Every year we look at what's actually moving in the cocktail world and build a few onto our tap menu. Here's what's hot right now, plus a few classics that never really leave.
Last updated for 2026 · refreshed seasonally2026 is leaning into lighter, more intentional drinking — low-ABV spritzes, bold citrus, and a return to savory, layered flavours.
Fresh orange juice and Campari, built simple and bright. It's having a real moment as the go-to low-ABV aperitivo this year — equal parts refreshing and effortless.
Built on tap, finished with fresh-squeezed orange.
Low-ABV, endlessly variable, and made for long, easy gatherings — bittersweet Italian aperitifs paired with sparkling wine and a twist of citrus.
A natural fit for our prosecco tap.
Briny, herbal, and a little unexpected — think a martini-style pour with a savoury twist. Not for every guest list, but a memorable addition for couples who want something different.
Best suited to our muddled, hand-finished service.
Alcohol-free is no longer an afterthought — guests expect a non-alcoholic option with the same care and presentation as everything else on the menu.
Already built into every drink we batch — ours start as mocktails by default.
Trends come and go — these never really leave the menu, and for good reason.
Bright, herbaceous, and crowd-pleasing across every age group — light rum, fresh lime, fresh mint, and a little sugar.
Mint can't go through a tap — this one's muddled fresh, every time.
Sweet, sour, and a little salty — tequila and lime in perfect balance. Still one of the most requested drinks at any event we work.
Batched and kegged for easy, consistent pouring all night.
Most couples pick a rosé for one tap and something a little bolder for the other — here are a few pairings we love right now.
Light, dry rosé on tap, topped with a splash of soda and a twist of citrus.
Grapefruit, lime, and a mezcal twist on the classic Paloma — bold and a little smoky.
Fresh orange and Campari — bright, low-ABV, and endlessly photogenic.
Bourbon, bitters, and a single large ice cube — built simple, never out of style.
Every recipe below, ready to batch, keg, or muddle — exactly how we'd build it on the truck.
Batch the orange juice and Campari together and load the keg. Pour over ice and top with a splash of soda at service. Garnish with an orange wheel.
Combine and keg cold. Pour over ice, garnish with a citrus twist or olive depending on the season.
Stirred to order, not batched — this one needs a bartender's attention to balance the savoury notes correctly for each guest's taste.
Build the non-alcoholic base first and batch it. At service, every glass starts as a mocktail — alcohol is added only if and when a guest asks for it.
Muddle mint with sugar and lime juice. Add rum and ice, top with soda. Mint can't go through a tap line — this one's always built fresh, glass by glass.
Batch and keg cold. Pour over ice into a salt-rimmed glass, garnish with a lime wheel.
Batch the rosé with elderflower liqueur if using, and keg cold. Top with soda water at service. Pour over ice, garnish with an orange twist.
Batch the mezcal, grapefruit, and lime juice together and keg cold. Pour over ice, top with soda, and garnish with a charred or fresh sage leaf for a smoky aroma.
Muddle the sugar with bitters, add bourbon and a large ice cube, stir until chilled. This one's built glass by glass, not kegged — it's about the single big cube and the slow dilution.
Trend insights drawn from 2026 industry trend reporting, including the Bacardi Cocktail Trends Report and several hospitality industry sources, then adapted into recipes that suit our tap-and-batch service model. Recipes here are our own.
Tell us your two, and we'll build the rest — these trends and more are all fair game for your tap menu.
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