If you are a dirty martini lover with a thing for spice, this hot and dirty martini is about to become your new go-to cocktail. It has everything you love about a classic dirty martini and then cranks up the heat with a few dashes of hot sauce. It is bold, it is briny, it is a little fiery, and honestly? It is perfect.
This post may contain affiliate links, meaning I may earn a small commission when you click on the links and make a purchase. I will never recommend a product that I don’t support 100%.
You’ll love this Hot and Dirty Martini
It’s spicy. A few dashes of hot sauce transform the classic dirty martini into something with a serious kick. You can dial the heat up or down based on your spice tolerance, which makes this drink totally customizable.
It’s easy to make. We are talking four ingredients, a cocktail shaker, and about two minutes of your time. That is it. No complicated techniques, no obscure ingredients.
It’s the perfect twist on a dirty martini. If you already love a classic dirty martini, this is the natural next step. All the briny, savory flavor you already love, but with an extra layer of heat that takes the whole drink up a notch.
Ingredients
Vodka or Gin. Both work beautifully in a hot and dirty martini, and which one you choose really comes down to personal preference. Vodka is neutral and lets the brine and hot sauce shine through more clearly. Gin brings a botanical, herby complexity that plays really well with the savory olive flavor. If you want a cleaner, more straightforward spicy dirty martini, go with vodka. If you want something a little more layered, gin is your move. Either way, use a quality bottle you actually enjoy drinking.
Olive Brine. This is what makes a martini "dirty." Use the brine straight from a jar of green olives in your fridge. Fresh brine from a sealed jar always tastes better than leftover brine from a garnish tray, so make sure you are using the good stuff.
Hot Sauce. This is the ingredient that makes it hot. Start with just a couple of dashes and adjust from there based on how spicy you like your drinks. You can always add more, but you can't take it out!
Dry Vermouth. A small splash of dry vermouth is the backbone of the classic dirty martini. It adds a subtle, herbal, slightly bitter note that balances the brine's saltiness. If you are not a vermouth person, you can skip it, but I love how it rounds out the whole cocktail.
How to make a Hot and Dirty Martini
- Chill your glass. Pop your martini glass in the freezer for at least 15 to 20 minutes before you start mixing. A properly chilled glass keeps your cocktail cold from the first sip to the last, and it just feels more elevated.
- Fill your cocktail shaker with ice. You want it about halfway full. Add your vodka or gin, olive brine, hot sauce, and dry vermouth directly over the ice.
- Shake or stir until very cold. Cover your shaker and shake vigorously for about 15 to 20 seconds until the outside of the shaker feels ice cold and frosty. If you prefer a clearer, slightly stronger cocktail, stir with a bar spoon for 20 to 30 seconds instead. Shaking will make it a little more aerated and diluted; stirring keeps it crisp and clean.
- Strain into your chilled glass. Pull your glass out of the freezer, strain the cocktail in, and immediately add your garnish.
- Garnish and serve right away. Martinis are best enjoyed immediately while everything is ice cold. Add your garnish of choice (more on that below!) and sip.
Substitutions and variations
Jalapeno Olive Brine. Instead of regular olive brine, use the brine from a jar of jalapeno-stuffed olives. It adds a green, vegetal heat on top of the classic briny flavor and is honestly one of my favorite ways to make this drink extra spicy without going overboard on the hot sauce.
Pickle Brine. Swap out the olive brine for pickle juice to make a spicy pickle dirty martini. It sounds different, but it is SO good. The tangy, garlicky flavor of pickle brine, combined with the heat of hot sauce, is a combination pickle lovers will absolutely go wild for. You can also do half olive brine and half pickle brine for the best of both worlds.
Spicy Vodka. Skip the hot sauce altogether and use a pepper-infused vodka or a jalapeno vodka instead. Brands like Absolut Peppar are easy to find, or you can infuse your own by soaking a fresh jalapeno or red chili in vodka for a day or two. This gives the spice a more seamless, integrated quality throughout the whole drink.
Garnish ideas
- Spicy Chip, like the Dorito I used
- Tajin Sprinkle
- Olives
How to make a big batch of this Hot and Dirty Martini
This cocktail is perfect for parties because the ratio scales up really easily. To make a big batch, combine your vodka or gin, olive brine, hot sauce, and dry vermouth in a large pitcher or carafe and stir to combine. Keep the pitcher covered and refrigerated until you are ready to serve.
When your guests arrive, give the pitcher a good stir, then pour the mixture directly over ice in individual glasses or strain into chilled martini glasses. Since you are not shaking each drink individually, make sure your pitchers and glasses are well chilled before serving. The cocktail can be made up to a day ahead and stored in the fridge, just hold off on adding ice until you are ready to pour.
A good rule of thumb: plan on about 3 ounces of cocktail per serving when scaling up your batch, and taste as you go to make sure the spice and brine levels are where you want them.
FAQs
What makes a martini "dirty"?
A martini is called "dirty" when olive brine is added to the classic combination of vodka or gin and dry vermouth. The brine gives the drink that signature cloudy, slightly greenish appearance and adds a salty, savory, umami-rich flavor. The more brine you add, the dirtier (and saltier) the drink gets. A hot and dirty martini takes that same formula and adds hot sauce for a spicy kick on top of all that briny goodness.
Should a hot and dirty martini be shaken or stirred?
This one is genuinely up to you! Shaking the martini chills it down quickly and creates a slightly more aerated, diluted drink with tiny ice shards. Stirring keeps it cleaner, clearer, and a touch stronger since there is less dilution from the ice. Traditionalists will tell you that martinis should always be stirred, but for a hot and dirty martini specifically, I think shaking is totally fine since the olive brine and hot sauce already cloud the drink anyway. Do whatever feels right to you!
Pin it for later!
Leave a Reply