Every winter, my Facebook community for home winemakers fills up with the same question: "What's the best way to make mulled wine?" After several years of testing different wines, spice blends, and methods with our 9,000+ members, I put everything I've learned into one place. This guide covers what mulled wine actually is, how to choose the right wine and spices, the stovetop and crockpot methods side by side, the major regional variations you'll run into, and links to every detailed recipe I've published on this site.
What Is Mulled Wine?
Mulled wine is red wine that's been gently warmed and infused with spices, citrus, and a sweetener. The practice goes back to the Roman Empire, where warmed, spiced wine was used both to make lower-quality wine more palatable and to ward off the winter cold during long journeys. As Roman trade routes spread through Europe, the habit of warming and spicing wine spread with them.
By the Middle Ages, mulled wine had become a fixture of European winter life — and that's really where the modern tradition takes shape. German and Nordic communities developed their own versions using local spices and fortified wines, and those regional traditions are still what define mulled wine today. That's also why you'll see so many different names for essentially the same drink depending on which part of Europe you're in — more on that below.
In my own kitchen, mulled wine has become a winter staple less for the history and more for the practical reason: it's one of the easiest ways to turn an inexpensive bottle of red wine into something that feels like an occasion. When a homemade batch comes out a little too thin or too harsh to drink on its own, mulling it is usually my first move before writing it off.
Mulled Wine Ingredients
A solid batch of mulled wine comes down to four categories of ingredients:
- Base wine — a dry to medium-bodied red (see the dedicated section below on choosing one)
- Warming spices — cinnamon sticks, whole cloves, star anise, and sometimes a vanilla pod or fresh ginger
- Citrus — orange is traditional, both for the juice and the peel/zest
- Sweetener — granulated sugar, honey, or brown sugar; some recipes use a splash of orange liqueur instead
Optional additions that show up in regional variations include apple slices, pomegranate arils, star fruit, raisins, and a splash of brandy or rum stirred in just before serving.
A few notes from experience on each category:
Spices. Always use whole spices, not ground. Ground cinnamon and cloves cloud the wine and leave gritty sediment at the bottom of the pot, while whole sticks and cloves infuse just as much flavor and strain out cleanly.
Citrus. Stick to the zest and juice, and avoid the white pith underneath the peel — it's bitter and will throw off the balance of the batch. A vegetable peeler gives cleaner zest strips than a knife.
Sweetener. Honey gives a rounder, slightly floral sweetness; brown sugar adds a faint molasses note; plain granulated sugar is the most neutral choice if you want the spices and wine to do the talking. None of these is "correct" — it comes down to what you have on hand.
Citrus liqueur as a sweetener swap. A splash of Grand Marnier or Cointreau in place of some of the sugar adds sweetness and a concentrated orange note at once — a swap I use for batches that should feel a bit more "finished."
Getting the Spice Balance Right
The single most common mistake I see in mulled wine — including in my own early batches — is over-spicing. Spices are far more potent after 20-30 minutes of steeping in warm liquid than at room temperature, so a batch that tastes right at the 5-minute mark can taste like a mouthful of cloves by minute 25.
As a starting ratio for a standard 750ml bottle, I keep to roughly 2-3 cinnamon sticks, 6-10 whole cloves, and 1-2 star anise pods — enough to clearly flavor the wine without any single spice dominating. For a stronger presence, extend the steeping time rather than adding more spice; for an over-spiced batch, dilute with a bit more wine and sweetener rather than starting over. Cloves overpower fastest if left in too long, so count them out rather than eyeballing a handful — and taste at the halfway point of steeping and again near the end. That single habit improves a homemade batch more than any other adjustment.
How to Make Mulled Wine: The Basic Recipe
This is the simplest version — the one I'd recommend making first before trying any of the regional variations below.
Ingredients (serves 6-8)
- 1 bottle (750ml) dry red wine
- 1 orange, sliced, plus extra zest
- 3 cinnamon sticks
- 8-10 whole cloves
- 2 star anise pods
- 1/4 cup honey or sugar, to taste
Instructions
- Combine all ingredients in a saucepan over low-medium heat.
- Heat gently, stirring occasionally, until the honey or sugar dissolves and the wine is steaming — usually 10-15 minutes.
- Do not let it boil. Boiling cooks off the alcohol and makes the spices taste harsh and bitter instead of warm and rounded.
- Taste and adjust sweetness, then let it sit on low heat for another 10-15 minutes so the spices fully infuse.
- Strain into mugs or a heatproof punch bowl and serve hot, garnished with a fresh orange slice or cinnamon stick.
This base recipe is intentionally simple. For a more detailed version with exact timing, troubleshooting, and serving suggestions, jump straight to one of the variation recipes in the recipe collection below.
Stovetop vs. Crockpot: Which Method Should You Use?
Both get you to the same result — the choice comes down to attention and batch size.
| Factor | Stovetop | Crockpot / Slow Cooker |
|---|---|---|
| Hands-on attention | Higher — needs occasional stirring and close watching to avoid a boil | Low — set it and walk away |
| Best batch size | 1-2 bottles | 2+ bottles, easily scales for a party |
| Time to ready | 20-30 minutes | 1.5-2 hours on low |
| Risk of boiling over | Higher if heat isn't watched | Very low on a "low" setting |
| Keeping it warm for serving | Needs to stay on the stove on lowest heat | Built-in — stays at serving temperature for hours on "warm" |
| Best for | A quick batch for a small group | Parties, open houses, anything where guests serve themselves over time |
For a single batch tonight, stovetop is faster. For a party needing hours of unattended warmth, crockpot wins — see the full Crockpot Mulled Wine recipe for exact timing and scaling.
Regional Variations Around the World
Mulled wine looks different depending on where you are. Here's how the major regional versions compare:
| Country / Region | Local Name | What Makes It Different |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | Glühwein | Often uses a dry red, less citrus-forward, sometimes a shot of rum (Feuerzangenbowle) |
| Nordic countries (Sweden, Norway, Denmark) | Glögg | Fortified with vodka or aquavit, includes raisins and blanched almonds as garnish |
| France | Vin Chaud | Lighter spicing, often features a Burgundy-style red |
| Italy | Vin Brulé | Similar to Glühwein but commonly includes bay leaf alongside cinnamon and cloves |
| Netherlands | Bisschopswijn ("Bishop's Wine") | Studded oranges (with cloves pressed directly into the peel) are simmered whole in the pot |
| Portugal | Candola | Often made with port or a fortified red, naturally sweeter |
| Brazil | Vinho Quente | Served at Festa Junina celebrations, frequently includes apple and ginger |
| United Kingdom | Mulled Cider (a close cousin) | Uses apple cider instead of wine as the base, otherwise similarly spiced |
If you want to try a country-specific version, the Apple Mulled Wine and Pomegranate Mulled Wine recipes on this site are good starting points for fruit-forward variations.
The Best Wine for Mulled Wine
You don't need an expensive bottle for mulled wine — in fact, I'd actively recommend against it, since the spices and sweetener will mask most of the nuance a pricier wine offers. Look for:
- Dry to medium-bodied reds — Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Grenache, or a basic Zinfandel all work well
- Something with enough acidity to balance the added sugar — overly soft, jammy reds can end up tasting flat once warmed and sweetened
- A bottle in the $8-15 range is the sweet spot for most grocery store options
Wines to avoid. Skip anything oak-heavy or already sweet — a heavily oaked Cabernet Reserve or a sweet red blend fights with the spices instead of complementing them. Light-bodied reds like Pinot Noir also tend to get lost once the spices and sweetener go in.
If you're making your own wine rather than buying a bottle, a homemade dry red or a Grenache-style batch works just as well — and it's one of my favorite uses for a homemade batch that came out a little too tannic to enjoy on its own. Mulling softens exactly the rough edges that make an amateur batch hard to drink straight.
Explore the Mulled Wine Recipe Collection
Once you've made the basic recipe above, here are the full variations on this site:
- Apple Mulled Wine — a cozy, fruit-forward twist using apple slices and warming spices, great for a smaller winter gathering.
- Pomegranate Mulled Wine — adds pomegranate juice and arils for a tart, jewel-toned variation that also makes a striking presentation.
- Crockpot Mulled Wine — the hands-off version, ideal for parties where you want a big batch staying warm for hours without supervision.
More regional and themed variations (Glögg, Glühwein, a Christmas-specific batch, and a historical Hippocras recipe) are in development and will be added to this collection as they're published.
Essential Equipment
- A heavy-bottomed saucepan or pot (or a slow cooker for the crockpot method)
- A fine-mesh strainer, for removing whole spices and citrus before serving
- A ladle
- Heatproof mugs or a punch bowl
- A kitchen thermometer (optional, but useful for staying under boiling point)
- A vegetable peeler, for clean citrus zest strips
- Cheesecloth or a spice bag, if you'd rather not strain at the end
- Storage containers, for refrigerating leftovers
Common Mistakes & Troubleshooting
Most problems trace back to heat that's too high, or spices left in the pot too long.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Tastes bitter or harsh | Wine was boiled instead of gently heated | Keep heat low-medium; aim for steaming, never bubbling |
| Too sweet | Too much honey/sugar added at once | Add sweetener gradually and taste as you go |
| Weak spice flavor | Not enough steeping time, or spices added too late | Let it simmer gently for at least 15-20 minutes once warm |
| Cloudy or gritty texture | Wine wasn't strained before serving | Strain through a fine-mesh sieve or cheesecloth |
| Alcohol taste too strong/raw | Not heated long enough for the flavors to round out | Extend the gentle simmer time by 5-10 minutes |
| Citrus tastes bitter | Pith (white part of the peel) included with the zest | Use a peeler to remove just the colored zest, avoiding the white pith |
| Overpoweringly spiced | Spices left steeping too long, or too many added | Dilute with extra wine and sweetener; follow the ratio above next time |
Serving and Storing Mulled Wine
Serving. Serve hot but not scalding — let it cool a minute or two off the heat first. Heatproof glass mugs show off the color and floating citrus better than an opaque mug, and a cinnamon stick or orange slice garnish goes a long way visually. For a party, keep the pot or crockpot on its lowest "warm" setting and let guests ladle their own rather than pre-pouring mugs that go lukewarm.
Batch sizing. One 750ml bottle serves 6-8 in small mugs, or 4-6 in larger glasses. For a gathering of 15-20, plan on 2-3 bottles — the crockpot scales more easily than juggling multiple stovetop pots.
Storage. Leftovers keep in the refrigerator for 3-5 days in a sealed container — strain out the spices and citrus first, since leaving them in keeps intensifying the flavor and can tip a balanced batch into over-spiced territory by day two. Reheat gently; avoid a full boil even on reheat. I don't recommend freezing it — the texture and aromatics suffer after thawing, and it's rarely necessary at 3-5 days of fridge life.
Best Time of Year to Make Mulled Wine
Mulled wine is, unsurprisingly, a cold-weather drink — most home winemakers in my community make their first batch right around the first frost and keep going through the holidays into early winter. It's a natural fit for Christmas markets and parties (where the German and Nordic versions originated), New Year's gatherings, and any casual get-together once the weather turns cold enough that a hot drink sounds appealing.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between hot wine and mulled wine? → Hot wine is simply warmed wine with no additions. Mulled wine is wine that has been warmed and infused with spices (typically cinnamon, cloves, and star anise), citrus, and a sweetener.
- What is the point of mulled wine? → Mulled wine was originally made to mask the taste of lower-quality or aging wine while also providing a warming, spiced drink for cold weather and winter gatherings.
- What is mulled wine called in different countries? → Germany calls it Glühwein, the Nordic countries call it Glögg, France calls it Vin Chaud, Italy calls it Vin Brulé, and Brazil calls it Vinho Quente. Each version has its own regional spice and fruit profile.
- Does mulled wine have a lot of alcohol? → Mulled wine typically retains most of the alcohol content of the base wine, usually 9-12% ABV, since gentle warming doesn't boil off significant alcohol if done correctly.
- Is mulled wine the same as spiced wine? → Yes, the terms are used interchangeably. Mulled wine is a type of spiced wine specifically warmed and served hot, typically during the colder months.
- Can you reheat mulled wine? → Yes, mulled wine can be gently reheated on the stovetop over low heat. Avoid boiling it, as this can cook off the alcohol and dull the spice aromatics.
- How long does mulled wine last? → Mulled wine keeps in the refrigerator for 3-5 days in a sealed container. Reheat gently before serving rather than storing it hot.
- What does mulled wine taste like? → Mulled wine tastes warm and spiced, with notes of cinnamon, clove, and citrus layered over the base wine's natural sweetness and acidity. The exact flavor depends on the wine used and the spice blend.
About the Author
Carlos Ocampo is a Ph.D. Chemical Engineer and home winemaker, and the administrator of the Winemaking for Beginners Facebook community (9,000+ members). He's been making wine at home for years and writes MakeWineLab to share what actually works, based on his own batches and the questions his community asks most. Read more about Carlos →