Cocktail Menu Logic: How to Build a Drink List That Covers 90% of Guests
Von Cocktail Ceremony
3 min Lesezeit
A good cocktail menu isn't a list of drinks - it's a system of moods. The seven core directions that cover almost any guest, and how to build a balanced list around them.
A good cocktail menu is not a list. It's a system. When you throw twelve random drinks on a page, you're gambling that a guest finds something they want. When you build around structure, you're guaranteeing it - because your guest isn't really choosing a drink, they're choosing a mood, and most people want something familiar in feeling even when the drink itself is new.
Whether you run a bar or just want a home list that never leaves a guest stuck, here's the framework the best menus quietly follow. It works because it's built on balance, not on a pile of recipes.
Build around directions, not drinks
Strong menus are organized around a few core directions - each one a mood, a texture, a moment. Cover these seven and you've answered almost anything a guest might want:
Refreshing - light, easy, low-commitment. Mojito, Basil Smash. The "I don't know, something crisp" order.
Strong - spirit-forward and slow. Negroni, Old Fashioned. For the guest who wants depth and no juice.
Sour - balanced, approachable, universal. Pornstar Martini, Clover Club. The center of gravity of any list; the safest crowd-pleaser.
Spritz - low-alcohol, bubbly, long. Aperol Spritz, Hugo. The daytime, session, "I'm not really drinking" choice.
Dessert - soft, round, sweet. White Russian, Amaretto Sour. The nightcap and the sweet tooth.
Spicy / smoky - bold and characterful. Spicy Margarita, Moscow Mule. For the guest who wants an edge.
Highball - simple, precise, endlessly drinkable. Paloma, Gin & Tonic. The effortless order that still has to be made well.
Seven directions, and you've covered the refreshing crowd, the spirit-heads, the sweet tooths, the spritz-and-chat table, and everyone in between.
Why this works
Two reasons.
For the guest, it removes anxiety. Nobody reads twenty cocktails and feels helped - they feel lost. But "do I want something refreshing, strong, or sour?" is a question anyone can answer in a second. A structured menu guides without a single word of explanation.
For you, it's efficient. Seven directions is a small, deliberate list - which means fewer ingredients to stock, less waste, and a bar that runs tight. You're not showing off range; you're covering needs. That's the difference between a menu that looks impressive and one that actually sells.
How to fill the slots
You don't need seven wildly different builds - you need seven different feelings. Two practical rules:
Twist the familiar. Most successful menu drinks are a small, smart variation on a classic the guest already trusts. A house Margarita, a seasonal spritz, a signature sour. Familiar in feeling, fresh in detail.
Share your ingredients. Build the seven so they lean on the same core spirits and house-made syrups, and your prep stays lean. It's the same logic as the 12-bottle bar: a small, overlapping set does most of the work.
And every one of them lives or dies on execution - fresh juice, measured pours, proper ice. A brilliant menu made carelessly still disappoints (see our 3 mistakes).
The tools behind a working menu
A structured menu only pays off if every drink on it is made consistently, service after service. That's a jigger, a shaker, a good strainer, and a scale for repeatable syrups - the foundation kit that turns a plan into a reliable pour. The Starter Pack and the wider bar tools collection have what a working bar needs.
Everything to run a real cocktail program is in stock at Cocktail Ceremony.
The takeaway
A cocktail menu isn't a list of drinks - it's a system of moods. Cover the seven core directions (refreshing, strong, sour, spritz, dessert, spicy/smoky, highball) and you've answered 90% of your guests before they've finished reading. Build around directions, lean on shared ingredients, and execute every drink with the same care.
Because a great menu isn't about showing range. It's about making the choice feel natural - and the drink taste inevitable.