33 Cocktail Appetizer Recipes for Your Next Boozy Bash

We've rounded up some of our favorite small bites to ensure you'll always have a snack in one hand and a drink in the other.

Overhead of a pastry-wrapped baked brie surrounded by crackers, grapes, fresh herbs, and chutney.

Serious Eats / Emily and Matt Clifton

You might think the most important part of a cocktail party is the booze, and with "cocktail" right there in the name, we can't say you're wrong. But we would argue the snacks are just as important, because as any responsible host knows, you need to make sure your guests have enough food to soak up all the alcohol. While chips and salsa might suffice for a mundane gathering, a holiday celebration calls for something bigger, better. From pâté made with chicken liver or cauliflower to baked brie and the ultimate shrimp cocktail, we've got all the recipes you need to throw the most delicious cocktail party possible.

For Omnivores

Chicken Liver Pâté With Bourbon and Cranberry Gelée

Chicken liver pâté on toast on a yellow plate with serving dish behind.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

I live the life of a humble food blogger, so foie gras pâté probably won't make an appearance at my next cocktail party. Fortunately, chicken liver pâté is much more affordable and still delicious. Our autumnal take on the dish is flavored with bourbon and apple cider and topped with cranberry gelée.

Juicy and Tender Swedish Meatballs With Rich Gravy

A platter of meatballs covered in gravy and topped with fresh parsley.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

A throwback to cocktail parties of a different era, these beef and pork meatballs are flavored with onion, white pepper, and allspice. Part of the charm of Swedish meatballs is their dense, springy texture, which you can achieve by mixing the meat more forcefully than we would typically recommend for meatballs.

Hoisin-Glazed Cocktail Meatballs

A dark slate tray with neatly lined up hoisin meatballs with fancy silver skewers, topped with sesame seeds and sliced scallions.

Serious Eats / Emily and Matt Clifton

This updated take on the cocktail meatball also starts with a mix of beef and pork, but gets an Asian twist from garlic, ginger, and hoisin sauce. When the meatballs come out of the oven we brush them with a glaze made from hoisin, ketchup, vinegar, honey, soy sauce, and sesame oil and sprinkle on scallions and sesame seeds.

Miso, Pork, and Walnut Dip for Vegetables

A small bowl of miso, pork, and walnut dip surrounded by sliced carrots, zucchini, and cabbage.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

You can't go wrong serving a crudité platter with classics like Green Goddess dressing and hummus, but for something a little more interesting, try this intensely savory dip made with walnuts, ground pork, and miso paste. The flavor depends heavily on what miso you use—standard red miso is fine, but I prefer a funkier miso.

Easy, Ultimate Clams Casino

A metal serving platter of bread crumb-topped clams casino served with a lemon wedge.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

My number one secret to throwing a successful party is doing as much work ahead of time as possible. Our take on clams casino can be prepped a day in advance, making it perfect for entertaining. The dish often winds up gritty and bland, but we avoid those problems by using coarse bread crumbs toasted in bacon fat and a flavorful bacon-clam compound butter.

9 In-Your-Face Deviled Egg Variations

A collage of devilled eggs with various toppings.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Our traditional deviled eggs are total crowd-pleasers, but I honestly get a little bored with them sometimes. Fortunately we have plenty of variations to mix things up, from a briny version topped with fried capers to a salmon-garnished deviled egg-everything bagel mashup.

Bacon-Wrapped Figs With Blue Cheese and Bourbon

A baking sheet of bacon-wrapped figs with blue cheese and bouron.

Serious Eats / Morgan Eisenberg

Don't be offended if this is the only party snack your friends request from now on. There are few things better than cheese wrapped in slices of bacon, and the figs and bourbon caramel glaze offset each bite's sharp saltiness.

Grilled Tarragon-Mustard Chicken Skewers

A baking sheet covered with char-grilled tarragon mustard chicken skewers, grilled lemon, and fresh tarragon.

Serious Eats / Morgan Eisenberg

A simple marinade with fresh herbs is all you need to make grilled chicken exciting. These grilled chicken skewers combine sweet, savory, and tangy flavors from a mixture of Dijon mustard, lemon juice, honey, and tarragon.

Smoky Bacon-Wrapped Baby Potatoes

A round platter filled with bacon-wrapped potatoes with a dish of dipping sauce in the center. Everything is on a wooden board surrounded with halved lemons, garlic cloves, fresh parsley, and another dish of sauce.

Serious Eats / Morgan Eisenberg

Serving a platter of bacon-wrapped potatoes will never, ever disappoint your guests. Here, the small potatoes are tossed with a spicy and smoky seasoning mixture, then roasted until the surrounding strips of bacon are crisp.

For Pescatarians

Plump and Tender Shrimp Cocktail

A blue plate covered in plump and tender shrimp with a glass bowl of cocktail sauce at the center.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Properly made shrimp cocktail is one of the best cocktail party hors d'oeuvres around, but all too often the dish is ruined by rubbery supermarket shrimp. Doing shrimp cocktail justice means poaching the shellfish gently in a court bouillon so that they become flavorful and tender. As for the cocktail sauce itself, we stick to the classic combination of ketchup and jarred horseradish.

Salmon Rillettes With Chives and Shallots

A white ramekin filled with salmon rillettes with rye crackers in the background.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Pork is probably the meat most closely associated with rillettes, but for a party I'm more likely to go with salmon because it feels extra fancy while being incredibly easy to prepare. There's no slow-cooking involved—just poach the salmon, shred it, and mix with mayo, shallots, and chives.

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce

A platter with rye crackers topped with salmon gravlax, caraway, coriander, and mustard dill sauce.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

I love cured salmon, but it can get pricey. When I want to treat myself, I turn to gravlax—since it's easy enough to make at home I don't have to pay for someone else's labor. The fish isn't cheap, but two pounds will serve a dozen people. To turn the fillet into gravlax all you need is salt, sugar, caraway, coriander, and a few days to let it all cure in the fridge.

Thai-Style Shrimp Cakes With Sweet Chili Dipping Sauce

A baking sheet of Thai-style shrimp cakes with sweet chili dipping sauce and lime wedges.

Serious Eats / Emily and Matt Clifton

Another way to save a few bucks preparing for a party is to make shrimp cakes rather than more common crab cakes. Shrimp works with all sorts of flavors—here we look to Thailand for inspiration and make the cakes with jalapeños, garlic, and enough cilantro to turn them vibrantly green.

Classic Pulpo Gallego

A red plate of pulpo gallego, a Galician tapas of tender sliced octopus topped with smoked paprika.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Your friends probably don't cook octopus for their cocktail parties, so serving pulpo gallego is sure to put you ahead of the pack. This Galician tapas dish seems impressive but is actually incredibly simple—either boiling or pressuring cooking the octopus will tenderize it, and from there you just have to slice it up and garnish with olive oil, salt, and Spanish smoked paprika.

Black Olive Tapenade With Garlic, Capers, and Anchovies

A small white bowl of black olive tapenade with garlic, capers, and anchovies next to a small wooden knife.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Despite the dish's fish-forward origins, modern tapenade is all about the olives. The ingredient list is pretty simple: Niçoise olives, garlic, Dijon mustard, lemon juice, capers, and anchovies. The trick is in how you combine them—a food processor works, but a mortar and pestle will give the spread much better flavor and texture.

Spanish Tuna-Stuffed Piquillo Peppers (Pimientos del Piquillo Rellenos de Atún)

Spooning aioli onto Spanish tuna-stuffed piquillo peppers on baguette slices.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

I don't know of any country on earth that respects canned food like Spain does. Far from survival rations, Spanish canned goods are often delicacies. This tapas recipe combines two of them, stuffing piquillo peppers with bonito tuna and serving them on baguette slices with allioli.

Bagna Càuda (Northern Italian Anchovy-Garlic Dip)

A wooden platter with a small bowl of bagna cauda anchovy dipping sauce, fresh bread, and crudite.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Bagna càuda is a potent dip made from warm olive oil loaded with tons of garlic and anchovies, all cooked together until melted down. Paired with a beautiful vegetable platter, it's the ultimate dip.

Make Blini, Two Ways

Overhead of buckwheat and yeasted blinis topped with sour cream, caviar, and various other toppings.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

This is one of those wonderful dishes that is pretty much reserved exclusively for the holidays. We should probably be eating blini and caviar all year long, but until then, the time has come again. We developed recipes for buckwheat blini and yeasted blini, so you can decide exactly how you want your mini-pancakes to taste. All that's left to do is buy plenty of caviar and crème fraîche.

Make Classic Oysters Rockefeller (and Not-So-Classic Oysters Oaxacafeller)

A baking sheet covered in green Oysters Rockefeller on a bed of rock salt.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Serving briny, juicy baked oysters is a good way to remind your guests that you're capable of far more than arranging a cheese board (though you can do that, too). Our take on the classic oysters ditches spinach and cheese, resulting in a lighter, fresher dish. Then, in a Mexican variation on the classic, we bump up the oysters' flavor with roasted poblano peppers, crema, and fresh cilantro.

For Vegetarians

Silky-Smooth Vegetarian Pâté With Roasted Cauliflower and Pecans

A rustic cracker covered in silky-smooth homemade vegetarian pâté.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

This vegetarian pâté gets its meaty flavor and texture from roasted cauliflower, which we cook with pecans and then purée. You can make the recipe vegan by using vegetable broth and oil instead of cream and butter, but it won't have quite the same silky pâté texture.

Updated Cheese Ball Trio

Three cheese balls on a platter, covered with different toppings. One has walnuts and pomegranate arils, the middle has toasted pine nuts, and the last is covered with a paste of green parsley and lemon zest. They are neslted on a serving platter on a bed of toasts, crackers, pretzels, and pita chips.

Serious Eats / Morgan Eisenberg

A ball of cheese sounds like a wonderful thing, but if you've ever been burned by an unappetizing cheese ball made with industrial pre-shredded cheddar you might be a little hesitant. Don't worry, through—our versions are made with high-quality blue cheese, goat cheese, and feta.

Marinated Goat Cheese

Emily and Matt Clifton

You could do a lot worse than serving a plain old log of chevre with crackers, but even better is to take the cheese and marinate it in olive oil with flavorful ingredients like garlic, thyme, fennel seed, and lemon peel. You don't have to use the very best olive oil here, but do know that the oil's flavor is going to come through in the finished dish.

Baked Brie en Croûte With Thyme and Fig Jam

A dark wooden platter topped with a circle of water crackers and a baked brie in the center, along with red grapes and fresh thyme sprigs. Around the platter are whole apples, more crackers and thyme, and a glass jar of preserves with a spreading knife.

Serious Eats / Emily and Matt Clifton

In the spirit of taking a cheese that's tasty on its own and making it even better, consider serving baked brie at your party. While you could keep it relatively simple and top a wheel of baked brie with honey and pistachios, wrapping the brie in puff pastry before baking makes for a more impressive centerpiece. This recipe pairs the brie with fig jam and fresh thyme, but you may want to also check out our version made with a homemade apple and pear compote.

Oven-Roasted Tomato Bruschetta

A close-up of bruschetta toasts.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Yes, it really is possible to enjoy bruschetta in December—the classic fresh tomato variety is of course a no-go this time of year, but you can prepare this oven-roasted version made with canned tomatoes instead. It's not bruschetta without the bread, so serve the spread with homemade baguette crackers.

Skordalia (Greek Garlic and Potato Spread)

A dish of Greek skordalia topped with minced herbs and served with pita triangles on a wooden board with a blue cloth.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Does the idea of garlicky cold mashed potatoes appeal to you? No? Well you should give skordalia a try anyways, because I think you'll be surprised by how much you love this tangy dip. It's best served with pita, and unless you can get the good stuff from a local bakery then I'd recommend making it yourself.

Spanish-Style Blistered Padrón Peppers (Pimientos de Padrón)

A wooden bowl filled with blistered Padrón peppers, finished with a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkling of coarse sea salt.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

This dish calls for just four ingredients, including salt and oil. You start with Padrón peppers, blister them in canola oil in a blazingly hot skillet, and finish with a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkling of coarse sea salt. About one in ten Padrón peppers is super-spicy, which makes this part appetizer and part parlor game.

Warm Spanish-Style Giant Bean Salad With Smoked Paprika and Celery

A bowl of Spanish giant bean salad next to celery leaves and a sliced baguette.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

The ingredient list here looks a little intimidating, but once everything is together the dish only takes five minutes to prepare—it's just a matter of heating everything up long enough to incorporate all the flavors. You won't want to lose any of the sauce, so serve this with crusty bread to soak up every last drop.

Vegan Spinach and Artichoke Dip

A skillet of vegan spinach and artichoke dip with a tortilla chip on top, next to a bowl of tortilla chips.

Serious Eats / Kristin Donnelly

Most likely, the spinach dip you're familiar with is chock-full of sour cream, mayonnaise, cream cheese, maybe even parmesan. We love that iconic dip, but it doesn't do the vegans among us much good. So we've created a version that relies on a creamy, blended mixture of cashews and cauliflower instead. It's packed with flavor, and doesn't sacrifice any of the original creamy texture.

Hummus Fries With Spicy Tahini Dip

A plate of hummus fries with a bowl of hummus, lemon wheels, garnished with fresh parsley.

Serious Eats / Morgan Eisenberg

These fries are inspired by the flavor of hummus. The batter calls for chickpea flour, which, when fried, results in crisp-shelled fries with creamy interiors. A spicy tahini dip cuts through each rich bite.

Sourdough Toasts With Tomato, Pesto, and Burrata

Sourdough toasts with tomatoes and burrata, topped with pesto on a wooden board.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

These toasts are equal parts easy and delicious. Crisped slices of sourdough are topped with burrata and grated ripe tomatoes, then drizzled with a creamy, bright, herbal pesto.

Romesco Sauce

Grinding ingredients for orange romesco sauce with a mortar and pestle.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

This deeply satisfying Spanish sauce combines almonds or hazelnuts with roasted tomatoes, garlic, dried peppers, olive oil, and more. It's great slathered on meat, but just as good served as a dip, alongside plenty of freshly cut vegetables.

Crispy Potato Skin Cups, Three Ways

A plate of crispy potato skin cups with a bowl of creamy dip garnished with a frond of fresh dill.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Think of these deep-fried, hollowed out potato skins as the best possible chip there is. You can fill them with all sorts of things, or leave them empty with a rich dip on the side. We suggest filling them with crème fraîche and smoked salmon, melted raclette cheese, or pulled pork and cheddar.