Red Wine Spritzer

Servings: 1 Total Time: 3 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Light, Fizzy, Lower-Alcohol Red Wine Pour
Red Wine Spritzer pinit

A red wine spritzer recipe is the simplest way to turn a heavy glass of red into a light, fizzy drink that works in any season. You mix red wine with cold carbonated water and a touch of something bright, then serve it over ice for a lower-alcohol pour. This version uses a measured ratio so the wine stays present but the bubbles keep it refreshing.

The method matters more than the bottle. A basic red wine spritzer recipe balances wine, sparkling water, and optional fruit so nothing tastes watered down. You get a drink that is easy to scale for a group and flexible enough for weeknight sipping or a backyard table. If you enjoyed this, our privacy policy is worth trying next.

Why You’ll Love These Red Wine Spritzer

  • Lower alcohol per glass than straight wine, roughly 6 to 8 percent depending on the pour
  • Ready in under 3 minutes with no special tools beyond a glass and spoon
  • Works with an open bottle you already have, so nothing goes to waste
  • Easy to batch for four people using one pitcher and a measured ratio

Ingredients You’ll Need

  • 4 oz red wine (medium-bodied, such as Merlot or Tempranillo)
  • 3 oz cold carbonated water (plain seltzer or club soda, chilled)
  • 1 oz orange juice or cranberry juice, chilled (optional for brightness)
  • 1 cup ice cubes (about 4 to 6 standard cubes)
  • 1 orange slice or 3 fresh raspberries for garnish

Use a wine you would drink on its own. The spritzer dilutes it, so a dull bottle will taste flat. Chill the carbonated water and juice before mixing so the ice does less melting work. Making this red wine spritzer at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.

Ingredient Substitutions

Red wine: Replace with an equal amount of rosé for a lighter, pink version with similar structure. Rosé brings less tannin, so the drink tastes softer and a little sweeter even without added juice. Expect a paler color and a shorter finish on the palate. The red wine spritzer works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.

Carbonated water: Swap with an equal amount of tonic water if you want a faint bitterness and more sweetness. Tonic adds sugar, so cut the juice to half an ounce to avoid a cloying mix. The bubbles are finer, and the drink reads more like a spritz than a simple spritzer.

Orange juice: Use 1 oz of pomegranate juice instead for a deeper red color and tart edge. Pomegranate is less acidic than orange, so add a small squeeze of lemon if you want more lift. The flavor turns darker and more wine-forward.

Ice cubes: Replace with 3 oz of frozen fruit (sliced strawberries or grapes) to chill without dilution. The fruit releases sweetness as it thaws, so skip the juice entirely. The texture stays chunky and the drink becomes more of a sangria-light. For another easy option, check out our recipe dietary.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Fill a 12 oz glass with 1 cup ice cubes so the ice reaches about two-thirds up the side.
  2. Pour 4 oz red wine slowly over the ice to keep the pour from splashing and diluting fast.
  3. Add 3 oz cold carbonated water down the side of the glass to preserve the bubbles at the top.
  4. Add 1 oz chilled orange juice if using, then stir once with a long spoon to layer without flattening.
  5. Drop in 1 orange slice or 3 raspberries, then serve immediately while the fizz is active.

Pro Tips

Chill the wine and water separately before mixing so the ice barely melts. A warm pour turns the spritzer watery within minutes and loses the crisp edge.

Use a medium-bodied red with low oak. Heavy oak flavors taste sharp when diluted, while a soft red keeps the mix rounded.

Pour the carbonated water last and down the inner wall of the glass. This protects the bubble structure that makes the french gimlet style drinks feel lively too.

For a batch, mix wine and juice in a pitcher and add ice and water per glass. Read technique notes on carbonation handling to keep large batches from going flat.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Using sparkling wine instead of still red wine doubles the alcohol and changes the taste entirely. A red wine spritzer recipe relies on still wine cut with plain bubbles, not a bubbly wine base.

Adding water before ice makes the glass overflow and wastes wine. Always set the ice first so you can see the real headspace.

Over-stirring kills the carbonation. One gentle turn is enough to combine the layers without flattening the drink. You might also like our traditional hwachae refreshing.

Serving Suggestions

Pair the spritzer with salty snacks like olives or cured meat so the bubbles cut the fat. It also sits well next to a jalapeno margarita spread if you are building a mixed drink table. Serve in a stemmed glass to keep hands from warming the liquid.

Storage and Reheating

Mixed spritzers do not store well because the bubbles fade within 30 minutes. Keep open red wine sealed in the fridge up to 3 days and mix fresh per glass. Do not leave a finished drink unrefrigerated for more than 2 hours.

Recipe Variations

Berry Spritzer

Muddle 4 raspberries into the bottom of the glass before adding ice and wine. The berries add a seedless tartness and a deeper red color. Skip the orange juice so the fruit stays the only sweet note.

Herbal Version

Add 1 sprig of thyme or basil to the glass with the ice for a savory edge. The herbs steep slowly as you drink, so the last sips taste more aromatic than the first. Use a lighter red like Pinot Noir to avoid clashing.

Low-Sugar Option

Omit the juice and use unsweetened club soda with a squeeze of lemon. The drink drops to roughly 2 grams of sugar per glass from the wine alone. It reads drier and pairs better with irish cream desserts on the side.

Warm-Spice Spritzer

Add a pinch of cinnamon to the orange juice before mixing for a cold autumn twist. The spice stays subtle but adds a round warmth against the tannin. This works best with a fruity red like Zinfandel.

Red Wine Spritzer pinit
0 Add to Favorites

Red Wine Spritzer

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 3 mins Total Time 3 mins
Servings: 1 Estimated Cost: $ 8 Calories: 120 kcal

Description

A red wine spritzer turns a heavy glass of red into a light, fizzy drink by mixing it with cold carbonated water and a touch of bright juice over ice. It is ready in under three minutes, easy to scale for a group, and works with any bottle you already have open.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Fill glass with ice

    Take a 12 oz glass and fill it with 1 cup ice cubes so the ice reaches about two-thirds up the side. This sets the real headspace and prevents overflow when you later add liquid. Use a clear glass so you can see the ice level before pouring.

  2. Pour red wine over ice

    Slowly pour 4 oz red wine over the ice to keep the pour from splashing and diluting too fast. Pour gently down the center so the wine settles around the cubes without disturbing them much. The wine should sit below the top of the ice with clear headspace remaining.

  3. Add carbonated water

    Add 3 oz cold carbonated water down the side of the glass to preserve the bubbles at the top. Tilt the glass slightly and pour along the inner wall so the fizz stays active rather than flattening. You should see bubbles rising to the surface after this step.

  4. Add juice and stir

    Add 1 oz chilled orange juice if using, then stir once with a long spoon to layer without flattening. Use a single gentle turn so the juice mixes lightly but the carbonation remains. The drink should look lightly blended with bubbles still present at the top.

  5. Garnish and serve

    Drop in 1 orange slice or 3 raspberries, then serve immediately while the fizz is active. The garnish adds a visual cue and a little aroma as you drink. Serve right away so the spritzer does not go watery or flat.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 1


Amount Per Serving
Calories 120kcal
% Daily Value *
Sodium 10mg1%
Total Carbohydrate 6g2%
Sugars 4g
Protein 1g2%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

  • Storage: Keep open red wine sealed in the fridge up to 3 days and mix fresh per glass; do not leave a finished drink unrefrigerated for more than 2 hours.
  • Chill first: Chill the wine and carbonated water separately before mixing so the ice barely melts and the drink stays crisp. Check our smoothie easy recipe for another quick chilled option.
  • Pro tip: Pour carbonated water last down the inner wall of the glass to protect the bubble structure and keep the spritzer lively.
  • Avoid over-stir: One gentle turn is enough to combine layers without killing the carbonation.
Keywords: red wine spritzer, low alcohol drink, sparkling water cocktail, easy wine cocktail, summer drink, backyard drink, weeknight sip, batch cocktail
Rate this recipe
Did you make this recipe?

Tag  freshlyfoodrecipes if you made this recipe. Follow @freshlyfoodrecipes on Instagram for more recipes.

Pin this recipe to share with your friends and followers.

pinit
Recipe Card powered by WP Delicious

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Can I make this ahead of time?

Mixed spritzers do not store well because the bubbles fade within 30 minutes, so mix fresh per glass. Keep open red wine sealed in the fridge up to 3 days and combine with chilled water and ice when ready to serve. For more easy drinks, see our peach lemonade recipe.

Can I freeze this recipe?

You should not freeze the finished spritzer since the carbonation and texture are lost on thawing. Instead, freeze 3 oz of fruit like strawberries or grapes to chill the drink without dilution as described in the substitutions. Open wine can be kept refrigerated but not frozen for best flavor.

What can I substitute for the red wine?

Replace the red wine with an equal amount of rosé for a lighter pink version with similar structure and less tannin. You can also use an equal amount of tonic water in place of carbonated water for faint bitterness, cutting juice to half an ounce. Avoid sparkling wine since it doubles alcohol and changes the recipe entirely.

How do I know when it's done?

The spritzer is ready as soon as the wine, water, and optional juice are poured and lightly stirred with bubbles still active at the top. Serve immediately while the fizz is present and the ice has not melted enough to water it down. If the bubbles have flattened, the drink has sat too long and should be remade.

Anna Food and Lifestyle Blogger

Hi, I’m Anna — a wellness enthusiast, recipe creator, and founder of Cook Recipe. I love making healthy, easy, and feel-good meals that inspire others to live happier, more balanced lives. When I’m not in the kitchen, you’ll find me exploring new places or flowing through a yoga session! 🌿

Rate this recipe

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Rate this recipe

Add a question

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *