Home Bar Building
The Non-Alcoholic Home Bar
How to build a fully stocked non-alcoholic bar — NA spirits, shrubs, fancy sodas, bitters, and mocktail recipes that are genuinely satisfying for every guest.
The best home bartenders ensure that every guest — regardless of whether they drink alcohol — gets something genuinely special. Building a non-alcoholic bar isn't about serving juice in a fancy glass; it's about applying the same principles of balance, freshness, and craft to alcohol-free drinks.
The Non-Alcoholic Bar Philosophy
A great NA drink has the same things a great cocktail has: balance between sweet, sour, bitter, and savory; aromatic complexity; visual appeal; and a sense of intention. The mistake most people make is treating NA drinks as an afterthought — a glass of sparkling water with a lemon wedge.
The techniques and principles in this guide produce NA drinks sophisticated enough that your drinking guests might prefer them.
Non-Alcoholic Spirits
The NA spirits category has grown enormously. These are not "juice alternatives" — they're genuinely complex, artisanal products designed to mimic the mouthfeel and flavor complexity of spirits.
Best NA Spirits
Seedlip: The pioneer of the category. Three expressions: - Spice 94 — Allspice, cardamom, oak, citrus. The most cocktail-versatile. - Garden 108 — Peas, hay, hops, mint, rosemary. Best with tonic and herbs. - Grove 42 — Citrus-forward; orange, lemon, ginger, lemongrass.
Ritual Zero-Proof: American-made alternatives designed specifically to mimic specific spirits. Their Whiskey Alternative, Gin Alternative, and Tequila Alternative are the most convincing NA substitutes available for classic cocktail formats.
Monday: Monday Gin and Monday Whiskey are the value entry point — less complex than Seedlip but priced at half the cost.
Lyre's: A wide range of bottled NA spirits — "American Malt," "Dry London Spirit," "Italian Orange" — designed to sub 1:1 for spirits in specific cocktails. The most complete NA bar in a single brand.
Shrubs: The NA Secret Weapon
A Shrub is a vinegar-based drinking syrup — sweetened, flavored vinegar that you mix with sparkling water for a sophisticated non-alcoholic drink. Shrubs provide the acidity and complexity that citrus juice provides in cocktails, but with more depth and a pleasantly tangy finish.
Basic shrub recipe: - 1 cup fruit (fresh or frozen) - 1 cup sugar - 1 cup apple cider vinegar (raw, unfiltered)
Method: Muddle fruit with sugar, let macerate 24 hours, strain. Add the vinegar to the strained syrup. Stir to combine. Bottle. Shelf life: 3 months refrigerated.
Best flavor combinations: - Strawberry + black pepper + balsamic vinegar - Raspberry + mint + champagne vinegar - Ginger + pear + rice wine vinegar - Blueberry + lavender + white wine vinegar
Serve: 1 oz shrub + 4–6 oz sparkling water over ice. Garnish with fresh herbs.
Fancy Sodas and Sparkling Mixers
Premium sparkling waters and tonics are the foundation of any NA bar.
Fever-Tree Indian Tonic Water: The quinine bitterness in tonic water is genuinely functional — it adds a pleasant bitterness that balances sweet NA syrups the same way vermouth balances spirits.
Fever-Tree Elderflower Tonic: Floral and slightly sweet. Beautiful with Garden 108 Seedlip and fresh cucumber.
Topo Chico or San Pellegrino: The highest-quality mineral waters have a characteristic mineral flavor that adds complexity. Carbonation strength also varies — Topo Chico is notably aggressive, which holds up better in mixed drinks.
Kombucha: The natural effervescence and slight tanginess of kombucha makes it an excellent NA cocktail base. GT's original (unflavored) or a ginger variety work in almost anything.
Bitters for NA Drinks
Most commercial bitters are very high proof — the alcohol content means they're used in such small quantities that they're generally considered non-alcoholic from a practical standpoint. However, if strict NA is required, there are alternatives:
Scrappy's Chocolate Bitters: Often chosen for NA menus because the 45% ABV is used in 1–3 dash quantities (negligible alcohol contribution per drink).
Acid-free non-alcoholic bitters: Seedlip makes a "spice" version. Bittermilk makes a bottled shrub-style product with complexity but no alcohol.
The classic technique: use 3–4 dashes of standard aromatic bitters (Angostura) in a sparkling mineral water mocktail. At such tiny quantities, the alcohol contribution is smaller than in many fruit juices.
Mocktail Recipes
The Garden Spritz
2 oz Seedlip Garden 108, 1/2 oz elderflower cordial, 4 oz Fever-Tree Elderflower Tonic, cucumber slices. Build over ice in a highball glass. Garnish with fresh mint and cucumber.
The Spiced Shrub Buck
1 oz strawberry-balsamic shrub, 1/2 oz lime juice, 5 oz ginger beer, 2 dashes Angostura bitters. Build in a highball over ice. Garnish with candied ginger and a lime wedge.
The NA Old Fashioned
2 oz Ritual Whiskey Alternative, 1/2 oz demerara syrup, 3 dashes Angostura orange bitters. Stir with ice, strain over a large ice cube in a rocks glass, garnish with an expressed orange peel. This is genuinely impressive — it looks and smells like the real thing.
The Virgin Daiquiri (Worth Making Right)
2 oz fresh lime juice, 1 oz simple syrup, 1 oz coconut water, 2 oz Seedlip Spice 94. Shake vigorously with ice, strain into a chilled coupe. Garnish with a lime wheel. The Seedlip's complexity makes this dramatically better than the basic lime-and-sugar alternative.
The Kombucha Cobbler
4 oz ginger kombucha, 1 oz raspberry shrub, 1/2 oz lemon juice, fresh fruit. Pour kombucha into a wine glass filled with crushed ice, add shrub and lemon juice, garnish elaborately with fresh berries, mint, and a lemon wheel.
Stocking the NA Bar
A complete NA bar setup costs roughly $80–$120 for the spirits, syrups, and mixers and produces enough variety to serve guests for months. The investment signals something important to your guests: that everyone at your table deserves a drink made with the same care and intention as the alcoholic options.
This is the highest-ROI upgrade most home entertainers can make.