Skip to main content

5 fun ways to sneak whiskey and other booze into your breakfast foods

Who doesn't want more booze in their breakfast foods?

People toasting over plates
bodiaphoto/Adobe Stock

Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. That’s how it goes, right? Our question is what exactly the word important refers to in this old cliché. Is it meant to mean that every breakfast should be an extravagant feast, a celebration of waking up to yet another unpromised sunrise here on this beautiful earth? Should we celebrate to the fullest with an abundance of delicious foods and drinks? If so, we wholeheartedly agree. If, on the other hand, it’s meant to mean that breakfast should be healthy fuel so our bodies start the day feeling good…sure, that works, too. (Yawn.) We like the first option better.

In that spirit of a celebratory breakfast, whether you’re celebrating a holiday, a breakfast-in-bed anniversary, special house guests, or Monday, cocktails needn’t be the only way to indulge. These are some of our favorite unique ways to add a little of that celebratory spirit to your favorite breakfast foods in the form of booze.

You’re welcome.

Closeup of butter on bread
Crazy Cake/Unsplash

Mix liquors into butter for toast

If you’ve never tried Vodka butter, oh, you are missing out. This tasty food trend saw a bit of time in the spotlight for a while last year, and it quickly became one of our favorite spreads for toast, baguettes, fish, sandwiches, and just about anything else you can imagine.

To make this boozy butter, simply combine two sticks of room temperature butter and 3 ounces of vodka in your food processor, and whizz until the mixture is creamy and smooth. Pair with absolutely anything on your breakfast buffet for rave reviews all around.

If you aren’t a Vodka fan, this recipe also works beautifully with gin, whiskey, or any other spirit on your bar cart.

Fruit Salad
Crystal Jo/Unsplash

Drunken fruit salad

Fruit salad is a great breakfast option. You know what makes it even better? Rum.

For this deliciously saucy salad, stir about five cups of your favorite combination of fruits with 1/2 cup rum and 1/2 cup orange juice. Let the mixture refrigerate for about three hours, then dish into individual bowls, top with whipped cream, and enjoy!

We like to use a wide variety of fruits for their colors and textures, but be careful when using more delicate berries such as raspberries. They will fill with the liquid mixture and may become messy.

If you’re short on time, cut the fruit pieces smaller as they will infuse more quickly than larger pieces.

Person making Bananas Foster
H. Michael Miley/Flickr

Bananas Foster crepes

The beautiful thing about breakfast foods is that many of them are just desserts in disguise. We’re looking at you, muffins. Given that fact, we doubt anyone would bat an eyelash at Bananas Foster for breakfast, especially if it’s a holiday or a special get-together. To make it more breakfast-appropriate, all you have to do is swap out the ice cream for some crepes. Done and done. So bust out that bottle of rum and show off those flambé skills. Just watch your eyebrows.

French toast
Yeh Xintong/Unsplash

Whiskey French toast

This one just makes sense. Especially if you consider the fact that cinnamon whiskey is a thing (thank you, Fireball). This spirit is just asking to be a part of Saturday morning French toast with its alluring, spicy warmth and kisses of cinnamon. When preparing your regular French toast recipe, simply pour a little whiskey into the egg mixture for a burst of adults-only spice that will have everyone begging for seconds.

Serve this delicious French toast with a simple drizzle of maple syrup, or our favorite homemade butterscotch sauce for an extra indulgent sweet treat.

Whipped cream
Sorin Gheorghita/Unsplash

Alcohol-infused whipped creams

This is one of those tricks that’s great for just about anything. Dessert, breakfast, cocktails, hot chocolate, Valentine’s Day fun, you name it. By infusing homemade whipped cream with your favorite spirit, you’re not only giving this already delicious food a fun secret, but you’re also upping its sophistication and complexity. Depending on the spirit you choose, whipped cream can completely transform from a childhood favorite into an elegant and complex ingredient, full of nuanced flavor and depth. You can use almost any flavor you like for whipped cream, but our favorites include bourbon, rum, Irish cream, and Kahlua.

To make alcohol-infused whipped cream, simply combine 1 cup of heavy cream, 4 tablespoons of powdered sugar, and 2 tablespoons of your favorite spirit in the bowl of your stand mixer. Using the whisk attachment, whip the mixture until medium peaks form.

Garnish any of your favorite boozy breakfasts with an added dollop of whiskey whipped cream for a dish that will not soon be forgotten.

Editors' Recommendations

Lindsay Parrill
Lindsay is a graduate of California Culinary Academy, Le Cordon Bleu, San Francisco, from where she holds a degree in…
The best sipping whiskeys, ranked
We ranked the best sipping whiskeys
whiskey

It might seem like an oversimplification, but two kinds of whiskey exist. First are the whisk(e)ys that are cheaper, less mature, and better suited for mixing into your favorite cocktails than drinking on their own. The second kind of whiskey is so complex, nuanced, long-matured, and flavorful that it deserves to be sipped on the rocks or with a splash or two of water. The latter is what we’re most concerned with today.

But that’s not all. For those unaware, whiskey is an all-encompassing term for a variety of whisk(e)ys, including single malt Scotch whisky (only the US and Ireland use the ‘e’ in whiskey), bourbon whiskey, Irish whiskey, rye whiskey, Canadian whisky, Japanese whiskey, and others from all over the world. This means that you have a lot to choose from when it comes to sipping whiskeys.

Read more
This is how to make a Bloody Bull – a better, beefier Bloody Mary recipe
Here's a different version of a Bloody Mary
Brennan's Bloody Bull.

Born in the great city of New Orleans, the Bloody Bull is the beefier cousin of the Bloody Mary. Treated to some meaty broth, the drink is super savory and begging to accompany your brunch plans.

The original hails from Brennan's, a colorful creole restaurant that's been on the scene since 1946. There are riffs of course, with bartenders treating the drink to everything from a bit of Guinness to a host of different spice blends.

Read more
This is why your bourbon tastes sweet even though there’s no added sugar
Why does bourbon taste sweet?
Whiskey glass

There’s a reason America’s “native spirit” is so popular. Bourbon is well-known for its mellow, easy-drinking, sweet flavor. For those new to the truly American whiskey, to be considered a bourbon, all distillers must follow a few rules and regulations.

To get the title of bourbon whiskey, the spirit must be made from a mash bill of at least 51% corn; it must be aged in new, charred oak barrels, it must be made in the US (but not just Kentucky, regardless of what a bourbon purist might tell you), distilled to a maximum of 160-proof, barreled at a maximum of 125-proof, and bottled at a minimum of 80-proof.

Read more