My Most Repeated Lemon Lillet Martini
I’ve been making this lemon Lillet martini since my college days, when a bottle of Lillet Blanc sat on my shelf longer than I expected before I learned how to use it. Over time, I kept adjusting the citrus and gin until it became a drink I can now pour without thinking twice, even during busy evenings at home.

Jump to:
In the first small condo I ever owned, I had a balcony for a while and never really used it. It faced another building, not much of a view, and the railing always felt slightly unsteady under my hands. Most evenings, I stayed inside, reading or cooking something simple, the way I had learned growing up, where the kitchen always carried more weight than any other room.
One evening, I brought a glass outside without thinking. I stood in front of a shelf earlier that day, holding a bottle of Lillet Blanc, turning it slightly to read the label again. I didn’t know how to say it out loud. It felt unnecessary to ask.
I bought it anyway, the same way I started ordering things off menus I couldn’t fully read. There was a kind of small confidence in that. This drink holds that moment. A mix of something familiar like gin, something citrus, and something that once felt out of reach but now sits easily in your kitchen.
The air was cooler than expected, the city softer from above. I remember the way the drink tasted different out there. Lighter, maybe. Or maybe it was the pause. That balcony became something else for a few minutes, a quiet place where I could stand still with a glass in my hand and feel like I understood something about myself that I hadn’t noticed before.
I grew up around flavors that leaned toward the steady and the known. My grandmother’s kitchen always had tea, always something simmering, often citrus tucked into dishes in a quiet way. Lemon showed up in everything from soups to salads, brightening things without asking for attention.

Later, I found that same pull toward citrus in drinks too. It’s why I still return to simple combinations like a lemon mojito mocktail on long afternoons, or a glass of fresh lemon mint lemonade when the kitchen feels too still. Even a lavender lemonade carries that same quiet balance, something floral resting gently against sharp citrus.
This lemon lillet martini carries the structure of a classic European aperitif, something that would feel at home in a small bar in France, yet it also carries the way I learned to cook and mix, guided by instinct, by what feels right in the glass.
Over time, I adjusted it, softened the edges with lavender, kept the lemon present without letting it take over. It became something I could make without thinking too much, something that felt like mine.
I still make this drink the same way. The balcony has changed, the kitchen is louder, but that small sense of confidence has stayed.
A word on presentation: I like to serve this cocktail in the Josephinenhütte Eau de Vie glass, called Josephine N° 10, from the Josephine Collection. I truly think that this beautiful hand-craft vessel impacts the flavor of the drink.
Ingredients

The base of this drink is gin, and it sets the direction of everything else. I reach for a London Dry style because it stays firm in the glass, carrying juniper and herbal notes without drifting into sweetness. It reminds me of the bottles I first noticed in small kitchen cabinets, always slightly intimidating at first glance, until I learned how much structure they bring to simple drinks. A softer gin can be used if that’s what’s on hand, though the result leans lighter and less defined.
Lillet Blanc sits right behind it. I still remember holding that bottle in my college apartment, turning it in my hands without fully knowing what I was buying. It brings a gentle citrus tone with a rounded, almost honeyed edge that softens the sharper lines of gin. If it’s unavailable, a dry white vermouth can take its place, though it pulls the drink toward a more herbal profile.
Then a homemade lavender simple syrup came later in my version of this drink. I added it after a few early tries felt too linear. It brings a quiet floral note that sits behind the citrus rather than leading it. When I’ve run out, a light honey syrup has worked in its place, though it shifts the drink into a softer direction.
See the recipe card for full list and exact quantities.
My Pick
Josephine N 10 – Eau de Vie Glass
Mouth-blown spirit glass, designed by Kurt Josef Zalto, presenting fine brandies with a new level of aromatic complexity and clarity—while also providing the perfect stage for other fruit-forward distillates like tequila and mezcal.
Top Tips
Pay attention to dilution, not just stirring time – I used to think the 30 seconds was a strict rule, but what matters more is what happens inside the glass. When the outside feels properly cold and slightly frosted, that’s the signal. If it still feels lukewarm in your hand, the drink will taste sharper than intended. If it goes too far, the structure thins out and the citrus disappears faster than it should.
Keep the lemon as fresh as possible – I’ve tried making this with pre-juiced lemon on busy days, especially when the kitchen was full. The difference shows immediately. Fresh lemon keeps the drink lifted and clean, while older juice turns it muted and slightly heavy. If the lemon feels dry or soft before cutting, it will not carry the same brightness.
Don’t overdo the lavender syrup – early versions I made leaned too heavily on floral notes because I thought it would add character. Instead, it started covering the gin and Lillet. The goal is restraint. The lavender should sit behind the citrus, not beside it. If you prefer a softer profile, reduce the syrup slightly rather than replacing it with something stronger.
How to Make a Lemon Lillet Martini Recipe

This iconic drink moves quickly, so the focus is less on speed and more on noticing how the texture shifts at each stage. Nothing here is meant to feel heavy in the glass. It leans toward clarity and a soft edge that comes from balance rather than strength. Here’s how to make this recipe:
Stir the base with ice
- Start by adding gin, Lillet Blanc, fresh lemon juice, lavender syrup, and orange bitters into a mixing glass filled with ice. At first, the mixture will look slightly cloudy and uneven.
- Stir for about 30 seconds
- A common issue here is overloading the syrup. If the lavender becomes too forward, the drink loses its citrus clarity. It should stay in the background, barely noticeable until the aroma reaches the nose.
Strain into a chilled coupe
- Strain the mixture into a coupe glass that has been properly chilled. In a chilled glass, the drink holds its shape longer, and the aromatics stay lifted instead of fading quickly.
- As it pours, the liquid should look pale and slightly golden, not overly transparent. If it appears too watery, the stirring went too far. If it looks dense or syrupy, it likely needed more time with the ice.
Finish with lemon twist
- Take a strip of lemon peel and hold it over the glass. Before dropping it in, gently press or twist it so the oils release across the surface. You should see a faint sheen form on top of the drink, almost like a thin layer catching the light.
- Drop the peel in or rest it along the rim. If the peel feels dry or doesn’t express much oil, the lemon may be past its peak, and that will slightly soften the brightness of the drink overall.
Storage

This lemon Lillet martini holds best when mixed fresh. Its structure relies on cold temperatures and immediate citrus brightness. Sitting too long leaves the drink flat.
To prep ahead, combine everything except ice in a sealed container and refrigerate for up to 24 hours. Avoid long-term storage or freezing, as the delicate floral and citrus balance will degrade. When ready to serve, stir the chilled base with fresh ice and finish with a lemon peel.
FAQs
Dry white vermouth is the closest substitute, though it brings a more herbal and slightly bitter edge compared to Lillet’s softer citrus tone. The drink will still hold its structure, but the overall profile shifts away from floral-citrus and leans more botanical. If using vermouth, you may want to reduce the orange bitters slightly to keep balance.
This usually comes from under-stirring or not chilling the mixture enough. When the ice hasn’t had time to dilute the gin slightly, the alcohol stays more pronounced. Stirring for the full time helps round everything out. Another cause can be lemon juice that is overly acidic or not balanced with enough dilution from ice.
You can mix the gin, Lillet Blanc, lemon juice, lavender syrup, and bitters a few hours ahead and keep it chilled in a sealed bottle. The texture stays close to fresh if it’s stored cold and stirred again with ice before serving. The drink should always be strained over fresh ice at the last minute, since sitting on ice too long changes the balance and softens the citrus.
Yes, but it comes in a small, controlled amount. The sweetness mainly comes from Lillet Blanc and the lavender simple syrup. Lillet already carries a light honeyed note, so the drink does not rely on added sugar to taste balanced. If you reduce or replace the lavender syrup, the drink becomes noticeably drier and more citrus-forward.
Recipe
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Lemon Lillet Martini
A lemon Lillet martini with fresh lemon, gin, and lavender for a crisp, balanced cocktail.
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Ingredients
- 2 oz gin London Dry style
- ½ oz Lillet Blanc
- ½ oz fresh lemon juice
- ¼ oz l
avender simple syrup - 2 dashes Regans’ orange bitters
- Ice for stirring
- Lemon twist
Instructions
-
Stir gin, Lillet, lemon juice, syrup, and bitters with ice for 30 seconds.
-
Strain into chilled coupe glasses.
-
Garnish with lemon twist.
Nutrition
Calories: 78kcalCarbohydrates: 1gProtein: 0.03gFat: 0.01gSaturated Fat: 0.01gSodium: 0.4mgPotassium: 8mgFiber: 0.02gSugar: 1gVitamin A: 0.4IUVitamin C: 3mgCalcium: 0.4mgIron: 0.01mg





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