• Orange and gold luster dust together — this is the combination for fall drinks
• 1/8 tsp per glass is the sweet spot; more than that and you lose the shimmer effect
• Works with alcoholic cider or plain apple cider — same results either way
• Glitter goes in first, before the cider, so the carbonation does the swirling for you
Harvest Orange Cider Cocktail
Warm amber cider, a hit of bourbon, and just enough glitter to make the whole thing glow like the last hour of a fall afternoon. This is the best edible glitter for drinks moment if you’ve never tried orange and gold together — the two shimmers layer in the glass in a way that looks way more intentional than the five seconds it takes.
Ingredients
- 4 oz Hard apple cider (or plain apple cider for a mocktail)
- 1.5 oz Bourbon
- 0.5 oz Fresh lemon juice
- 1 tsp Honey
- 1/8 tsp Orange Luster Dust
- 1/16 tsp Gold Luster Dust
- Ice
- Cinnamon stick and apple slice to garnish
Add the honey and lemon juice to your glass first. Give it a quick stir — honey doesn’t dissolve well in cold liquid, so getting it mixed before the ice goes in saves you from a sticky clump at the bottom.
Drop in the orange luster dust and gold luster dust. Both go directly into the glass, not into a shaker. You want the glitter moving freely in the final drink, and shaking it packs everything down.
Add ice, then pour in the bourbon. Give it one slow stir — just enough to combine everything without killing the shimmer momentum you’re about to create.
Pour the cider over the back of a spoon if you want the layers to show, or pour it straight in for a fully mixed drink. Either way, the carbonation will move the glitter through the glass automatically. Watch it for a second before you hand it to anyone. It earns the pause.
Cinnamon stick, apple slice, done. Serve immediately — cider loses its bubbles fast, and the shimmer is best when there’s still some movement in the glass.

The Orange Luster Dust does most of the visual work here — it reads almost copper in amber-colored drinks, which is exactly the effect you want. The Gold Luster Dust is the supporting cast. On its own in cider it’s beautiful, but layered with orange it picks up the warm tones in the liquid and you get this depth that looks almost metallic.
If you want to push the color into deeper autumn territory — think mulled cider, red wine floats, anything in that cranberry-spice direction — a tiny pinch of Red Luster Dust alongside the orange works surprisingly well. Not for this specific recipe, but worth knowing.
For everything you need to know about getting glitter to behave in drinks — quantities, why some glitters sink, how to layer colors — the [how to use edible glitter in drinks guide](https://lusterdust.com/how-to-use-edible-glitter-in-drinks-the-complete-guide/) covers all of it.
1/8 tsp of orange plus 1/16 tsp of gold is the sweet spot for a single rocks glass. If you go heavier on the orange, you’ll start losing the coppery shimmer and it tips into murkiness. The goal is particles catching light as they move — not a full-on opaque shimmer situation. For a bigger batch, scale it proportionally but stay conservative. You can always add more; you can’t take it out.
Completely. Plain apple cider works exactly the same way — the carbonation from sparkling cider moves the glitter just as well as hard cider. Skip the bourbon, maybe add a splash of sparkling water if your cider isn’t carbonated, and you’ve got a fall mocktail that looks identical in the glass. Nobody at the table will know it’s alcohol-free unless you tell them.
Yes, with one adjustment: keep the glitter out of the batch. Mix the bourbon, lemon juice, and honey in a pitcher ahead of time and refrigerate it. When guests arrive, add a scoop of ice to each glass, pour in the base, then add the glitter and top with cider individually. Glitter added to a pitcher hours in advance just settles to the bottom and you lose the whole effect.


