-

📌 Pin

Bellini

Prosecco and white peach puree, blended cold. The Harry's Bar Venice original from 1948. Drier than a Mimosa, more elegant than a Buck's Fizz, named after a Renaissance painter and dressed for a piazza.

Bellini Cocktail Recipe: A Classic Champagne and Peach Delight
4.37 from 11 votes
Calories: 160kcal
Prep Time: 2 minutes
Total Time: 2 minutes
The Bellini cocktail is a classic drink that combines the elegance of Champagne with the sweet, fruity flavor of peach schnapps. This simple yet sophisticated cocktail is perfect for celebrating special occasions or enjoying a luxurious brunch. Here’s how to make this delightful drink.

Ingredients

Instructions

Prepare the Glass:

  • Begin by chilling a Champagne glass in the freezer to ensure the drink stays refreshingly cold.

Combine the Ingredients:

  • Pour 3 parts Champagne into the chilled glass. The Champagne provides a bubbly, refreshing base that sets the tone for the cocktail.
  • Add 1 part peach schnapps. The schnapps introduces a sweet, fruity flavor that complements the dryness of the Champagne.
  • Add a dash of grenadine syrup. This not only adds a hint of sweetness but also gives the cocktail a beautiful blush color.

Serve:

  • Serve the Bellini immediately to enjoy its refreshing taste and elegant presentation.

Notes

The Bellini cocktail is a perfect choice for any celebratory occasion. Its combination of Champagne and peach schnapps creates a delightful blend of flavors that is both refreshing and sophisticated. Whether you’re toasting to a special event or simply enjoying a luxurious moment, the Bellini is sure to enhance your experience. Enjoy this classic cocktail and elevate your next celebration!

Estimated Nutrition:

Calories: 160kcal (8%)Carbohydrates: 8g (3%)Potassium: 91mg (3%)Sugar: 7g (8%)Iron: 0.5mg (3%)
CourseBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
CuisineBeverage, Cocktail, Drinks
KeywordBeverage Recipe, Cocktail Recipe, Drink Recipe

Where it came from

Giuseppe Cipriani invented the Bellini at Harry's Bar in Venice in 1948. He named it after the 15th-century Venetian painter Giovanni Bellini because the drink's pink-orange colour reminded him of the saint's robe in one of Bellini's paintings. The drink became the bar's signature and stayed that way.

Harry's Bar still serves the Bellini exactly the same way: white peach puree (made on-site from fresh peaches in season), prosecco DOC, no garnish, no embellishment. Ernest Hemingway, Truman Capote, Orson Welles, and a long list of mid-century celebrities ordered them by the round.

What it tastes like

Soft, fruity, and dry, with a peach-melba quality and the lift of dry sparkling wine. Less sweet than a Mimosa, more delicate than a Kir Royale.

White peach is the key. Yellow peaches are fine but they're sweeter and bring less of the floral perfume that defines this drink. Frozen white peach puree (Boiron, Ravifruit) is the off-season fallback.

The technique

Two parts prosecco to one part chilled white peach puree. The Harry's spec: 100ml prosecco, 50ml chilled white peach puree. Combine cold ingredients in a chilled flute. Stir gently with a barspoon. No garnish, no fuss.

The puree must be cold. Warm puree kills the bubbles. Make a batch of fresh puree (white peaches, blender, fine sieve), chill in the fridge for an hour, then build to order.

Drink Buddy Exclusive

Tell us what's in your cabinet.

Our Cocktail Builder takes whatever bottles you've got and hands you every drink you can actually make tonight.

Open the Builder →

Get the Drink Buddy newsletter

One drink, one tip, one Tuesday a month.

Plus the recipes we drop before they hit the site. Zero spam.

Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

The peach

Use
Fresh white peaches in season, or frozen white peach puree (Boiron, Ravifruit)
Skip
Yellow peaches (too sweet) or peach syrup (artificial)
Why
White peach is softer and more floral. The drink is named for that specific colour and aroma.

The prosecco

Use
Prosecco DOC or DOCG (Italian, dry)
Skip
Sweet prosecco, Asti, or non-Italian sparkling
Why
Italian prosecco DOC is the canonical pairing. Dry is essential to balance the peach.

The temperature

Use
Both ingredients fridge-cold, flute chilled
Skip
Room-temperature puree (kills the bubbles)
Why
Cold ingredients keep the bubbles lively and the drink crisp.

Variations

Other champagne and prosecco classics for civilised afternoons.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No fresh white peaches?

Frozen white peach puree (Boiron, Ravifruit) is the standard substitute. Tinned peaches in juice (not syrup) work in a pinch.

No prosecco?

Cava, cremant, or champagne all work. Avoid sweet sparkling wine.

No white peaches?

Yellow peaches make a sweeter, more candy-like Bellini. Bartenders sometimes mix yellow with apricot for closer flavour.

Want it sweeter?

Add 5ml of peach syrup or simple syrup to the puree before mixing.

Need a winter version?

Use frozen white peach puree from a specialty supplier. Roasted-peach puree (skin on, oven 30 min) gives extra depth in cold months.

Frequently Asked Questions

Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.

What is in a Bellini?

Prosecco and white peach puree. The classic spec is two parts prosecco to one part puree: 100ml prosecco, 50ml chilled white peach puree, in a flute.

How do you make a Bellini?

Pour 50ml cold white peach puree into a chilled flute. Slowly top with 100ml cold prosecco, pouring down the side. Stir once gently with a barspoon. No garnish.

Where did the Bellini come from?

Harry's Bar in Venice, 1948. Bartender Giuseppe Cipriani created it and named it after Renaissance painter Giovanni Bellini, whose paintings featured the drink's pink-orange colour.

Bellini vs Mimosa?

Both are sparkling-wine and fruit cocktails. Bellini uses white peach puree and prosecco; Mimosa uses orange juice and champagne. Bellini is drier and more delicate.

Can I use yellow peaches?

Yes, but the drink will be sweeter and lose the floral white-peach aroma. Yellow peach Bellinis taste closer to peach Schweppes; white peach is canonical.

What prosecco is best?

Prosecco DOC or DOCG, dry. Mionetto, La Marca, Bisol, or Nino Franco are all reliable. Avoid sweet prosecco labelled extra dry (which is sweeter than dry).

Why is the temperature important?

Warm puree flattens the bubbles instantly. Both ingredients must be fridge-cold for the drink to stay lively.

How strong is a Bellini?

About 7 to 8 percent ABV in the flute. Light. Sessionable for a leisurely afternoon.

Can I make Bellinis ahead of time?

Make the puree ahead. Combine the prosecco and puree to order. The wine goes flat within 5 to 10 minutes of opening.

What glass should I use?

A flute. The Harry's Bar version is always served in a flute. A coupe works visually but loses bubbles faster.

DL
From the Drink Lab catalogue

Drink Lab has been collecting cocktail recipes since 2013. Some we wrote ourselves, plenty came in from readers, and the rest got passed across a bar somewhere along the way.

Last updated April 26, 2026 · 1 min read

More Like This

More short, light, sparkling cocktails when subtlety is the point.