Bourbon
Hot Toddy
A classic hot toddy is a perfect way to warm up on a cold evening—and it only requires three ingredients and some boiling water.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Mint Julep
A classic whiskey cocktail made with bourbon and mint is even more fragrant when you flavor your simple syrup.
By Cindy Kebbell
Lane Cake
A classic Southern cake, after winning first prize at the county fair in Columbus, Georgia, Lane Cake also earned the name “Prize Cake.”
By Cheryl Day
Manhattan
The Manhattan is a classic cocktail made with whiskey and sweet vermouth.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Bourbon Chicken Liver Pâté
Though this pâté can be eaten the day it's made, we find it even more flavorful when made one or two days ahead. If you use several small ramekins instead of a pâté crock or terrine, you may need more clarified butter to seal the tops.
By Shelley Wiseman
Rosemary-Bourbon Glazed Ham
Filled with rich bourbon notes and glazed with rosemary, brown sugar, mustard, and bourbon, this festive ham makes for a delicious and stunning holiday centerpiece.
By Elizabeth Van Lierde
Bourbon Pecan Pie
When I was growing up in Louisiana, fall meant pecans littering the ground from the stately trees in our suburban neighborhood. On walks home from the bus stop, we would dip into various neighbors’ backyards and gather as many pecans as would fit in our pockets and backpacks. My favorite thing to do once all the nuts had been shelled (by hand!) was to make pecan pie. This recipe uses cane syrup, which adds a more complex sweetness than corn syrup. Plus, by toasting the pecans, you bring out the .…
By Vallery Lomas
Bourbon Butterscotch Ice Cream
Buttery brown sugar caramel flavors this ice cream, with an added boost from bourbon.
By Dana Cree
A Peach for the Porch
Is there a better combo than a peach, a porch, and some port-finish bourbon? In this whiskey sour riff, an easy vanilla-honey syrup compliments the flavor of the whiskey and peach nectar.
A Little Smoke
Enjoy your bourbon enhanced with a touch of chocolate and sweet-and-savory spice notes. This cocktail is great with barbecue.
Cinnamon Cooler
This bourbon cocktail brings warming spices into a crisp cooler. For the cinnamon apple spice tea, steep one cinnamon apple spice tea bag (such as Celestial Seasonings) in six ounces hot water for 2 minutes. Let cool to room temperature before using.
Kentucky Buck
Strawberries shine in this tall, refreshing, gingery cocktail, made with bourbon, fresh lemon, muddled berries, and spicy ginger beer.
By Adrienne Stillman
Thunderer
This easy-to-make cocktail was one of the earlier drinks I created for the bar menu at our Brentwood restaurant, Tavern. It is made with a honey syrup infused with fresh ginger and chiles de árbol, so you get those flavors and that heat in the cocktail. I added grapefruit to make it tangy.
By Christiaan Röllich
Old Pepper
Warm up with this concoction of bourbon, hot sauce, and Worcestershire sauce. It’s not a Southern classic, but it certainly drinks like one.
By Alba Huerta
Have Your Thanksgiving Wine and Mix This Cocktail With It Too
Riesling meets apple cider and bourbon in a sophisticated cocktail that goes well with turkey, stuffing, and more.
By Maggie Hoffman
Paradise Apple
In this cocktail, Riesling (Marrero favors dry Rieslings from the Finger Lakes or Alsace) adds brightness to a mix of fresh apple cider and bourbon. Blending dried figs with honey syrup gives you a sweetener that’s full of earthy, nutty notes, and a small amount of floral liqueur gives the tart, refreshing drink a subtle luscious quality.
By Lynnette Marrero
Newton's Law
Apple butter is a brilliant shortcut to a robustly flavored fall cocktail. Spiced with cinnamon and sometimes ginger, nutmeg, or clove, it brings in every essential autumn note in a teaspoon or two.
By Maggie Hoffman
Turmeric Hot Toddy
This golden-hued turmeric hot toddy from Claire Sprouse of Brooklyn’s Hunky Dory is wonderfully savory from the combination of nutty Amontillado sherry and earthy turmeric.
By Claire Sprouse
Bourbon Fruit Tea Punch
This spiked fruit tea is intentionally not too boozy, but you can also just leave the bourbon out.
By Tailor, Nashville, TN