Champagne Cocktails: 10 Recipes to Try at Home
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Champagne cocktails are drinks built by combining chilled Champagne with a small addition like bitters, liqueur, citrus, juice, syrup, sorbet, or beer. The best Champagne cocktails for home include the Classic Champagne Cocktail, French 75, Kir Royale, Mimosa, Bellini, Aperitivo Spritz, Sgroppino, Raspberry Royale, Black Velvet, and a Pomegranate Rosemary Sparkler. For the best results, chill the bottle and glassware, measure sweet ingredients, and pour Champagne slowly down the side of the glass to protect carbonation.
Champagne cocktails have a special kind of magic: they look elegant, feel festive, and they are surprisingly easy to pull off at home when you know a few bubble-protecting rules. They scale beautifully, from a quiet two-glass toast to a full brunch table where everyone wants “something fizzy.”
1) Classic Champagne Cocktail

- 1 sugar cube
- 2 dashes Angostura bitters
- 10 ml (2 tsp) cognac or brandy
- 90 to 120 ml chilled Champagne
- Orange twist (garnish)
- Add the sugar cube to a flute or tulip glass.
- Saturate with bitters.
- Add cognac.
- Top slowly with Champagne, pouring down the side.
- Express orange peel over the top, then garnish.
2) French 75

- 30 ml gin
- 15 ml fresh lemon juice
- 10 ml simple syrup
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Lemon twist
- Shake gin, lemon, and syrup with ice for 8 to 10 seconds.
- Strain into a chilled flute or tulip.
- Top with Champagne gently.
- Garnish with lemon twist.
3) Kir Royale

- 10 to 15 ml crème de cassis
- 90 to 120 ml chilled Champagne
- Blackberry (optional)
- Add cassis to the glass first.
- Top slowly with Champagne to avoid foaming and to naturally blend.
- Garnish lightly.
4) Mimosa

- 60 ml cold orange juice (prefer low pulp)
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Add juice first.
- Top with Champagne slowly.
- One gentle lift with a bar spoon if needed, not a stir.
5) Bellini

- 45 ml peach purée (or mango purée)
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Add purée to the glass.
- Add a small splash of Champagne and lightly fold to loosen texture.
- Top with the remaining Champagne.
6) Aperitivo Champagne Spritz

- 45 ml Aperol (or 30 ml Campari for more bitterness)
- 15 to 30 ml sparkling water
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Orange slice
- Build in a wine glass with ice.
- Add aperitivo, then sparkling water.
- Top with Champagne.
- Garnish with orange.
7) Sgroppino

- 1 small scoop lemon sorbet
- 15 ml vodka
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Add sorbet to a chilled glass.
- Pour vodka over sorbet.
- Top with Champagne and let it foam gently.
8) Raspberry Royale

- 4 raspberries (fresh or thawed)
- 15 ml raspberry liqueur (like Chambord)
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Add raspberries to the glass and gently bruise once or twice.
- Add liqueur.
- Top with Champagne.
9) Black Velvet

- 60 ml chilled stout or porter
- 60 ml chilled Champagne
- Add stout to the flute first.
- Very slowly top with Champagne, pouring over the back of a spoon if you want a clear layer.
10) Pomegranate Rosemary Sparkler

- 20 ml pomegranate syrup (or reduced pomegranate juice)
- 90 ml chilled Champagne
- Rosemary sprig
- Optional: pomegranate arils
- Add syrup to the glass.
- Top with Champagne slowly.
- Clap rosemary between your hands once (quick aroma release), then garnish.
Champagne vs Sparkling Wine for Cocktails
“Champagne” is a legally protected term in many places, reserved for sparkling wine produced in the Champagne region under specific rules. That matters for cocktails because Champagne often brings a distinctive texture and flavor profile that stands up to mixers: finer mousse, citrus and orchard fruit, and sometimes toasty notes. Practical rule:- Use Champagne when the cocktail is minimalist (bitters, cassis, a clean citrus build).
- Use a quality traditional-method sparkling wine when the cocktail is fruit-heavy (Bellini, big-juice brunch builds).
- Brut (default): Versatile, crowd-pleasing, easiest to balance.
- Extra Brut or Brut Nature: Best for sweet additions (liqueurs, syrups, juice).
- Rosé Champagne: Ideal for berry-forward cocktails where you want color and red-fruit lift.
Tools, Glassware, and Prep That Actually Changes the Drink
Cold ingredients, a measured sweetener, and a gentle pour create a Champagne cocktail that stays sparkling longer and tastes cleaner.Temperature Targets
Multiple Champagne producers and educators commonly recommend serving Champagne in a cool range, often around 8 to 10°C (46 to 50°F) for best aromatic expression without aggressive foaming. At home, the easiest win: chill glassware for 10 minutes and keep juice, syrups, and liqueurs cold too.Glassware
- Tulip glass (best all-around): Helps aroma bloom while keeping bubbles.
- Flute (best for show): Maximizes the “stream” of bubbles, slightly less aroma.
- Coupe (best for vibe, worst for longevity): Drinks go flat faster, so serve immediately.
The Two-Lever Balancing System
If a Champagne cocktail tastes “off,” it is almost always one of these:- Too sweet: add acid (lemon) or switch to drier Champagne next time.
- Too tart: add syrup in tiny increments.
- Too boozy: reduce base spirit, increase Champagne, or use a lower-proof modifier.