Thursday, February 12, 2026

My New Weekend Obsession: The Midnight Martini

 
There’s something magical about lazy weekends. The kind where you don’t set an alarm, the couch becomes your kingdom, and you lose yourself in an Italian series with subtitles flying across the screen. That’s exactly the mood I was in last weekend when I decided it was time to treat myself to something really special.

I’ve loved coffee-based cocktails for years—they’re basically dessert in a glass—but I wanted to try something a little different. Enter: the Midnight Martini. Yes, you make the rich cinnamon syrup yourself, but trust me, it’s stupidly easy and transforms the drink into something dark, cozy, warm, and downright addictive. I made a batch ahead of time (it keeps in the fridge for weeks), and when Saturday rolled around, I shook up a double in my favorite glass. Did I regret going big? Absolutely not. Zero regrets. Just pure, velvety bliss.

The combo is perfection: bold cold espresso, smooth vodka, a touch of coffee liqueur, creamy chocolate liqueur, and that gorgeous cinnamon sweetness tying it all together. It’s rich without being heavy, caffeinated enough to keep the binge going, but boozy enough to feel like a real indulgence—perfect for those late-night, mood-lit moments.

If you’re a coffee lover who also appreciates a good cocktail, this Midnight Martini is going to become your weekend ritual too. Prep the syrup on a quiet evening, stash it in the fridge, and thank me later when you’re sipping one while the plot twists unfold.

 Here’s my simplified take on the recipe—no fuss, no intimidation, just delicious results.

Midnight Martini

First, make the cinnamon syrup

 (enough for about 6 drinks—make it once and enjoy for weeks)

½ c. sugar

¼ c. water

1 cinnamon stick (about 2–3 inches) or ½ t. ground cinnamon

Put everything in a small saucepan. Heat over medium, stirring until the sugar completely dissolves (takes about 2–3 minutes). Don’t let it boil hard—just gentle heat. Take it off the stove and let it cool completely (20–30 minutes). Fish out the cinnamon stick (or leave ground cinnamon in if you used that). Pour into a small jar and refrigerate. Done!

For each cocktail (make a double like I did!)

2 oz. cold espresso or strong cold brew

2 oz. vodka

1 oz. Kahlúa

1 oz. Mozart liqueur

1 oz. cinnamon syrup

Plenty of ice

Pop your martini or coupe glass in the freezer for 5–10 minutes to get it nice and cold.

Add all the liquids (espresso, vodka, liqueurs, syrup) to a cocktail shaker.

 Fill the shaker halfway with ice.

 Shake hard for 15–20 seconds until the shaker feels freezing cold and frosty on the outside.

 Strain into your chilled glass (hold back the ice).

 Garnish if you’re feeling fancy: 3 coffee beans on top, a dusting of cinnamon or grated chocolate, or even a half-moon of chocolate shavings.

Sip slowly… or not so slowly. Either way, enjoy every velvety, cinnamon-kissed sip.

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5 comments:

  1. I've never had any problem with alcohol...but this might shatter that achievement! lolol
    hugs
    Donna

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  2. This looks luscious, I would get myself into BIG trouble.

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  3. First let me say that I love your martini class and I give this martini and A+ yum !!

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    1. I love that martini glass too. I got four of them at Pier One before they closed their stores.

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  4. Pattie! My goodness this looks luscious. That cinnamon syrup is worth its weight in gold. Next time I'm in Specs I'll look for the Mozart liqueur - yum!

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