Prosecco cocktail recipes
- therockettman

- Nov 24, 2019
- 2 min read
Updated: Aug 2

Cava from Catalunya
My affinity for sparkling wine began in earnest while living in Barcelona in the late 1980s. The sparkling wine from Catalunya is called Cava and is typically a blend of Macabeo, Parellada and Xarel.lo grape varietals and produced in the traditional “Méthode Champenoise”. Nothing against Champagne, which I also adore, but Cava is more accessible from a price perspective and often smoother and creamier on the palate. Some of our favorite labels are Raventos, Raimat, Codorniu, Segura Viudas and Juvé y Camps.
Prosecco from Italy
We do not need a special occasion to enjoy a glass of bubbly. It is also nice to mix the bubbles with other ingredients for a refreshing sparkling cocktail – for this we usually depend on a dry and effervescent Italian Prosecco. The sparkling cocktail seems to make any event with friends or neighbors a festive one. One of our favorites is a cocktail that we were introduced to in San Francisco at the legendary Zuni Café. Because it is no longer on the menu I cannot tell you what it was called at the time – but we now refer to it as a Zuni Fizz. It is a cocktail for any season consisting of one part gin, two parts Elderflower liqueur, a dash of freshly squeezed lemon (all of this should fill half a champagne flute) and topped off with sparkling wine.

In the summer we indulge in the Aperol Spritz, a delightfully tangy and dry Italian apéritif that blends well with Prosecco (two parts Aperol to three parts Prosecco) and a splash of soda, garnished with a slice of lemon. It feels like drinking Capri sunshine on a hot day!

For something completely different around the holidays, we make a red wine sorbet (red wine and sugar boiled down and then frozen) and float a scoop of it in a glass of Prosecco. It was inspired by a cocktail we sampled at a Philadelphia restaurant by Marc Vetri, Amis (now closed), and tastes like winter in a glass.

Saluti!





Comments