Côtes de Bordeaux Bloom is a floral-forward French aperitif that celebrates the fruit, spice, and verdant hillsides of Bordeaux in a contemporary, low-effort spritz. Rather than hiding the personality of the wine, this recipe frames it with delicate elderflower, tart verjus, and a whisper of alpine gentian. A small measure of raspberry purée bolsters fruit tones without pushing the drink into dessert territory, while soda adds lift and an airy sparkle. The result is a gently effervescent, ruby-kissed cocktail that feels equally at home on a sunny terrace as it does at a refined apéritif hour.
Red Bordeaux is rarely the first wine bartenders reach for when mixing. Tannins can clash with citrus and carbonation. Here, several techniques tame those edges:
Expect wild raspberry and cherry from a youthful Côtes de Bordeaux, lifted by blossoms, thyme, and grapefruit oils. Pink peppercorn is optional but recommended; its rose-like top notes harmonize with elderflower and mirror the wine’s red-fruit aromatics. The finish is crisp, dry to off-dry, and elegantly bittered—more spritz than sangria.
For a small gathering, batch everything except soda and fresh citrus. Keep the blend chilled, then top each pour with soda just before serving. If batching, strain out peppercorns and thyme to avoid bitterness over time. A 750 ml bottle yields roughly eight servings using the proportions here; adjust liqueur and verjus to taste after a quick test pour.
Create a zero-proof Bloom by using de-alcoholized red wine or a blend of tannin tea and red grape juice, then add elderflower syrup (not liqueur), verjus, lemon, and soda. Keep bitterness with a nonalcoholic aperitif or a few dashes of zero-proof bitters.
The apéritif tradition in France values appetite-whetting drinks that are aromatic, moderate, and social. Côtes de Bordeaux Bloom nods to that ritual with ingredients that are distinctly French—verjus from the vineyard, floral liqueurs from alpine and rural traditions, and the region’s celebrated wine—yet it feels modern, airy, and seasonless.
Pair with salted almonds, goat cheese tartines, or olives. For a spring touch, serve alongside radishes with butter and flaky salt; the peppery snap plays beautifully with the drink’s floral fruit.
Côtes de Bordeaux Bloom is proof that red wine can be both sophisticated and playful in a cocktail glass. It is an invitation to think like a winemaker while mixing like a bartender—layering acidity, fragrance, and texture so the wine shines rather than disappears. Once you taste how the verjus and elderflower coax the fruit forward and the soda loosens the structure, you may find this Bloom becoming your go-to aperitif when the evening calls for something graceful, refreshing, and unmistakably French.