Hot Buttered Rum

Servings: 3 Total Time: 20 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Colonial-era warm spiced rum with make-ahead butter batter
Hot Buttered Rum pinit

A hot buttered rum is a warmed cocktail built on dark rum, a spiced butter batter, and hot water. The drink dates back to colonial America, where rum was cheap and butter was a pantry staple that smoothed out the spirit’s bite. This version uses a make-ahead batter so you can fix a single mug in under five minutes or scale up for a cold-night gathering.

The batter is the real workhorse here. You cream butter with brown sugar and baking spices, then freeze it in a log or scoop it into portions. When a craving hits, you drop a pat into a mug, pour in rum and boiling water, and stir until the fat melts into a silky, faintly cloudy liquid. The result is sweet, warming, and far less harsh than drinking rum neat. Making this hot buttered rum at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.

What you get from this method is consistency. Because the spice-and-sugar ratio is locked into the batter, every cup tastes the same. You also avoid the grainy texture that comes from trying to dissolve cold butter straight into hot liquid without a emulsifier already in place. The hot buttered rum works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.

Why You’ll Love These Hot Buttered Rums

  • The batter keeps in the freezer for up to 3 months, so one prep gives you dozens of quick drinks.
  • Dark rum and brown sugar create a molasses backbone that lighter spirits can’t match.
  • You control the spice level by adjusting the cinnamon and clove in the base mix.
  • It scales cleanly from a solo nightcap to a party punch bowl without changing technique.
  • The drink stays warm longer than wine or beer thanks to the fat layer on top.

Ingredients You’ll Need

  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
  • 1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/8 tsp fine sea salt
  • 6 oz dark rum (about 3 standard 2-oz pours)
  • 3 cups boiling water, divided
  • 3 whole cinnamon sticks, for garnish

The butter must be truly soft, not melted, or the batter won’t cream smooth. Dark brown sugar carries more molasses than light, which is why the recipe specifies it. Storing leftover hot buttered rum correctly keeps it tasting good for days.

Ingredient Substitutions

Unsalted butter: Replace with an equal weight of salted butter if that’s what you keep on hand. Cut the added salt from the batter to avoid a savory edge, and expect a slightly firmer set in the freezer. The drink will taste a touch more seasoned, which works fine with the cloves.

Dark rum: Swap with an equal volume of aged spiced rum for a brighter vanilla note, or use a 100% aged rum if you want less sweetness. Spiced rum reduces the need for ground clove, so drop that spice to 1/8 tsp. The body stays similar because both are 80-proof spirits.

Dark brown sugar: Use light brown sugar in the same packed amount if the dark type is gone. You’ll lose some molasses depth and the batter will be a shade lighter, but the structure holds. Add 1 tsp of blackstrap molasses to recover the color and flavor if you have it.

Ground cloves: Replace the 1/4 tsp with an equal amount of allspice if cloves are too sharp for you. Allspice reads rounder and more peppery, and it pairs well with nutmeg without the medicinal bite some people notice in clove. No other step changes.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. In a medium bowl, add 1/2 cup softened unsalted butter, 1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar, 1 tsp ground cinnamon, 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg, 1/4 tsp ground cloves, and 1/8 tsp fine sea salt. Beat with a hand mixer on medium-low heat is not needed here; use medium speed for 2 minutes until the mix is uniform and fluffy.
  2. Scoop the batter onto a sheet of parchment and roll into a 1-inch log, or portion into 9 heaping teaspoons. Freeze up to 3 months in a sealed bag; this step can be done days ahead.
  3. For each mug, drop 1 portion (about 1 tbsp) of frozen batter into a 12-oz heatproof glass. Pour 2 oz dark rum over the cold batter.
  4. Add 1 cup boiling water to the mug. Stir with a spoon for 30 seconds until the butter fully melts and the liquid turns translucent with a slight sheen on top.
  5. Slide in 1 cinnamon stick and serve. The drink should steam and the surface should show a thin fat layer, not floating clumps.

Pro Tips

Freeze the batter in a silicone ice-cube tray so each cube is one perfect serving with no cutting required. The cubes pop out fast and stay portioned.

Use water just off the boil rather than a rolling boil to avoid scorching the rum’s volatile aromas. A 185°F pour keeps the nose clean.

For a richer mouthfeel, swap 1 oz of the water for hot whole milk per mug, a move borrowed from dairy-forward cocktails that flatten alcohol heat.

Make a party batch by multiplying the batter and whisking it with rum and water in a spiced mug setup on a warmer. The fat keeps the top from skinning over for 45 minutes.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Adding butter straight from the fridge without creaming causes lumps that never melt in the mug. Always beat the base to a fluffy state before freezing.

Pouring rum into a dry mug then adding water that’s too cool leaves an oil slick instead of an emulsion. Keep the water at a true boil when it hits the glass.

Over-spicing with clove turns the drink medicinal and numbs the rum’s character. Measure the 1/4 tsp level, not a heavy pinch.

Serving Suggestions

Pair the mug with a slice of brown bread to echo the molasses in the batter. The dense crumb holds up to dunking.

For a non-alcoholic companion, set out a hot toddy so guests who skip rum still get a warm spiced cup. Use the same batter minus spirit.

Serve after a roast like porchetta when the table wants something sweet and warming to close. The fat in both dishes bridges the courses.

Storage and Reheating

The raw batter freezes in a sealed container for up to 3 months and thaws in the mug under hot water. Do not store finished hot buttered rum; the emulsion breaks as it cools and reheating tastes flat.

If you batch the mixed drink for a party, hold it in a thermos for 2 hours max, then discard. Per food safety, cooked-or-mixed dairy and alcohol drinks shouldn’t sit warm above 40°F for more than two hours.

No freezer storage applies to the finished cup. Make only what you’ll drink, since the butter separates and the texture won’t recover in the microwave.

Recipe Variations

Vanilla Bean Version

Scrape 1/2 vanilla bean into the butter base before creaming for a floral sweetness that lifts the clove. The seeds show as tiny specks and the drink smells like custard. Skip the vanilla if you already use spiced rum.

Citrus Twist

Add 1 tsp grated orange zest to the batter for a bright note that cuts the fat. Use a microplane so the peel stays fine and doesn’t float as pith. The cup reads lighter and pairs well with citrus cocktails on a buffet.

Maple Swap

Replace half the brown sugar with pure maple syrup, reducing water by 1 tbsp per mug to balance liquidity. The batter softens faster in the freezer and the flavor leans woodsy. Watch the boil temperature so the syrup doesn’t scorch.

Batched Punch

Multiply the batter 8x, whisk with 24 oz rum and 12 cups hot water in a party pitcher, and hold on a low warmer. Ladle into mugs with a stick of cinnamon each. The fat layer keeps the surface from cooling for a full evening.

Hot Buttered Rum pinit
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Hot Buttered Rum

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 5 mins Total Time 20 mins
Cooking Temp: 100  C Servings: 3 Estimated Cost: $ 10 Calories: 250 kcal

Description

A hot buttered rum is a warmed cocktail built on dark rum, a spiced butter batter, and hot water with roots in colonial America. A make-ahead batter of butter, brown sugar, and baking spices lets you fix a silky, sweet mug in under five minutes.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Cream the batter base

    In a medium bowl, add 1/2 cup softened unsalted butter, 1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar, 1 tsp ground cinnamon, 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg, 1/4 tsp ground cloves, and 1/8 tsp fine sea salt. Beat with a hand mixer on medium speed for 2 minutes until the mix is uniform and fluffy with no visible butter lumps.

  2. Shape and freeze batter

    Scoop the batter onto a sheet of parchment and roll into a 1-inch log, or portion into 9 heaping teaspoons for easy single serves. Freeze up to 3 months in a sealed bag; this step can be done days ahead and the batter should be solid and sliceable before use.

  3. Place batter in mug

    For each mug, drop 1 portion (about 1 tbsp) of frozen batter into a 12-oz heatproof glass. The cold batter should sit at the bottom and the mug should be large enough to hold rum and a full cup of water without overflowing.

  4. Pour the dark rum

    Pour 2 oz dark rum over the cold batter in the mug. The rum should coat the frozen batter pat and begin to slightly soften its surface before the water is added.

  5. Add boiling water

    Add 1 cup boiling water to the mug, using water at a true boil so the butter emulsifies instead of forming an oil slick. The hot liquid should steam immediately on contact with the rum and batter.

  6. Stir to emulsify

    Stir with a spoon for 30 seconds until the butter fully melts and the liquid turns translucent with a slight sheen on top. The surface should show a thin fat layer, not floating clumps, which tells you the emulsion is correct.

  7. Garnish and serve

    Slide in 1 cinnamon stick and serve the drink while it steams and the fat layer remains intact. The mug should feel hot to the touch and the aroma of spice and rum should be clear on the nose.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 3


Amount Per Serving
Calories 250kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 14g22%
Saturated Fat 9g45%
Cholesterol 41mg14%
Sodium 110mg5%
Total Carbohydrate 18g6%
Sugars 17g
Protein 1g2%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

  • Storage: Raw batter freezes in a sealed container for up to 3 months; do not store finished hot buttered rum as the emulsion breaks when cooled.
  • Make ahead: Freeze batter in a silicone ice-cube tray so each cube is one perfect serving with no cutting required, as noted in our hot toddy guide.
  • Pro tip: Use water just off the boil at about 185°F to avoid scorching the rum's volatile aromas and keep the nose clean.
  • Serving: Pair the mug with a slice of brown bread to echo the molasses in the batter and hold up to dunking.
Keywords: hot buttered rum, dark rum, spiced butter batter, brown sugar, cinnamon, colonial cocktail, make-ahead batter, warm drink
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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I make this ahead of time?

Yes, the butter batter can be made ahead and frozen in a sealed bag for up to 3 months, so you can prep once and fix mugs later. For a non-alcoholic companion using the same batter minus spirit, see our non-alcoholic hot toddy.

Can I freeze this recipe?

The raw batter freezes perfectly for up to 3 months in a sealed container and thaws right in the mug under hot water. Do not freeze the finished drink because the emulsion breaks and the texture will not recover.

What can I substitute for dark rum?

Swap with an equal volume of aged spiced rum for a brighter vanilla note, or use 100% aged rum if you want less sweetness. If using spiced rum, drop the ground clove to 1/8 tsp since the added spice is already present.

How do I know when it's done?

The drink is ready when the butter is fully melted and the liquid is translucent with a slight sheen and a thin fat layer on top. Stir for the full 30 seconds and avoid any floating clumps, which mean the emulsion has not formed.

Anna Food and Lifestyle Blogger

Hi, I’m Anna — a wellness enthusiast, recipe creator, and founder of Cook Recipe. I love making healthy, easy, and feel-good meals that inspire others to live happier, more balanced lives. When I’m not in the kitchen, you’ll find me exploring new places or flowing through a yoga session! 🌿

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