Coffee liqueur can do far more than make an Espresso Martini. These ten serves use proven cocktail structures, championship coffee-cocktail ideas and NORSE CODE adaptations to explore whisky, rum, bitter aperitifs, sherry, citrus, tonic and texture.
Beyond the Obvious Coffee Cocktails
We have deliberately left out the Black Russian, White Russian and Mudslide. They are established drinks, but they appear in almost every coffee-liqueur roundup and do little to show how versatile well-made coffee liqueur can be.
The list starts with recognised modern classics and celebrated coffee-cocktail ideas, then moves into NORSE CODE serves built around familiar cocktail structures. The aim is simple: drinks that feel distinctive, balanced and worth making at home.

The Revolver
Bourbon, coffee liqueur and orange bitters
The Revolver is the strongest place to begin because it is already a respected modern classic. Bourbon supplies vanilla, oak and caramel; coffee liqueur deepens the roasted notes; orange bitters lift the finish.
Ingredients
- 60ml bourbon or rye whiskey
- 15ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 5ml rich sugar syrup, optional
- 3 dashes orange bitters
- Orange peel
Method
Stir all liquid ingredients with ice until cold. Strain into a chilled coupe or Nick & Nora glass. Flame or express an orange peel over the drink.

Espresso MarTIKI
Dark rum, pineapple, orgeat and coffee
Martin Hudák’s Espresso MarTIKI is genuinely different: tropical fruit, almond, dark rum and coffee form a richer, more complex drink than the name might suggest. Pineapple brings acidity, orgeat adds texture and rum bridges the roasted and tropical flavours.
Ingredients
- 40ml aged or pineapple rum
- 20ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 30ml fresh pineapple juice
- 15ml orgeat syrup
- 30ml cooled espresso or cold brew concentrate
- Edible flower, optional
Method
Shake hard with ice and double strain into a chilled coupe. Garnish lightly so the coffee and pineapple aroma remain clear.

Black Eagle Highball
Whisky, bitter wine, coffee and tonic
Hudák’s competition Black Eagle used whisky, Barolo Chinato or Dubonnet, Campari, grenadine, cold brew and tonic. This NORSE CODE adaptation uses Hel Above to provide the coffee layer and removes the grenadine to avoid unnecessary sweetness.
Ingredients
- 30ml blended Scotch whisky
- 25ml Barolo Chinato or Dubonnet
- 15ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 10ml Campari
- 60–80ml chilled tonic water
- Orange peel
Method
Stir the first four ingredients briefly with ice. Strain into a tall glass over a large ice spear, top with tonic and express orange peel over the surface.

Coffee Negroni
Gin, vermouth, Campari and coffee liqueur
Coffee and Campari share bitter, roasted and citrus-friendly characteristics. The challenge is restraint: too much coffee liqueur muddies the gin and vermouth, while too little disappears.
Ingredients
- 25ml London dry gin
- 25ml sweet vermouth
- 20ml Campari
- 15ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- Orange peel
Method
Stir with ice and strain over one large cube in a chilled rocks glass. Garnish with a broad orange peel.

Coffee Boulevardier
Bourbon, vermouth, Campari and coffee
Replacing gin with whiskey makes the bitter-coffee combination warmer and rounder. Bourbon’s vanilla and oak are natural partners for brewed coffee, while Campari prevents the drink becoming soft or sweet.
Ingredients
- 35ml bourbon
- 20ml sweet vermouth
- 15ml Campari
- 15ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- Orange peel
Method
Stir with ice until properly chilled. Strain over a large cube and garnish with orange peel.

Coffee Old Fashioned
Whiskey, Hel Above and aromatic bitters
This is deliberately simple. Hel Above replaces part of the sweetener while adding genuine brewed-coffee character. The result should still taste first and foremost like an Old Fashioned.
Ingredients
- 50ml bourbon or rye
- 15ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 2 dashes aromatic bitters
- 1 dash orange bitters
- Orange peel
Method
Stir with ice and strain over a large cube. Express orange peel over the glass.

Coffee Manhattan
Rye, vermouth and a restrained coffee layer
Coffee can overwhelm a Manhattan, so the measure remains modest. Rye supplies spice, vermouth provides fruit and herbs, and Hel Above adds roast and length.
Ingredients
- 45ml rye whiskey
- 20ml sweet vermouth
- 15ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 2 dashes aromatic bitters
- Orange peel or cocktail cherry
Method
Stir with ice and strain into a chilled Nick & Nora glass. Garnish with orange peel or one good cherry.

Coffee Sour
Bourbon, lemon and a soft coffee foam
Lemon and coffee sound confrontational, but acidity is already central to good coffee. Bourbon and a small amount of syrup connect the two, while egg white or aquafaba gives the drink a polished texture.
Ingredients
- 40ml bourbon
- 20ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 25ml fresh lemon juice
- 7.5ml sugar syrup
- 20ml egg white or aquafaba
- 3 coffee beans, optional
Method
Dry shake without ice, then shake hard with ice. Double strain into a chilled coupe and allow the foam to settle before garnishing.

Sherry Coffee Flip
Oloroso, dark rum, Hel Below and whole egg
This is the indulgent after-dinner drink in the list. Oloroso brings nuts and dried fruit, dark rum adds molasses and spice, and Hel Below provides fuller texture. The whole egg turns it into a proper flip rather than a cream drink.
Ingredients
- 30ml oloroso sherry
- 20ml aged dark rum
- 20ml NORSE CODE Hel Below
- 5ml demerara syrup, optional
- 1 fresh whole egg
- Freshly grated nutmeg
Method
Dry shake very thoroughly, add ice and shake again. Double strain into a small chilled wine glass or coupe. Finish with fresh nutmeg.

Cold-Filter Tonic
Hel Above, tonic and grapefruit
The simplest drink on the list is also one of the most revealing. Tonic exposes whether the coffee liqueur has genuine clarity or merely sweetness. Grapefruit oils sharpen the bitterness and make the serve feel grown-up and refreshing.
Ingredients
- 35ml NORSE CODE Hel Above
- 100ml chilled premium tonic water
- Grapefruit peel
- Large, solid ice cubes
Method
Build Hel Above and tonic over plenty of ice in a tall glass. Stir once, gently, and express grapefruit peel over the top.
Which NORSE CODE Should You Use?
| Cocktail | Recommended Bottle | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Revolver | Hel Above | Higher strength and clearer coffee finish |
| Espresso MarTIKI | Hel Above | Stands up to rum, pineapple and orgeat |
| Black Eagle Highball | Hel Above | Works with whisky, bitterness and tonic |
| Coffee Negroni | Hel Above | Keeps the drink structured rather than syrupy |
| Coffee Boulevardier | Hel Above | Matches bourbon, oak and orange |
| Coffee Old Fashioned | Hel Above | Acts as both modifier and coffee component |
| Coffee Manhattan | Hel Above | Provides roast without excessive softness |
| Coffee Sour | Hel Above | Balances lemon and whiskey more cleanly |
| Sherry Coffee Flip | Hel Below | Fuller texture suits the indulgent format |
| Cold-Filter Tonic | Hel Above | Clarity and strength matter in a long serve |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I substitute Hel Above for another coffee liqueur one-for-one?
Often, but not automatically. Start at the original volume, taste, then adjust syrup, bitter ingredients or the Hel Above measure in small 2.5–5ml steps.
Why are the White Russian and Black Russian not included?
They are valid classics, but they appear in almost every coffee-liqueur list. This guide is designed to show less obvious, more expressive uses of coffee liqueur.
Which cocktail is easiest to make at home?
The Cold-Filter Tonic requires no shaker and only three components. The Coffee Old Fashioned and Revolver are also straightforward.
Which serve is best for Hel Below?
The Sherry Coffee Flip makes deliberate use of Hel Below’s softer strength, darker sugar profile and fuller texture.
Are these official Martin Hudák, Dan Fellows or Victor Delpierre recipes?
Only the clearly credited published structures are directly adapted from their work. The remaining drinks are NORSE CODE specifications or interpretations.
There Is More to Coffee Liqueur Than One Cocktail
Hel Above brings coffee intensity and structure to spirit-forward, bitter and carbonated serves. Hel Below offers a softer, fuller option for layered and indulgent drinks.
Drink responsibly. Recipes containing raw egg should use fresh, appropriately handled eggs or a suitable pasteurised alternative.