Fluffy Duck cocktail in a tall glass with creamy pastel yellow colour, frothy soda head, orange wheel and cherry garnish

Fluffy Duck

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Fluffy Duck

Gin, advocaat, OJ, cream, topped with lemonade. The Aussie pub favourite that drinks like a creamy boozy orange-and-vanilla dessert. Looks pastel-yellow and soft. Tastes like trouble.

Fluffy Duck cocktail in a tall glass with creamy pastel yellow colour, frothy soda head, orange wheel and cherry garnish
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Prep Time: 4 minutes
Total Time: 4 minutes
Gin, advocaat, OJ, cream, topped with soda. The Aussie pub-pour version of a cocktail your nan probably ordered. Creamy, fluffy, sweet, tastes like a creamy citrus dessert. Goes down very fast.

Ingredients

  • 30 ml gin London Dry
  • 30 ml advocaat egg yolk and brandy liqueur
  • 30 ml fresh orange juice
  • 30 ml cream pure or thickened
  • 90 ml lemonade or soda water to top
  • 1 wheel orange garnish
  • 1 maraschino cherry optional, garnish

Instructions

  • Fill a hurricane or tall highball glass with ice.
  • Add gin, advocaat, fresh orange juice and cream to a shaker with ice.
  • Shake hard for 10 to 12 seconds (the cream needs to froth).
  • Strain into the prepared glass.
  • Top with cold lemonade or soda water for a frothy head.
  • Garnish with an orange wheel and a maraschino cherry.

Notes

Shake hard. The cream needs to whip up so the drink gets that "fluffy" head when you top with soda. A weak shake leaves it flat and gloopy. The point of the drink is the texture.

Where it came from

The Fluffy Duck is an Australian and British pub cocktail that took root in the 1960s and 1970s, hitting peak popularity in the 1980s alongside other pub-pour favourites like the Snowball and the Brandy Alexander. Named for its appearance: pale yellow, fluffy white foam on top, looks like a cartoon duckling.

Two main versions exist. The Aussie pub-pour version uses gin, advocaat, OJ, cream and lemonade or soda. The British “Fluffy Duck” sometimes uses rum and Cointreau instead. The Australian one is the more enduring template and still appears on RSL menus.

Why advocaat

Advocaat is a Dutch egg yolk and brandy liqueur, thick, custard-yellow, very sweet. It was a 1960s and 1970s British and Australian household staple (often mixed with lemonade as a Snowball). In the Fluffy Duck, advocaat does the heavy lifting: it adds eggy richness, vanilla and the signature pale-yellow colour. Without it, the drink loses its character.

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Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

The advocaat

Use
Warninks (the most common) or Bols Advocaat
Skip
Eggnog, much thinner and sweeter, doesn’t hold the same texture
Why
Advocaat is essentially custard with brandy. It is the soul of the drink.

The cream

Use
Pure cream or thickened cream
Skip
Light cream or milk, too thin to froth properly
Why
You need fat to whip up under shaking. Thin dairy goes watery.

The top

Use
Lemonade (Sprite, 7Up) for the classic Aussie pub version
Try
Soda water for a less sweet version
Why
Lemonade is the original; soda water is a modern lighter spin. Both work.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No advocaat?

Eggnog plus a teaspoon of brandy gets close but is sweeter. Skip if you want a “Duck” without the eggs.

No gin?

White rum makes a Bahama Mama cousin. Vodka works but loses the botanical lift.

No fresh OJ?

Bottled is fine for this drink. The cream and advocaat hide most juice differences.

Lactose-free?

Coconut cream works (changes the flavour but holds the texture).

Want it stronger?

Add 15ml more gin. The drink takes the boost without much change in profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

What is in a Fluffy Duck cocktail?

Gin, advocaat, fresh orange juice, cream and lemonade or soda water. Standard build is 30ml each of gin, advocaat, OJ and cream, shaken and strained into a tall glass, then topped with 90ml of lemonade. Garnished with an orange wheel and a cherry.

Why is it called a Fluffy Duck?

Named for its appearance: pale yellow with a fluffy white foam head from the shaken cream and the topped lemonade. The drink looks like a cartoon duckling. The name has been around since at least the 1960s.

What is advocaat?

Advocaat is a Dutch liqueur made from egg yolks, sugar and brandy. It looks like custard, has a vanilla and brandy flavour, and is the signature ingredient in cocktails like the Snowball, Bombardino and Fluffy Duck. Warninks is the most-sold brand worldwide.

Where is the Fluffy Duck popular?

Australia and the UK, primarily. Common on RSL Club, suburban pub and bistro menus. The Aussie version is the gin, advocaat, OJ and cream build. The British version sometimes uses rum and Cointreau. Both are called Fluffy Duck.

Is the Fluffy Duck a creamy cocktail?

Yes. The cream and advocaat give it a smooth, custardy texture. It drinks closer to an alcoholic milkshake or a light dessert cocktail than a typical highball.

How strong is a Fluffy Duck?

About 8 to 10 percent ABV in the glass. The cream, juice and lemonade dilute the spirits significantly. Tastes weaker than it is, which is the entire trap.

Can I make a Fluffy Duck without advocaat?

You can, but it stops being a Fluffy Duck. Eggnog with a splash of brandy is the closest substitute. Without the egg yolk and vanilla character, the drink loses its identity.

What food goes with a Fluffy Duck?

Light desserts: pavlova, lemon tart, vanilla ice cream, fruit salad. Also works as a brunch drink with French toast or pancakes.

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

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