Seasonal Menu
Muse & Co rotates seasonal specials throughout the year. These are limited-time drinks that are only available for a few weeks or a couple of months. They keep the menu fresh, give customers a reason to come back, and let us experiment with new flavors.
How Seasonal Specials Work
The Cycle
Seasonal specials typically follow this pattern:
| Season | Timing | Flavor Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Winter / Holiday | December - February | Warm spices, chocolate, peppermint, cozy flavors |
| Spring | March - May | Floral, light fruit, fresh flavors |
| Summer | June - August | Tropical, refreshing, cold-brew, bright fruit |
| Fall | September - November | Pumpkin, chai spice, warm caramel, apple |
Not Every Season Has a Special
Some seasons we run a special, some we do not. It depends on what ingredients are available, what sounds good, and whether we have time to develop and test a new recipe. There is no fixed schedule -- specials are announced when they are ready.
How a New Drink Gets Added
- Idea stage: Management or a team member proposes a new seasonal drink concept
- Recipe development: The recipe is tested and adjusted until it tastes right and looks good
- Costing: Ingredient costs are calculated to set the price
- Training: All team members are trained on the new recipe before launch
- Announcement: The drink is promoted on social media, our website, and in-store signage
- Limited run: The drink is available for the announced period, then removed from the menu
How Long Do Specials Last?
Most seasonal specials run for 4-8 weeks. Some popular ones may be extended. When a seasonal drink is about to end, management will let the team know with enough notice to use up remaining specialty ingredients.
Learning a New Seasonal Drink
When a new seasonal drink is announced, here is what you need to do:
Before Launch Day
- Read the recipe card that will be posted in the prep area
- Make it yourself at least once during a slow period to get comfortable with the process
- Taste it so you can describe it accurately to customers
- Know the price and any special toppings that pair with it
- Ask questions if anything about the recipe is unclear
During the Limited Run
- Be ready to describe the drink when customers ask "What is that?"
- Suggest it as a special when customers seem undecided or ask for recommendations
- If we run out of a specialty ingredient mid-shift, let the team know immediately so we can 86 the item (mark it as unavailable) rather than making a bad version
Selling Seasonal Specials
Seasonal drinks are the easiest upsell on the menu. "Have you tried our [seasonal drink]? It is only available for a few more weeks." The limited-time nature makes customers more likely to try something new.
Inventory for Seasonal Items
Seasonal specials often require ingredients that are not part of the regular stock:
| What to Watch | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Specialty syrups | May not be reorderable after the season ends |
| Fresh ingredients | Perishable items with short shelf life |
| Specialty toppings | May be unique to the seasonal drink |
| Packaging or signage | Seasonal cups, stickers, or menu inserts |
Track Specialty Ingredients
If you notice a seasonal ingredient is running low, tell the shift lead right away. Some ingredients have long lead times for reorder, and running out mid-promotion is a bad experience for customers who came in specifically for that drink.
Past Seasonal Examples
These are examples of the types of drinks that have been offered as seasonals to give you a sense of the creativity involved:
| Season | Drink Concept | Key Ingredients |
|---|---|---|
| Winter | Peppermint Mocha Boba | Espresso, chocolate, peppermint syrup, milk, boba |
| Winter | Spiced Chai Milk Tea | Chai spice blend, black tea, milk, brown sugar boba |
| Spring | Lavender Honey Latte | Lavender syrup, honey, espresso, milk |
| Spring | Cherry Blossom Tea | Sakura flavor, green tea base, lychee jelly |
| Summer | Mango Sticky Rice Tea | Mango, coconut milk, jasmine rice flavor |
| Summer | Watermelon Mint Fruit Tea | Fresh watermelon, mint, green tea base |
| Fall | Pumpkin Spice Milk Tea | Pumpkin puree, cinnamon, black tea, milk |
| Fall | Caramel Apple Fruit Tea | Apple, caramel drizzle, green tea base |
These Are Examples
The drinks above are illustrative. Actual seasonal offerings are decided by management and may be completely different. The point is to show the range of what a seasonal special can be.
Proposing a New Seasonal Drink
If you have an idea for a seasonal drink, we want to hear it. Here is how to propose one:
- Write down the concept: What is the drink? What does it taste like? What season does it fit?
- Think about ingredients: Can we get the ingredients easily? Are they expensive?
- Consider the prep: How complicated is it to make? Will it slow down the line during a rush?
- Share it with management: Bring it up during a team meeting or send a message
Good seasonal drink ideas are:
- Visually distinctive -- looks different from the regular menu
- Easy to describe -- customers should understand it from a sentence
- Practical to make -- should not add more than 1-2 extra steps versus a regular drink
- Reasonably priced -- specialty ingredients should not push the price too far above the regular menu
When a Seasonal Drink Ends
When a seasonal drink is retired:
- Remove signage and any menu inserts from the counter
- Stop suggesting it to customers
- Use up remaining ingredients in other drinks if possible, or set them aside for management to decide
- If a customer asks for a retired seasonal drink, let them know it was a limited-time offering and suggest something similar from the regular menu
Last updated: March 2026
