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Champagne Cocktail

Two champagne flutes with bitterssoaked sugar cubes and orange peels.
Photo by Elizabeth Coetzee, Food styling by Rebecca Jurkevich
  • Active Time

    2 minutes

  • Total Time

    2 minutes

Whether it’s New Year’s Eve, Valentine’s Day, or a random Tuesday on the couch, sipping a Champagne cocktail always feels celebratory. The long legacy of the classic version dates at least as far back as the Bartender’s Guide, an 1862 book by industry icon Jerry Thomas that included this drink. With just three ingredients (plus a citrusy garnish), its festive fizz is an understated answer to cognac- (or gin-) and liqueur-spiked sparkling cocktails like the French 75 or Kir Royale.

While the sugar and aromatic bitters augment some of the wine’s flavor, you can taste the bubbly in this old-fashioned Champagne cocktail more than in, say, a bellini, mimosa, or Aperol spritz. But save your best Champagne for sipping straight and opt for a middle-of-the-road bottle of Champagne when mixing this drink. 

If you don’t have sugar cubes on hand, swap in 1 tsp. granulated sugar (raw sugar is particularly nice). Otherwise, this is a rare classic cocktail in which experimentation is less ideal because each ingredient is crucial to the integrity of the drink. Could you make a satisfying aperitif using simple syrup instead of sugar, lemon juice or lime juice instead of a lemon twist, or prosecco or cava instead of brut Champagne? Sure. But purists would argue that any of those substitutions means your version no longer qualifies as a classic Champagne cocktail recipe. That might not matter to you in the slightest—it’s the sort of debate best settled over another round of something bright and bubbly.

This recipe was adapted for style from ‘101 Champagne Cocktails’ by Kim Haasarud. Buy the full book on Amazon.

Ingredients

Makes 1

1 sugar cube
3–5 dashes Angostura bitters
4 oz. Champagne or other sparkling wine, chilled
Lemon or orange twist, for garnish

Preparation

  1. Drop 1 sugar cube into a Champagne flute and soak with 3–5 dashes Angostura bitters. Top with 4 oz. Champagne or other sparkling wine. Garnish with a lemon or orange twist.

    Photo by Elizabeth Coetzee, Food styling by Rebecca Jurkevich



    Editor’s note: This Champagne cocktail recipe first appeared on Epicurious in November 2010. Head this way for more great sparkling wine drink recipes

Cover of Kim Haasarud's 101 Champagne Cocktails featuring a classic version of the drink.
Reprinted with permission from 101 Champagne Cocktails by Kim Haasarud, © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Buy the full book at Amazon or Bookshop.
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  • Wonderful for New Year's eve celebration this year. It is on must do list.

    • Anonymous

    • Palm Springs California

    • 1/1/2022

  • Has always been one of my favorites. Great way to test a bartender and see if they know their stuff. Amazing how many try to give me a Kir Royale instead which is not AT ALL the same.

    • Anonymous

    • Washington, DC

    • 2/15/2017

  • One of my favorites, but, to make it even better, before adding the champagne, add about an inch of Lillet (a French aperitif wine) to the glass and then fill with champagne.

    • janekaren

    • New Haven, Ct.

    • 2/22/2012

  • This is my "go-to" cocktail! Simply perfect!! Classy too!

    • Anonymous

    • 12/26/2011

  • I couldn't find bitters - so I used candied ginger in lieu of the sugar & bitters.

    • contra_laura

    • 1/11/2011

  • This is a classic champagen cocktail, however, just to give it a bit more of a kick add a nip of brandy to the glass as well as the Bitters & sugar cube.(good french brandy if you have it) Voila, you have the Classic French Champagne Cocktail - French '75.

    • greenfk

    • Brisbane, Australia

    • 12/28/2010

  • The very best and simple to make!!! Always my drink of choice for a special occasion.

    • 2rallan

    • Stockton, CA

    • 11/24/2010

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