Carajillo Old Fashioned
A whiskey-forward Carajillo Old Fashioned riff with rye, Cognac, coffee liqueur, and Licor 43.
The drink lands in the glass with the confidence of an Old Fashioned and the aroma of an after-dinner coffee. That is the whole reason this one is worth chasing: it sounds a little too obvious on paper, then shows up darker, rounder, and more grown-up than the name suggests.
I first saw this Carajillo Old Fashioned through The Educated Barfly, who credited the idea back to a bar build. It had the kind of premise that makes you stop scrolling if you already love both drinks. A Carajillo has that bright coffee-and-vanilla lift; an Old Fashioned has the slow, whiskey-forward weight. Putting them together is not subtle, but it is very reasonable.
This version is a delight, though it is honest about what it is. It does not fully scratch the Carajillo itch if what you want is that sweet, espresso-liqueur glow front and center. It leans more like a stirred whiskey drink with coffee and Licor 43 tucked into the finish, and I liked that about it.
This is more Old Fashioned than Carajillo, but the coffee and Licor 43 make the landing softer.
The main technique note is simple: stir it like you mean it. A short stir will leave the drink hot and a little disjointed, because rye, Cognac, coffee liqueur, and Licor 43 all need dilution to settle into one glass. Give it enough time over ice to round off the edges, then pour it over fresh ice in a chilled rocks glass.
If you want the drink to lean harder into Carajillo territory, bump the coffee liqueur and Licor 43 slightly. I would not replace the Licor 43, though. Its vanilla-citrus sweetness is the bridge between coffee and whiskey here; without it, the drink becomes a coffee Old Fashioned, which is good, but not this.
Why this works
Rye gives the drink structure, Cognac adds body, and the coffee liqueur brings the roasted note that makes the whole idea click. Licor 43 keeps the coffee from going too dark by adding vanilla, citrus, and sweetness. Stirring matters because this is a spirit-forward build: dilution is not just about making it colder, it is what makes the whiskey, Cognac, and liqueurs taste like one cocktail instead of four ingredients sharing a glass.
Tips & variations
- Make it more Carajillo-forward: Increase the coffee liqueur and Licor 43 a touch if you want the drink sweeter, rounder, and more clearly in that after-dinner coffee lane.
- Do not skip the Licor 43: This is the ingredient that keeps the riff connected to a Carajillo. Without it, the drink loses the vanilla-citrus lift that makes the build feel intentional.
- Use the stir as your adjustment dial: If the cocktail tastes sharp, it probably needs more dilution. Stir a little longer before changing the recipe.
Make it in Spritz
Spritz keeps this kind of riff easy to revisit: save the Carajillo Old Fashioned to favorites, scale it if you are making a round, and check whether your bar already has the whiskey, Cognac, coffee liqueur, and Licor 43 ready to go. You can also share it straight from the app when someone asks what exactly you just made.


