• Cocktail of the Week,  Cocktails / Food

    New Year’s Eve Champagne Cocktails

    Below are a few tips to help you prepare the best champagne cocktail.

    • Chill your glass in the freezer for 5 – 10 minutes while you gather your ingredients and open your champagne. (Heat is the enemy of carbonation.)
    • Since none of these drinks are served over ice, chill all ingredients in the fridge for several hours before making your cocktails.
    • Freshly squeeze all citrus and strain to remove any bits of pulp. Chill.

    The basic ingredients of a champagne cocktail usually includes:

    • a bitter or sweet liqueur
    • a flavor accent, if you used a bitter for the first step this step will mostly likely be sweet 
    • Champagne or Prosecco 
    Champagne Cocktail Liqueurs and Accents

    Once you understand the basic components, have fun and create your own cocktail. Below are a few options to get you started. 

    Classic Champagne Cocktail

    The Classic Champagne Cocktail

    1 sugar cube

    Angostura aromatic bitters

    5 oz Champagne

    Place the sugar cube in the bottom of a chilled champagne flute. Dash bitters onto the sugar cube until soaked. Top with champagne. This is a classic party drink because it’s quick to make and the sugar makes the champagne fizz.

    Kir Royale

    Kir Royale

    1/2 ounce black currant liqueur (Creme de Cassis)

    5 oz Champagne

    Luxardo cherry (do not chill or the syrup will crystalize)

    Pour the chilled liqueur into the chilled champagne glass. Top with champagne. Garnish with a Luxardo cherry.

    Cocchi Champagne Cocktail

    Cocchi Champagne Cocktail

    1 oz Cocchi Americano

    1/2 oz Orange simple syrup (see below)

    5 oz Champagne or Prosecco

    Combine in a chilled champagne flute. Garnish with an orange slice or a fresh orange peel.

    Orange Simple Syrup

    Simmer in a saucepan for 5 – 10 minutes. Stir occasionally.

    • 1 cup water
    • 1 cup of sugar
    • The peel from 1 orange and 1 lemon (try to include as little white part (pith) as possible since that will give your syrup a bitter taste)
    • Juice from the orange you just zested

    Strain out the peels, discard. Refrigerate the citrus simple syrup for up to one week.

    Hibiscus Champagne Cocktail

    Hibiscus Champagne Cocktail

    1 oz St. Germain Elderflower Liqueur

    1/2 oz Hibiscus rosemary concentrate (see below)

    5 oz Champagne or Prosecco 

    Combine in chilled champagne flute. Garnish with a sprig of fresh rosemary.

    Hibiscus Rosemary Concentrate. If you can find hibiscus flowers that’s great, (available on Amazon) but if not, just pick up a container of natural hibiscus tea at the grocery store. The Republic of Tea is a good brand.

    • Boil 1 1/2 cups of water
    • Add 1/4 cup of hibiscus flowers or several tea bags and a couple sprigs of fresh rosemary

    Let steep for at least 10 minutes until the concentrate is a dark red.

    Strain out the flowers and discard. Refrigerate the concentrated tea for up to one week. (If you have any leftover concentrate, try it in the Hibiscus margarita.) 

    Cherry Champagne Cocktail

    Cherry Champagne Cocktail

    Luxardo cherries (do not chill or the syrup will crystalize)

    1 oz Cherry liqueur (I used Heering 200) 

    Fresh lemon juice 

    5 oz Champagne or Prosecco

    Drop a Luxardo cherry in the bottom of a chilled champagne coupe or flute. Use a spoon to drizzle a tablespoon of Luxardo syrup in the glass. Top with 1 oz cherry liqueur and a few drops of fresh squeezed lemon juice, then top with Champagne or Prosecco. Garnish with a lemon wheel or lemon peel. 

    Sorbet Champagne Float

    Sorbet Champagne Float

    Sorbet

    Raspberries or blackberries

    Champagne

    Place a ball of sorbet in a chilled coupe, top with champagne and berries. Serve with a spoon. You could even serve this for dessert, just use a chilled dessert dish and increase the size of the sorbet scoop. 

    Aperol Spritz

    I can’t forget the classic, Aperol Spritz.

    For the person who just wants a glass of champagne, consider adding a few pomegranate seeds and watch them dance on the bubbles. 

    Cheers and Happy New Year!

    Comment below with your favorite bubbly cocktail. I’m always looking for new ideas.

  • Favorites,  Lifestyle

    Book (and Cocktail) Recommendations

    While everyone’s travel has come to a halt, consider ordering or downloading a book set in a beautiful, fun destination – maybe some place you’ve always wanted to visit. And, since almost everyone is looking forward to happy hour right now, I’ve suggested a cocktail to go with each location!

    Nantucket / Martha’s Vineyard: read with a Nantucket Spritz (1 oz tequila, 1 oz Cointreau, 2 oz blood orange juice, 2 oz champagne – chill ingredients, combine and serve in a champagne glass)

    The Nantucket Spritz photo and recipe from The Kachet Life

    The Nantucket Inn by Pamela Kelly (the first of four books in the Nantucket Beach Plum series) – In the first book Lisa Hodges decides to turn her large, waterfront home into a bed and breakfast.

    Winter in Paradise by Elin Hilderbrand (the first of two books in the Paradise series) – All of Elin’s books are based in Nantucket and I’ve enjoyed them all.

    A Beautiful Place to Die: Martha’s Vineyard Mystery #1 by Philip R. Craig – If you’re more of a mystery book reader, this is a nineteen-book series.

    Italy: read with a glass of Italian red wine, or an Aperol Spritz (recipe here)

    Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes – If you enjoyed the movie, you’ll love the book.

    A Vineyard in Tuscany by Ferenc Máté – A very entertaining read about Ferenc and his wife, Candace, restoring a thirteenth-century friary, planting a vineyard and building a winery. 

    Living in a Foreign Language by Michael Tucker – Remember “L.A. Law” stars Michael Tucker and Jill Eikenberry? This book details their ups and downs buying and renovating a 350-year-old house while trying to learn Italian. 

    France: read with a glass of well-chilled French rosé, or a French 75 (recipe here)

    A Riviera Retreat by Jennifer Bohnet – Jennifer has numerous books based in the French Riviera, all quick easy reads that will have you pulling up a map to see exactly how close Cannes, Antibes, Nice and Monaco are located. I’m definitely adding The French Riviera to my list of future travels.

    A Year in Provence by Peter Mayle – Peter recounts the highlights of living in a 200-year-old farmhouse at the base of the Lubéron Mountains. If you enjoy Peter’s writing style, he has numerous books based in Provence.

    Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald – If you’re looking to read a classic set in The French Riviera this book is often seen as a follow-up to The Great Gatsby.

    Leave a comment with the books you’re reading now. I’m always looking for more suggestions.

    Cheers and happy reading!

    Click on the three lines to the left of the word “lifestyle” at the top of this page and enter your email address to receive notifications by email when I post something new on this blog. Also, follow me on Instagram at cocktailsandgratitude for photos of cocktails, flowers, my pets and, someday soon, more travel.

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