18 Non-Alcoholic Holiday Drinks for All Occasions

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Spiced, sweet, and not modest at least, this refreshing mocktail goes hard on the citrus with a touch of fizz for a little nose tickle. Don’t be shy with the garnish for a pop of delicious eye candy. And if you’re hosting a thirsty group, this recipe can be scaled up with ease.

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Another fruity concoction, this mocktail recreates the taste of British Christmas pudding, a traditional holiday dish from across the pond. Pomegranate, cranberry, dried fruits and citrus zest are combined with nutmeg, clove and other spices to give you a flavor combo fit for royalty. Serve it up hot or cold and feel free to prepare this drink a day or two ahead of the party if you’re feeling pressed for time.

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A bit tart and a bit sweet, this wintertime gem features the bold flavors of pine simple syrup and unsweetened cranberry juice. One sip and your senses are transported to a crisp forest with Donner and Blitzen. A touch of ginger beer adds a hint of sweetness and fizz.

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This dairy-free drink takes the traditional Puerto Rican Christmas coquito and marries it to the festive green hues of East Asian matcha. Sweet and creamy, the nonalcoholic matcha coquito uses just about every part of the coconut to create a rich treat. Notes of vanilla and cinnamon round out the yum.

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For nearly 500 years, hot gløgg has helped Nordic folks stay comfortable during those famously frigid winters. The nonalcoholic version of this traditional holiday drink is juice based and infused with all the spices on Santa’s list.

The juice is mulled — or slowly heated — and combined over heat with allspice, nutmeg, cinnamon, orange peel, and fresh ginger. The spices are strained out, raisins and almonds are added and your mugs are filled to the brim with coziness.

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If you’re looking for a gluten free sip that is both refreshing and sumptuous, the Sparkling Honey Roasted Pear Mocktail is for you. The preparation involves baking some pears, so this drink is a bit of a labor of love. But the results are delish. The brown sugared rims give you some sweetness up front while the grapefruit juice base provides some tartness backend.

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This eye popping punch not only serves all of your holiday guests, but it also doubles as a gorgeous holiday decoration. Refreshing and easy-to-prep, this holiday punch combines pear, pomegranate, and cranberry juices with cranberry ginger ale for a bright flavor profile. But the wow-factor comes from the festive red and green garnishes.

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A truly decadent winter treat, this holiday mocktail lovingly recreates the Cuban mojito with a caffeinated twist. If you find yourself on a beach for the holidays, this rich, creamy and sweet drink is a lovely way to wake up. Remember, half the world celebrates Christmas during their summer! (What’s up, Australia!)

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Inside info tells us that Santa loves a good cup of hot cocoa. Get down to the chocolate basics with this six ingredient gem. Milk infused with real peppermint leaves adds a refreshing touch of love to this yummy classic.

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This set-it-and-forget-it dairy-free hot cocoa hack is a true game changer. Toss the ingredients in a slow cooker, set it to “high” and… walk away. Four hours later, you have enough delicious hot cocoa to serve eight friends. This cocoa can be stored away and reheated as needed and even used as coffee creamer if chilled. Bonus!

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This recipe is the bomb. Literally. Hot cocoa bombs are simply hard chocolate shells filled with hot cocoa that magically melts into chocolatey goodness when you drop them into steaming hot milk. And you don’t have to be one of those Instagram chocolatier geniuses to make them. Imitation rum flavoring is the secret to getting an eggnog taste, but these bombs can be customized into a ton of different flavors and colors. A favorite with kids, this hot cocoa recipe also doubles as a take-home holiday party gift.

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For a different hot cocoa flavor profile, try the gluten free hot white peppermint chocolate. This nighttime holiday treat can be made in either a slow cooker or a stovetop. (And yes, it sounds like a naughty Tinder username.)

Santa’s secret tip: The slow cooker route will fill your little Swiss chalet with a yuletide peppermint aroma.

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High on fizz and low on sweetness, this ginger grapefruit spritzer is a refreshing holiday mocktail with layers of color. With

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Tilray and Canopy Growth Are Pivoting to Beer and Energy Drinks

  • Big cannabis companies like Tilray and Canopy Growth are expanding into beverages.
  • The moves come as they lose market share in Canada’s competitive industry for recreational cannabis.
  • These companies are trying to figure out how to give their revenue — and stock prices — a boost.

It’s hard to make money in cannabis, so the world’s largest cannabis companies are pivoting.

They’re slowly but surely getting into beer and sports drinks, too.

The Canadian cannabis company Tilray in early November acquired Montauk Brewing Company, a New York craft-beer brewer. Tilray already owned SweetWater Brewing Company, an Atlanta-based craft brewer, and Breckenridge Distillery, a Colorado whiskey brand.

Tilray’s competitor Canopy Growth, one of the world’s largest cannabis companies, is the majority owner of BioSteel, a sports-beverage brand that has sponsorship deals with professional sports teams such as the Toronto Raptors and the Dallas Mavericks as well as high-profile athletes including Kansas City Chief quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

And both companies are led by executives with experience running traditional consumer-packaged goods and beverage companies. Tilray CEO Irwin Simon used to run Hain Celestial Group, a food and supplements company. Canopy Growth counts the Corona beermaker Constellation Brands among its largest investors and is run by David Klein, the alcohol giant’s former CFO.

‘Trying to be something different’

“I’m trying to be something different,” Simon said in an interview. “I’m trying to create the next generation of a cannabis, beer and spirits company that no one else is doing out there.”

He says that while the market might think of Tilray as just a “cluster of businesses,” his goal is to build intelligently around Tilray’s brands — like Diageo or AB InBev, but with pot.

Irwin Simon

Tilray CEO Irwin Simon.

Courtesy of Aphria



Both companies have lost market share in Canada’s competitive legal market, according to analysts at Cantor Fitzgerald, and recreational cannabis is a shrinking chunk of their overall revenue. The bright spots, analysts say, appear to be their non-cannabis businesses.

After Canopy reported its financial results on November 9, analysts mostly addressed the company’s beverage business and highlighted the company’s continued challenges in making money selling pots.

Canopy’s core cannabis business saw revenue tumble 27% compared with the same quarter last year, while BioSteel revenue nearly quadrupled, according to the company’s filings. Canopy brought in 52.3 million Canadian dollars, or about $39.1 million, from its core Canadian cannabis business, and another CA$10.6 million from its international cannabis business, while BioSteel brought in about CA$30 million.

In a November 11 note, analysts at the investment bank Jefferies called Canopy’s core Canadian cannabis business “a sideshow.” Cowen analyst Vivien Azer said the company’s revenue beat was “driven almost entirely by BioSteel.” Analysts from Stifel continued their “Sell” rating on the stock while touting BioSteel as one of the few successful units at the company.

Canopy, for its part, announced a complex plan in October to plow into the more lucrative US cannabis market, through options it has to purchase three US cannabis companies and report their results on its balance sheet — which would surely give its cannabis revenue a boost . But Nasdaq, where Canopy is listed, objects to parts of the plan, so its fate is unclear.

“While we remain focused on our core cannabis business, our high growth CPG strategy anchored by BioSteel is showing impressive performance as the brand consistently achieves record quarter-over-quarter revenues and continues its rise to the top of the sports hydration category,” a Canopy Growth representative, Jennifer White, told Insider in an emailed statement.

She added that cannabis remained a core component of Canopy’s business and that the company’s mergers-and-acquisitions strategy would be focused on building out Canopy’s capacity in the US cannabis market.

Klein, the Canopy CEO, previously told Insider he’s focused on the US and wanted to be “on the fast-track” to enter the US cannabis market when he’s able to do so.

Tilray’s cannabis business slumps, while beer booms

Like Canopy, Tilray’s core cannabis business is also declining while its beverage unit and other businesses are growing.

Tilray’s cannabis revenue declined 17% in the quarter that ended August 31, compared with the same period last year, while its alcoholic beverage business saw revenue climb 34%.

In January, Tilray changed its corporate name to Tilray Brands to reflect the company’s “evolution from a Canadian LP to a global consumer packaged goods company powerhouse,” the company said in a press release.

To be sure, Tilray’s beverage business still accounts for only a small fraction of its total business. In the most recent quarter, it accounted for 13% of revenue, up from 9% a year earlier. The company’s cannabis business, on the other hand, accounted for 38% of revenue, down from 42%.

Tilray has been expanding its international medical cannabis businesses as well and owns Manitoba Harvest

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I’m A Celebrity fans slam Boy George for throwing his drink up when Jill Scott was crowned Queen

I’m A Celebrity fans have slammed Boy George for trying to bring attention towards himself when Jill Scott was crowned Queen of the Jungle.

The singer, 61, was sitting with his fellow former campmates in the studio as they watched hosts Ant and Dec reveal the winner of I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! 2022.

But viewers noticed that the special moment for the Lioness was a moment he took ‘the spotlight’ to himself, they said by throwing his drink up in the air as Jill was given her title as Queen.

'Attention seeking': I'm A Celebrity fans have slammed Boy George for trying to bring attention towards himself when Jill Scott was crowned Queen of the Jungle

‘Attention seeking’: I’m A Celebrity fans have slammed Boy George for trying to bring attention towards himself when Jill Scott was crowned Queen of the Jungle

George, sat in the center of the top row of celebs, donned a bold red hat and he raised his glass as the good news was revealed.

He then appeared to throw the drink up in the air in jubilation for Jill.

Some fans did not take well to the celebratory move from the Karma Chameleon singer.

One wrote on Twitter: ‘Boy George throwing his drink over himself cuz the attention is on somebody else.’

Celebration: The singer, 61, was sat with his fellow former campmates in the studio as they watched hosts Ant and Dec reveal the winner of I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!  2022

Celebration: The singer, 61, was sat with his fellow former campmates in the studio as they watched hosts Ant and Dec reveal the winner of I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! 2022

Another said: ‘Boy George wanted the spotlight by chucking his drink.’

Similarly, someone else wrote: ‘All the celebs were looking at Jill… apart from Boy George, he was looking for the camera pointing at him. Urgh. Well done Jill.’

One other quipped: ‘Boy George trying to make it about him by chucking his drink?’

Earlier in the week, George became the first I’m A Celebrity campmate to snub the show’s post-exit interviews.

The singer, real name George O’Dowd, did talk to Ant McPartlin, 47, and Declan Donnelly, 46, after he was the fourth celebrity to be axed from the show on Tuesday evening but did not do the usual daytime TV slots the morning after.

Not happy: But viewers noticed that the special moment for the Lioness was a moment he took 'the spotlight' to himself, they say by throwing his drink up in the air as Jill was given her crown

Not happy: But viewers noticed that the special moment for the Lioness was a moment he took ‘the spotlight’ to himself, they say by throwing his drink up in the air as Jill was given her crown

Scarlette Douglas, 35, and Sue Cleaver, 59, both appeared on Good Morning Britain from Australia and Charlene White, 42, spoke to her co-hosts in the Loose Women studio.

Not long after, George was refused permission to fly back to the UK from Australia after the homesick star demanded a waiver from the I’m A Celeb final.

The diva-like singer was ‘desperate’ to go home but is contractually obliged to stay in Australia until the ITV series has ended.

Sources close to the Karma Chameleon star told MailOnline: ‘He wanted to go home immediately, he didn’t want to hang around.’

Fourth out: Boy George was refused permission to fly back to the UK from Australia after the homesick star demanded a waiver from the I'm A Celeb final

Fourth out: Boy George was refused permission to fly back to the UK from Australia after the homesick star demanded a waiver from the I’m A Celeb final

They continued: ‘If he had his way he would be on a plane already but he wasn’t allowed to do that.

‘His aim of going into the jungle was for the world to see the stripped back version of him, no hair, makeup, costumes, or hats – he didn’t actually care how far he went in the competition.

‘The fact he has to stay in Australia for days now is an annoyance to him, he isn’t fussed about sticking around for the final but that’s what he has to do.

‘He’s traveled across the world his entire career and has seen Australia before so there’s really no reason for him to be here, especially as he isn’t concerned with catching up with his co-stars on the other side.’

In the Sunday night finale, Jill Scott roared to victory as former Lioness was crowned Queen of the Jungle after winning I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!

The sports star, 35, beat politician Matt Hancock, 44, and Hollyoaks actor Owen Warner, 23, in the grand final on Sunday evening after surviving 23 days in the Australian camp.

After congratulating the former midfielder on her win, Mike Tindall did the honors in placing the floral crown on Jill’s head as she sat triumphantly on the wooden throne before she embraced her fiancée Shelly Unitt on the bridge.

Stuck in Oz: The singer, 61, was voted off the show on Tuesday night, and is 'desperate' to go home but is contractually obligated to stay in Australia until the ITV series has ended

Stuck in Oz: The singer, 61, was voted off the show on Tuesday night, and is ‘desperate’ to go home but is contractually obligated to stay in Australia until the ITV series has ended

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