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Lychee Martini Recipe

Chilled lychee martini in a coupe glass with lychee garnish on a cocktail pick on a pale stone surface.

If you have a can of lychees and a bottle of vodka, you are five minutes away from a pale, glossy lychee martini that smells floral, tastes bright, and feels far more elegant than the effort it takes.

This is the lychee martini people wanted the old version to be: still pretty, still fragrant, still a little nostalgic, but colder and cleaner. It is a good drink for people who want something beautiful without wanting something sugary.

Canned lychee syrup gives you the flavor base, the whole fruit becomes the garnish, and a small splash of dry vermouth keeps the finish crisp. This is the kind of cocktail that makes a small dinner feel planned, even if all you did was chill the glasses and open a can of lychees.

Make this simple vodka version first. Once that glass tastes right, the rest is just mood: gin for floral, puree for body, pear for elegance, or sparkling water for a zero-proof version.

Lychee Martini at a Glance

This cocktail takes about 5 minutes, serves 1, and is best shaken hard with ice until very cold. Use 2 oz vodka, 3/4 to 1 oz canned lychee syrup, 1/2 oz fresh lime juice, and 1/4 oz dry vermouth. Start with 3/4 oz syrup if your can tastes very sweet.

Prep Time5 minutes
Yield1 cocktail
MethodShake with ice
Best BaseCanned lychee syrup

The Best Lychee Martini Ratio

Think of the base as 2 oz vodka, about 1 oz lychee, and 1/2 oz citrus, with a small dry accent.

IngredientAmount
Vodka2 oz / 60 ml
Canned lychee syrup3/4 to 1 oz / 22 to 30 ml
Fresh lime juice1/2 oz / 15 ml
Dry vermouth1/4 oz / 7.5 ml
IceEnough to fill the shaker halfway
Lychees for garnish1 to 2 canned or fresh lychees
No-table version

2 oz vodka, 3/4 to 1 oz lychee syrup, 1/2 oz lime juice, and 1/4 oz dry vermouth. Shake with ice for 15 to 20 seconds, strain into a chilled glass, and garnish with lychee.

The MasalaMonk lychee martini rule

Lychee for aroma, lime for lift, vermouth for restraint. Use dry vermouth for the default version. Choose Cointreau only if you want a brighter, slightly rounder bar-style glass.

Tested balance note

I prefer 3/4 oz lychee syrup when the canned syrup is thick and very sweet, and the full 1 oz when the syrup tastes lighter. The 1/4 oz dry vermouth is small, but it makes the finish noticeably cleaner.

A quick measure note: 1/4 oz is about 1 1/2 teaspoons, and 1/2 oz is about 1 tablespoon.

Graphic showing a lychee martini ratio with vodka, lychee syrup, lime juice, and dry vermouth.
Use this ratio as the first-glass baseline; adjust only the syrup after tasting your canned lychees.

Lychee Martini Recipe Card

Balanced Lychee Martini

This is the version to make first: vodka, canned lychee syrup, fresh lime, dry vermouth, ice, and a simple lychee garnish.

Prep5 minutes
Serves1 cocktail
GlassCoupe or martini
MethodShaken

Ingredients

  • 2 oz / 60 ml vodka
  • 3/4 to 1 oz / 22 to 30 ml canned lychee syrup
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml fresh lime juice
  • 1/4 oz / 7.5 ml dry vermouth
  • Ice, enough to fill the shaker halfway
  • 1 to 2 canned or fresh lychees, for garnish

Method

  1. Chill a coupe or martini glass.
  2. Add vodka, lychee syrup, lime juice, and dry vermouth to a shaker.
  3. Add ice and shake hard for 15 to 20 seconds.
  4. Strain into the chilled glass.
  5. Garnish with one or two lychees and serve right away.

Optional adjustments: Use lemon instead of lime for a softer finish, Cointreau instead of dry vermouth for a rounder citrus note, lychee puree for fuller body, or a tiny pinch of salt if the drink tastes flat.

Classic vodka lychee martini in a stemmed glass with lychee garnish and bar tools nearby.
The classic vodka version is the baseline for judging sweetness, citrus, and dilution before you change the recipe.

Want to change the mood of the drink after this first glass? Go to Choose Your Version or jump straight to the variation section.

How to Make a Lychee Martini

1. Chill the glass

Place a martini glass or coupe in the freezer for 5 to 10 minutes. If you do not have time, fill the glass with ice water while you make the cocktail, then empty it before pouring. A warm lychee martini tastes heavier than a well-chilled one.

Choose a coupe if you are serving guests because it is easier to carry. A martini glass gives the drink that sharper classic look.

2. Add the ingredients to a shaker

Add vodka, canned lychee syrup, fresh lime juice, and dry vermouth to a cocktail shaker. If you are using puree, muddled fresh lychee, or lychee liqueur, add it here.

Hand pouring liquid from a jigger into a cocktail shaker while making a lychee martini.
Measure into the shaker first; in a simple drink, one careless extra pour can throw off the whole glass.

3. Add ice

Fill the shaker about halfway with fresh ice. Good ice matters because it chills the drink before it waters it down.

4. Shake hard

Shake for 15 to 20 seconds, or until the shaker feels very cold.

Why shake instead of stir?

Classic spirit-only martinis are usually stirred, but this one has citrus and lychee syrup, juice, or puree. Shaking chills it faster, blends the fruit, and gives the drink a smoother texture.

Hands shaking a metal cocktail shaker with ice while preparing a lychee martini.
Shake until the metal feels cold so the drink lands smoother, colder, and brighter.

5. Strain into the glass

Strain into your chilled martini glass or coupe. Use a regular strainer for the syrup or juice version. Double strain through a fine mesh strainer if you used puree or muddled fresh lychee.

Pale lychee martini being strained from a shaker into a chilled cocktail glass.
A clean strain into a cold glass makes the final pour clearer and more polished.

6. Garnish and serve

Skewer one or two lychees on a cocktail pick and rest it across the glass, or drop one lychee gently into the drink. Serve right away while the glass is still cold and the aroma is fresh. The first sip should feel cold and fragrant before it feels sweet.

No Cocktail Shaker?

Use a mason jar with a tight lid. Add the ingredients and ice, seal it well, shake hard, then strain into a chilled glass. It will not feel quite as polished as a proper shaker, but it works well for a home cocktail.

Mason jar filled with pale lychee martini mixture and ice, with a hand holding the lid.
A mason jar works when there is no shaker, as long as it seals tightly and the drink is strained.

Using puree or fresh lychee instead of syrup? See Best Lychee to Use before moving to the second round.

Remember this before you adjust

If you remember nothing else: start with canned lychee syrup, keep the lime fresh, and shake until the tin is cold.

The finished drink should land in this order: lychee aroma first, cool vodka body second, lime at the end.

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Choose Your Version

Make the default glass first. Once you know how sweet, tart, and strong you like it, use this table to adjust the mood.

Graphic listing lychee martini versions including classic, drier, floral, frozen, zero-proof, and bar-style.
Use this chart to choose your next direction: classic, drier, floral, frozen, zero-proof, or bar-style.
You WantUse This Route
Classic easy versionCanned lychee syrup + vodka + lime + dry vermouth
Drier, cleaner versionLess syrup + extra citrus + dry vermouth
More floral and grown-upGin + lychee syrup + lime + optional elderflower
Frozen party versionFrozen lychees + vodka or gin + lime + ice
Zero-proof versionLychee juice + lime + sparkling water or tonic
Smoother bar-style versionLychee puree + vodka + lemon + Cointreau or elderflower
First-glass rule

If you are making this for the first time, do not start with rose, pear, liqueur, or puree. Make the canned-syrup vodka version first, then adjust the second glass. Your biggest choice is not the garnish. It is syrup vs puree, lime vs lemon, vodka vs gin.

Need help choosing the base first? See Best Lychee to Use. Trying to fix sweetness before changing the whole recipe? Go to less-sweet fixes.

What Is a Lychee Martini?

A lychee martini is a martini-style cocktail, not a strict classic martini. It borrows the cold glass, elegant serve, and spirit-forward feel, then adds lychee and citrus for a softer fruit finish.

It is usually made with vodka, lychee syrup or juice, citrus, ice, and a lychee garnish. The drink should be pale and almost delicate, but the flavor should not be weak. You want lychee on the nose, citrus on the finish, and enough chill that the vodka feels smooth rather than sharp.

Lychee is also spelled litchi in many places, so a litchi martini and a lychee martini usually mean the same drink.

What Does a Lychee Martini Taste Like?

A lychee martini tastes floral, juicy, lightly tropical, and gently sweet, with a citrus finish. It should taste like lychee first, not sugar syrup.

Vodka keeps the cocktail quiet and lets the lychee lead. Gin pushes it in a more botanical direction. Lychee liqueur makes the fruit louder, so it needs citrus to stay crisp. Lime gives the drink a sharper edge, while lemon makes it softer and more elegant.

A good lychee martini should feel delicate, not weak. If the glass smells like lychee before you sip, you are already close. The first sip should be floral; the finish should be cleaner than expected.

Why This Recipe Works

This version works because it respects what lychee is good at: aroma, softness, and a little perfume. Lime gives it shape, vodka gives it room, and vermouth keeps the finish dry.

Canned lychee syrup gives instant flavor.
You do not need a special mixer. The syrup from canned lychees is fragrant, easy to measure, and available all year.
Fresh lime keeps the drink lifted.
If the cocktail tastes flat, it usually does not need more fruit. It needs acid. Lime gives the drink a clear finish.
Vodka keeps the fruit in front.
Because vodka is neutral, the lychee stays central.
Dry vermouth adds restraint.
You do not taste it loudly, but it keeps the finish clear-edged.

Why Lychee Martinis Are Back

The older lychee martini was often all syrup and perfume. The better modern version is colder, brighter, and more restrained: real lychee flavor, fresh citrus, and a softer finish. Punch has also covered the lychee martini’s return to real lychee flavor and layered balance, which is exactly the direction this recipe takes.

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Ingredients You Need

You do not need a bar cart full of bottles. The main thing is choosing one lychee base and keeping the drink cold, fresh, and clean.

Overhead view of vodka, dry vermouth, canned lychees, lime, shaker, jigger, and ice arranged for a lychee martini.
Lychee brings aroma, lime adds lift, and vodka plus vermouth give the cocktail its cold, crisp backbone.

Vodka

Vodka is the easiest and most common base for a lychee martini. It is smooth, neutral, and lets the fruit stay in front. Use something clean and mid-shelf. If you would not drink it in a vodka soda, it will not disappear here.

Plain vodka is the best starting point. Citrus vodka can work if you want a sharper drink, but vanilla or strongly flavored vodka can make the cocktail feel less crisp.

Canned Lychee Syrup

For the default recipe, use the syrup from canned lychees. It gives you lychee flavor and a ready-made garnish in one can. Start with 3/4 oz / 22 ml if your syrup tastes very thick. Use the full 1 oz / 30 ml if the syrup tastes lighter or you want a softer fruit note.

Fresh Lime Juice

Fresh lime juice keeps the drink lifted. Bottled lime can taste dull in a cocktail this simple. Lime makes the cocktail sharper and more tropical. Lemon makes it softer and more elegant. Yuzu can work too, but use it lightly because it is aromatic and sharp.

For a deeper citrus cocktail comparison, the lemon drop martini is a useful companion because it also depends on keeping sweetness and citrus in balance.

Dry Vermouth

Dry vermouth is the default accent in this recipe. Use 1/4 oz / 7.5 ml for a subtle edge. Use up to 1/2 oz / 15 ml if you want the vermouth to be more noticeable. It should not shout. It should simply make the lychee taste cleaner.

Cointreau or Orange Liqueur

Cointreau is lovely, but it changes the drink. Use it when you want a rounder citrus cocktail, not when you want the driest martini-style version.

If using Cointreau instead of dry vermouth, start with the lower amount of lychee syrup and adjust after tasting. The orange-citrus structure is similar to fruit-forward drinks like a mango margarita recipe, where fruit, citrus, and orange liqueur all need to stay in check.

Ice

Ice chills, dilutes, and smooths the cocktail. Use plenty of fresh, cold ice. Old, wet, half-melted ice can make the drink watery before it is properly chilled.

Lychee Garnish

One or two whole lychees on a cocktail pick are enough. Canned lychees are perfect because they are soft, glossy, and easy to skewer. Fresh peeled lychees also work when they are in season.

The garnish is doing more than looking pretty. It tells the drink what flavor to expect before the first sip.

Best Lychee to Use for a Lychee Martini

For most home kitchens, canned lychees are the smartest option: predictable, easy, and already packed with garnish. Fresh lychees are wonderful when they smell floral before you even peel them, but they should feel like a bonus, not a requirement.

Canned lychees in syrup and fresh peeled lychees arranged side by side for comparing lychee martini ingredients.
Canned lychee is more consistent for cocktails; fresh lychee is delicate but needs more prep.
What You HaveHow to Use ItAdjustment
Canned lychees in syrupUse syrup in the cocktail and fruit as garnishAdd lime to keep the finish bright
Fresh lycheesPeel, pit, muddle or blend, then strainAdd a little simple syrup if needed
Lychee juice or nectarUse as a lighter fruit baseReduce added syrup
Lychee pureeUse for fuller fruit flavor and bodyDouble strain for smooth texture
Lychee liqueurUse for intense flavor and extra alcoholReduce or skip extra syrup
Lychee martini mixUse only if that is what you haveAdd fresh citrus, start small, and taste before adding more
Chart comparing canned lychee syrup, fresh lychee, juice or nectar, puree, and liqueur for making lychee martinis.
Match the lychee base to the result: easy, lighter, stronger, fuller, or silkier.

Clear vs Cloudy Lychee Martinis

For the clearest drink, use canned lychee syrup and strain well. For stronger fruit flavor, use lychee puree or muddled fresh lychee. The cocktail will be slightly cloudy, but it will taste more fruit-forward. Double strain puree or muddled fruit if you want a smoother finish.

Two lychee martinis side by side, one clearer and more translucent and the other cloudier and creamier.
Syrup makes a clearer drink; puree or fresh fruit gives a cloudier, fuller-bodied glass.

How to Use Canned Lychees

  1. Open the can and strain the syrup into a small cup.
  2. Pick the firmest whole lychees for garnish.
  3. Chill the syrup if you have time.
  4. Use 3/4 to 1 oz / 22 to 30 ml syrup per cocktail.
  5. Save any leftover lychees for garnish, dessert, or mocktails.

If the syrup is very thick, start with less. You can always add more, but it is harder to pull sweetness back once the drink is mixed.

How to Use Fresh Lychees

  1. Peel the lychees.
  2. Remove and discard the seed.
  3. Muddle 2 to 3 lychees in the shaker if you only want a fresh fruit accent.
  4. If using fresh lychee as the full fruit base, blend or muddle 4 to 6 peeled, pitted lychees.
  5. Strain and measure about 1 oz / 30 ml of juice or puree for one cocktail.
  6. Add a little simple syrup only if the fruit is not sweet enough.

Use only the peeled white fruit, never the seed.

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How to Make It Less Sweet

This is the part that separates a good lychee martini from a one-note one. If the glass tastes heavy, fix the balance before adding more fruit.

Jigger measuring lychee syrup beside canned lychees and a lime wedge for a lychee martini.
Start with a smaller syrup pour when the can tastes thick, then add more only if the glass needs fruit.
ProblemFix
Too sweetAdd 1/4 oz / 7.5 ml more lime or lemon juice
SyrupyReduce lychee syrup to 3/4 oz / 22 ml or 1/2 oz / 15 ml
Too candy-likeUse dry vermouth instead of Cointreau
Flat flavorAdd a tiny pinch of salt before shaking
Too strongAdd 1/2 oz / 15 ml lychee juice
Too wateryUse colder ice and shake only 15 to 20 seconds
Not enough lychee flavorAdd muddled lychee, puree, or a small amount of lychee liqueur

A tiny pinch of salt may sound unusual, but it can make the lychee taste clearer. Use only a few grains, not enough to make the drink taste salty.

Quick quality checks

Before you change the whole recipe, check the simple things: fresh citrus, cold glass, enough ice, and syrup amount. If using liqueur, reduce syrup; if using puree or fresh lychee, double strain.

Graphic listing fixes for a lychee martini that is too sweet, syrupy, flat, too strong, or cloudy.
Use the chart to fix sweetness, flatness, strength, or cloudiness without starting over.

Still not getting the balance right? Check the troubleshooting section before changing the whole recipe again.

Vodka, Gin, or Lychee Liqueur?

The default lychee martini is vodka-based, but the best spirit depends on the style you want.

Vodka Lychee Martini

Vodka gives the cleanest glass. It is smooth, simple, and lets the fruit stay in front. Use the main recipe if you are making the drink for the first time.

Gin Lychee Martini

Gin makes the drink more botanical and floral. It works especially well if your gin has citrus, rose, cucumber, or elderflower notes.

Pale gin lychee martini with lychee garnish, cucumber ribbon, and botanical accents in a stemmed glass.
Gin shifts the drink toward a brighter, greener, more botanical profile.
  • 2 oz / 60 ml gin
  • 1 oz / 30 ml lychee syrup or juice
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lime juice
  • 1/4 to 1/2 oz / 7.5 to 15 ml elderflower liqueur, optional
  • 1 to 2 lychees for garnish

Shake with ice and strain into a chilled glass. If using elderflower liqueur, reduce the lychee syrup slightly because both are sweet. If gin is the direction you like, the French 75 cocktail is another elegant gin-and-citrus drink that works well for parties.

Lychee Liqueur Martini

Lychee liqueur gives stronger fruit flavor, but it also adds sweetness and alcohol. Treat it as part of the lychee base, not as something to add on top of a full pour of syrup.

  • 1 1/2 oz / 45 ml vodka
  • 3/4 oz / 22 ml lychee liqueur
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lychee juice or canned syrup
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lime or lemon juice
  • Ice
  • Lychee garnish

Shake hard and strain into a chilled glass. This route tastes more intense and bar-like, but the citrus is important. Without it, the drink can become cloying.

Lychee Martini Variations

Once the base drink tastes right, the variations are easy. Think of them as small turns in mood, not totally new recipes. Save the rose water, pear vodka, and Halloween garnish for round two.

Every variation should still protect the same thing: lychee aroma first, clean citrus finish last.

Frozen Lychee Martini

A frozen lychee martini is thicker, softer, and more slushy than the shaken version. Because very cold drinks can taste less tart, add enough lime so it stays bright.

Frozen lychee martini with slushy texture in a chilled glass with lime and lychee nearby.
The frozen version turns the drink softer and slushier, with fruit taking the lead over the spirit.
  • 1 cup frozen lychees, about 8 to 10 lychees or 100 to 120 g
  • 2 oz / 60 ml vodka or gin
  • 1 oz / 30 ml lychee syrup
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lime juice
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml dry vermouth, optional
  • 1/2 to 3/4 cup ice

Blend until slushy and pour into a chilled coupe or martini glass. If it is too thick, add a splash of lychee juice. If it is too sweet, add a little more lime.

Virgin Lychee Martini

A virgin lychee martini should still feel like a proper drink, not just juice in a fancy glass.

Virgin lychee martini mocktail in a stemmed glass with bubbles, lychee garnish, and lime.
Bubbles and lime keep the zero-proof glass bright enough to feel like a proper cocktail.
  • 2 oz / 60 ml lychee juice or nectar
  • 1 oz / 30 ml canned lychee syrup
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml fresh lime juice
  • 1 to 2 oz / 30 to 60 ml sparkling water or tonic
  • 1/2 teaspoon grenadine or cranberry juice, optional for color
  • Lychee garnish

Shake the lychee juice, syrup, and lime with ice. Strain into a chilled glass, top with sparkling water or tonic, and garnish with lychee. For a less sweet mocktail, use more sparkling water and less syrup. You can also add a thin slice of ginger, a few mint leaves, or 1 to 2 drops of rose water.

For more zero-proof lychee ideas, MasalaMonk also has lychee virgin mojitos built around lychee, lime, mint, coconut water, and sparkling water.

Rose Lychee Martini

Rose is lovely here, but it is powerful. A few drops make the drink feel romantic; too much makes the lychee disappear.

  • 2 to 4 drops rose water, or
  • 1/4 teaspoon rose syrup

Shake it with the main recipe. Garnish with a lychee and, if available, one edible rose petal.

Pear Lychee Martini

A pear lychee martini gives the drink a softer, elegant fruit note.

Pear lychee martini in a coupe glass with lychee garnish and pear accent.
Pear makes the drink gentler, softer, and more dinner-party friendly.
  • 2 oz / 60 ml pear vodka or regular vodka
  • 3/4 oz / 22 ml lychee syrup or juice
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lemon juice
  • 1/4 to 1/2 oz / 7.5 to 15 ml elderflower liqueur, optional
  • Lychee garnish

Shake with ice and strain. This variation is especially good for dinner parties because it feels delicate rather than tropical.

For a Din Tai Fung-inspired pear lychee martini, use pear vodka, lychee, lemon, and a small amount of elderflower liqueur. This is not the official restaurant recipe, but it follows the pear-lychee-elderflower direction people often associate with that style; Din Tai Fung’s own menu describes its Pear Lychee Martini with pear vodka, St-Germain, fresh lemon juice, and lychee fruit.

Pink Lychee Martini

A classic lychee martini is usually pale, not pink. Add cranberry, pomegranate, raspberry, or grenadine only if you want color, not because the drink needs it.

Pale blush-pink lychee martini with lychee garnish in an elegant stemmed glass.
Keep the color blush and translucent so berry or pomegranate does not bury the lychee.
  • 1/4 oz / 7.5 ml cranberry juice
  • 1 teaspoon grenadine
  • 1/4 oz / 7.5 ml raspberry liqueur
  • A small splash of pomegranate juice

The goal is a blush-pink drink, not a berry cocktail with lychee in the background.

Restaurant-Style Lychee Martini

Most restaurant-style searches are really about texture, balance, and a colder finish — not a secret bottle. The trick is mouthfeel: the drink should feel silkier, not heavier.

Pale lychee martini in a chilled coupe glass with lychee garnish, fine strainer, and small bowl of puree nearby.
Puree gives this bar-style version a silkier body while keeping the glass pale and elegant.

When the canned syrup version tastes a little too light, this is the upgrade: puree for body, lemon for softness, and Cointreau or elderflower for a rounder bar-style finish.

  • 2 oz / 60 ml vodka
  • 1 oz / 30 ml lychee puree
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lemon juice
  • 1/4 to 1/2 oz / 7.5 to 15 ml Cointreau or elderflower liqueur
  • Ice
  • Lychee garnish

Double Strain Lychee Puree Martini

Shake hard and double strain.

Lychee martini being poured through a fine mesh strainer into a coupe glass.
A fine mesh strain keeps puree smooth while preserving the extra fruit body.

For a Nobu-inspired lychee martini, aim for the style rather than a claimed official recipe: very cold, smooth, lychee-forward, and polished. This captures the direction with vodka, lychee juice or puree, fresh citrus, and a chilled glass.

Soho-Style Lychee Martini

If your bottle is Soho or another lychee liqueur, treat it as both flavor and sweetener. That means you need less syrup and more citrus than you might expect.

  • 1 1/2 oz / 45 ml vodka
  • 3/4 oz / 22 ml Soho or another lychee liqueur
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lychee juice
  • 1/2 oz / 15 ml lime juice

Shake with ice and strain. Taste before adding extra syrup.

Other Easy Flavor Twists

  • For a softer version, replace 1/2 oz / 15 ml vodka with chilled sake.
  • To make the citrus sharper, use 1 teaspoon yuzu juice in place of part of the lime.
  • A light coconut note can come from a small splash of coconut water.
  • For Halloween, stuff a canned lychee with a blueberry, raspberry, or small dark grape and rest it on the glass with a cocktail pick.

Coconut milk or cream of coconut will make the drink cloudy and heavier, so use it only if you want a creamy tropical version.

Garnish Ideas

A lychee martini should look clean and elegant. You do not need a crowded glass. A lychee garnish is enough drama for one drink.

Close-up of glossy lychee garnish on a cocktail pick resting across the rim of a chilled lychee martini glass.
The lychee garnish sets the flavor expectation before the first sip.
  • One whole lychee on a cocktail pick
  • Two lychees skewered together
  • Lychee with a lime twist
  • Lychee with an edible rose petal
  • Lychee stuffed with blueberry for Halloween
  • Lychee with a tiny mint sprig
  • A very light sugar rim for a sweeter party version

The whole lychee is part of the charm: pale, glossy, and almost jewel-like in a frosty glass. For the most classic look, use one or two pale lychees in a clear, ice-cold drink.

For photos, place the lychee garnish across the rim instead of dropping it into the drink. It keeps the glass cleaner and shows the fruit.

Common Lychee Martini Mistakes

Prep table with syrup, wet ice, warm glass, puree, strainer, garnish, and bar tools arranged for a lychee martini.
Too much syrup, weak ice, warm glassware, or poor straining can change the drink more than garnish ever will.
Avoid these first
  • Using too much syrup: Start with 3/4 oz if your canned lychee syrup tastes thick.
  • Skipping fresh citrus: Bottled lime can make the drink taste flatter.
  • Serving it warm: Chill the glass and shake until the tin feels cold.
  • Adding every floral ingredient at once: Rose, elderflower, pear, and lychee can blur together quickly.
  • Not straining puree: Double strain if you want a smooth restaurant-style glass.
  • Using a harsh vodka: A simple drink will not hide a rough spirit.

Need exact fixes for a glass that already went wrong? Jump to Troubleshooting.

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Make-Ahead and Party Tips

How to Make the Base Ahead

Make the base ahead, not the finished cocktail. A lychee martini is best after it has been freshly shaken with ice.

For parties, this is the kind of drink you want partly ready before guests arrive: chilled base in the fridge, glasses waiting, and the firmest lychees picked for garnish. It lets you look prepared without doing much in front of guests.

Clear pitcher and bottle of lychee martini base with empty chilled glasses, lychees, lime, shaker, and jigger on a table.
Chill the base in advance, then shake each serving to order so dilution stays controlled.

To prep a single cocktail ahead, combine the vodka, lychee syrup, citrus, and dry vermouth in a small jar and refrigerate. When ready to serve, shake the chilled mixture with ice and strain into a cold glass.

Scale for a Party

If you are batching for a group, multiply the recipe by the number of drinks you want. Keep ice out of the pitcher and shake individual portions at serving time. If you like pitcher-friendly vodka drinks, MasalaMonk’s Moscow Mule recipe is a useful companion because it also separates the make-ahead base from the fresh or fizzy finishing element.

Before batching for guests, mix one test drink. It is much easier to fix one glass than eight, and a pitcher tastes different before dilution.

ServingsVodkaLychee SyrupCitrusDry Vermouth or Cointreau
12 oz / 60 ml3/4 to 1 oz / 22 to 30 ml1/2 oz / 15 ml1/4 oz / 7.5 ml
24 oz / 120 ml1 1/2 to 2 oz / 45 to 60 ml1 oz / 30 ml1/2 oz / 15 ml
48 oz / 240 ml3 to 4 oz / 90 to 120 ml2 oz / 60 ml1 oz / 30 ml
816 oz / 480 ml6 to 8 oz / 180 to 240 ml4 oz / 120 ml2 oz / 60 ml

Serve It Without Losing Texture

For a batch, start with the lower amount of lychee syrup. Taste the chilled base, then add more only if needed. Cointreau adds sweetness as well as citrus, so keep that in mind when scaling.

For best texture, shake individual servings with ice. If serving straight from a pitcher, add about 1/2 oz / 15 ml cold water per cocktail to replace the dilution from shaking.

Garnish just before serving so the lychees look fresh. If using fresh citrus, the batch tastes best the same day.

Planning food too? Go straight to What to Serve with Lychee Martinis.

Troubleshooting

Most lychee martini problems are easy to fix. They usually come down to sweetness, temperature, or straining.

IssueLikely CauseFix
Too sweetToo much syrup or liqueurAdd lime/lemon, reduce syrup, or use dry vermouth
Too sourToo much citrusAdd a splash of lychee syrup or juice
Too strongToo much vodka or not enough dilutionAdd 1/2 oz / 15 ml lychee juice or shake with fresh ice
Too wateryWarm glass, weak ice, or overshakingChill the glass and shake only 15 to 20 seconds
Cloudy drinkPuree, juice, or muddled fruitDouble strain or use canned syrup for a clearer look
Not enough lychee flavorWeak juice or too much citrusAdd muddled lychee, puree, or a little lychee liqueur
Tastes flatNeeds acid or saltAdd a tiny pinch of salt or a little more citrus
Garnish sinks awkwardlyLychee is too soft or tornUse a cocktail pick and choose firmer lychees

What to Serve with Lychee Martinis

Serve lychee martinis with food that gives the drink contrast: salt, crunch, spice, or clean seafood. The cocktail is floral and lightly sweet, so it works best with snacks that keep the glass feeling fresh.

Best Pairings by Mood

Pairing MoodGood Options
Salty and crunchyCroquettes, fried wontons, crispy tofu
Fresh and lightSushi-style bites, shrimp appetizers, cucumber salad
SpicyChilli garlic snacks, spicy chicken skewers, spring rolls
Party boardFruit, cheese, deviled eggs, light crackers
Pairing chart showing foods to serve with lychee martinis, including croquettes, wontons, crispy tofu, sushi bites, shrimp, cucumber, chilli garlic snacks, chicken skewers, fruit, cheese, and deviled eggs.
Match the drink with salty, fresh, spicy, or party-board foods depending on the serve.

Easy Party Pairings

Lychee martini in a stemmed glass served beside a plate of golden croquettes on a tray.
Warm, crisp snacks give this floral cocktail the contrast it needs.

Crisp, hot party bites are a natural match. Croquettes work beautifully because the salty crunch balances the cocktail’s fruitiness.

Creamy snacks can also work if they are not too heavy. A platter of classic deviled eggs gives the drink something savory and rich to cut through.

Avoid very heavy dishes if you want the cocktail to stay fragrant and refreshing.

Serving a crowd as well? Pair this section with the make-ahead and party tips.

Responsible Serving Note

This recipe is intended for adults of legal drinking age. Because this uses a full spirit pour, serve smaller portions and keep the virgin lychee martini available for guests who prefer not to drink.

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FAQs

What is a lychee martini made of?

A lychee martini is usually made with vodka, lychee syrup or juice, fresh lime or lemon juice, ice, and a lychee garnish. This version also uses a small amount of dry vermouth for a cleaner finish.

What does a lychee martini taste like?

It tastes floral, juicy, lightly tropical, and gently sweet, with a citrus finish. A good one smells delicate, tastes bright, and finishes cleaner than you expect.

Can I make a lychee martini with canned lychee?

Yes. For most home bartenders, canned lychee is the smartest starting point because it gives you consistent syrup and whole lychees for garnish.

Can I use the syrup from canned lychees?

Yes. Start with 3/4 to 1 oz / 22 to 30 ml per cocktail, depending on how sweet the syrup tastes.

Do I need lychee liqueur?

No. Lychee liqueur can make a good drink, but canned lychee syrup is easier to find and easier to control. If you use liqueur, reduce the syrup.

Can I make a lychee martini without vermouth?

Yes. Use vodka, lychee syrup or juice, and fresh lime or lemon. Vermouth gives the drink its dry edge, so skip it only if you want a softer fruit cocktail.

Should a lychee martini be shaken or stirred?

Shake this version because it contains citrus and lychee syrup, juice, or puree. Shaking chills and blends the drink better than stirring.

Is vodka or gin better for a lychee martini?

Vodka is best for the cleanest lychee flavor. Gin works if you want a more botanical, floral drink.

What is the best vodka for a lychee martini?

Use a clean, smooth, mid-shelf vodka that tastes good chilled. Avoid strongly flavored vodka unless you specifically want that flavor in the drink.

How strong is a lychee martini?

A lychee martini is closer to a martini than a tall mixed drink. For a lighter glass, add 1/2 oz / 15 ml lychee juice or make the virgin version with sparkling water.

How do I make a lychee martini less sweet?

Use less lychee syrup, add more lime or lemon juice, choose dry vermouth instead of Cointreau, or add a tiny pinch of salt before shaking.

Can I use fresh lychee?

Yes. Peel and pit the lychees, then muddle or blend them before shaking. Double strain if you want a smoother drink.

Can I make a frozen lychee martini?

Yes. Blend frozen lychees with vodka or gin, lychee syrup, lime juice, and ice until slushy.

Can I make a virgin lychee martini?

Yes. Use lychee juice or nectar, canned lychee syrup, lime juice, and sparkling water or tonic. Shake the juice, syrup, and lime with ice, then top with bubbles.

What is a Nobu-style lychee martini?

A Nobu-style or restaurant-style lychee martini usually means a very cold, smooth, lychee-forward vodka drink with a polished bar feel. Aim for the style with vodka, lychee puree or juice, citrus, and a small amount of Cointreau or elderflower liqueur rather than claiming an official copycat.

Can I make lychee martinis ahead for a party?

Yes. Mix the vodka, lychee syrup, citrus, and dry vermouth ahead and refrigerate. Keep ice out of the pitcher, then shake each serving with ice before pouring.

Final Tips for the Best Lychee Martini

Make the first one simple: canned lychee syrup, vodka, lime, dry vermouth, and a glass cold enough to fog at the edges. Once that balance is right, the rest is just mood — gin for floral, puree for body, pear for elegance, or sparkling water for a zero-proof glass.

Keep the garnish simple, taste before adding extra syrup, and let the lychee do the work.

Tried it with fresh lychee, gin, rose, pear, or as a mocktail? Tell us what changed the drink most for you — lime or lemon, syrup or puree, vodka or gin? Your answer may help the next reader adjust their glass too.

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