Why is it called a French Martini?

The Chambord (a French raspberry liqueur made near Chambord chateau in the Loire Valley) is what makes it French. The drink itself was invented in New York in 1984 — the name is a marketing nod to the French liqueur.

How do you make a French Martini?

Add 45ml vodka, 15ml Chambord, and 45ml fresh pineapple juice to a shaker with ice. Shake hard for 15 seconds — the pineapple juice creates the signature pink foam. Double-strain into a chilled coupe. Garnish with a single raspberry or leave plain.

Why is my French Martini not foaming?

You used bottled pineapple juice, didn’t shake hard enough, or didn’t shake long enough. Fresh pineapple juice contains enzymes that create the foam when agitated. Shake hard for at least 15 seconds. Bottled juice has been pasteurised and the enzymes are dead — you’ll get little to no foam.

What does a French Martini taste like?

Sweet pineapple, then Chambord raspberry-blackberry-vanilla, then vodka warmth. Frothy texture on top. Sweet but the pineapple acidity keeps it bright.

How strong is a French Martini?

About 18-20% ABV. Vodka is 40%, Chambord is 16.5%, the pineapple juice dilutes everything. Same general strength as a Cosmopolitan.

Is a French Martini the same as a Pink Lady?

No. Pink Lady is gin-applejack-grenadine-egg white (1920s). French Martini is vodka-Chambord-pineapple (1984). Both pink, both frothy on top, but completely different drinks.

What does the foam come from?

Fresh pineapple juice contains enzymes (bromelain) that create foam when shaken hard. The same way that fresh egg white foams. Bottled, pasteurised pineapple juice has dead enzymes and won’t foam.

What food pairs with a French Martini?

Sweet desserts (cheesecake, fruit tart, panna cotta), aged cheeses, light seafood. Skip with red meat or anything heavy — the sweetness clashes.

Where can I get a French Martini?

Most cocktail bars know it. Less common at dive bars or pubs. Balthazar in NYC (the home bar of the drink) still serves it — it’s on the menu and the staff know how to make it properly.

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

More Like This

More 1990s revival cocktails worth shaking up.