Cinematic overhead shot of a rustic kitchen counter with a creamy gingerbread frappe topped with whipped cream and cinnamon, surrounded by spices, a blender, a mason jar of cold brew, and gingerbread crumbs, evoking a cozy Christmas morning atmosphere.

Frosted Gingerbread Frappe

Making a Frosted Gingerbread Frappe at home saves you serious cash and tastes better than anything you’ll find at your local coffee shop.

I’ve spent way too much money on seasonal coffee drinks that honestly weren’t worth the hype. Then I realized I could make my own gingerbread frappe in less time than it takes to wait in the drive-through line.

This isn’t rocket science. You’re basically blending coffee, ice, spices, and a bit of sweetness into something that tastes like Christmas in a glass.

KEY INFO

Prep time: 2 minutes
Cook time: None
Total time: 2 minutes
Servings: 1-2 drinks
Difficulty level: Easy (seriously, if you can work a blender, you’re golden)
Dietary tags: Adaptable for vegetarian, vegan, low-sugar, gluten-free

Cost: Under $2 per serving versus $5-6 at coffee shops

EQUIPMENT NEEDED

Here’s what you actually need:

  • High-powered blender (this is non-negotiable for that smooth, slushy texture)
  • Measuring spoons and cups
  • Tall glass (16 oz or larger)

Nice to have but not essential:

  • Whipped cream dispenser (makes you feel like a proper barista)
  • Ice cube tray for freezing coffee
  • Food processor (works in a pinch, but your texture won’t be as smooth)
INGREDIENTS
Main Components
Ingredient Amount Substitutions
Cold coffee 1½ cups Cold brew, 2 shots espresso with ½ cup water, instant coffee dissolved in cold water
Milk ½ cup Oat milk, almond milk, coconut milk, whatever you’ve got
Ice 1 cup (about 8-10 cubes) Coffee ice cubes if you’re fancy
Molasses 1 teaspoon Gingerbread syrup (3-4 pumps), brown sugar, maple syrup
Brown sugar 1-2 tablespoons Stevia (½ tsp), honey, agave, sugar-free syrup
The Spice Situation
  • Ground ginger: ½ teaspoon
  • Cinnamon: ½ teaspoon
  • Nutmeg: ½ teaspoon
  • Ground cloves: 1 dash (don’t go crazy here)
  • Vanilla extract: ¼ teaspoon
Toppings
  • Whipped cream (2 generous tablespoons)
  • Extra cinnamon for dusting
  • Chopped gingerbread cookies (optional but brilliant)

Overhead view of a rustic wooden kitchen counter in warm morning light, showcasing small glass bowls with golden ginger powder, cinnamon sticks, ground cinnamon, whole nutmeg with a grater, and scattered dark cloves. Vintage measuring spoons accompany each bowl, while steam rises from a carafe of freshly brewed coffee in the background, with flour dusting and cookie crumbs on the cutting board surface.

METHOD
Before You Start

Get your coffee situation sorted first.

Your coffee needs to be cold or room temperature at the warmest. Hot coffee will turn your frappe into sad, watery disappointment.

I usually make extra coffee in the morning and stick it in the fridge. Even better, freeze leftover coffee in ice cube trays and use those instead of regular ice.

Measure out your spices into a small bowl. This takes 30 seconds and prevents that awkward moment when you’re blending with one hand while digging through the spice cabinet with the other.

Step-by-Step

1. Pour the liquids first

Add your cold coffee and milk to the blender. Liquids always go first so the blades don’t just spin uselessly on top of ice.

2. Add your sweetness

Drop in the molasses (or gingerbread syrup if you’ve got it). Add your brown sugar or sweetener.

3. Dump in the spices

All your spices go in now—ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, vanilla. Don’t skip the vanilla; it makes everything taste more expensive.

4. Ice goes last

Add your cup of ice on top of everything.

5. Blend like you mean it

Start on low speed for about 5 seconds, then crank it up to high. Blend for 30-60 seconds until you hear the sound change from crunchy grinding to a smooth whoosh.

The mixture should look like thick, coffee-colored slush. If you can still see ice chunks, blend another 10 seconds.

6. Pour and top

Pour into your glass, leaving at least an inch at the top. Pile on the whipped cream—this is not the time for moderation.

7. Make it pretty

Dust with cinnamon. If you’re feeling extra, crumble some gingerbread cookies on top.

Dynamic close-up of a stainless steel blender in action, mixing a coffee-colored mixture with ice crystals, surrounded by a molasses jar, a tilted milk carton, and measuring cups, while cinnamon dust floats in sunlight.

CRUCIAL TIPS

Temperature is everything.

Never, ever use hot coffee. I learned this the hard way and ended up with something that tasted like disappointment and looked like murky water.

Adjust sweetness before you blend.

Taste your coffee and milk mixture before adding ice. It should taste slightly too sweet because the ice will dilute it.

Don’t overfill your blender.

Fill it only halfway, especially if you’re using a frappe powder or thickener. These mixtures expand like crazy and you’ll end up wearing half your frappe.

Fresh spices matter.

If your ground ginger has been sitting in your cabinet since 2019, it’s not doing you any favors. Fresh spices make a massive difference in flavor.

The whipped cream goes on RIGHT before serving.

Add it too early and it’ll sink into the drink and disappear. Nobody wants phantom whipped cream.

STORAGE & SCALING
Storage

Look, this drink is best consumed immediately. The ice starts melting and the whole thing gets watery after about 15 minutes.

If you absolutely must make it ahead:

  • Blend everything except the ice
  • Store in the fridge for up to 24 hours
  • Add fresh ice and reblend before serving
Scaling

For one serving: Halve everything except use ½ cup ice minimum

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