
Ingredients
- 90 ml amontillado sherry or oloroso
- 15 ml simple syrup 1:1
- 2 wheels orange plus extra for garnish
- 1 cup crushed ice plus more for topping
- 1 mix seasonal fruit berries, citrus, mint, for garnish
Instructions
- Add two orange wheels and the simple syrup to a shaker.
- Muddle gently to release the orange oils.
- Add the sherry and a scoop of crushed ice.
- Shake briefly (10 seconds) just to chill.
- Strain into a goblet packed with fresh crushed ice.
- Top with more crushed ice, mounded high.
- Garnish lavishly with seasonal fruit: orange wheels, lemon slices, berries, a sprig of mint.
- Serve with a straw. Long, slow sipping is the entire point.
Notes
Where it came from
The Cobbler family of drinks (cobblers were any spirit + sugar + crushed ice + fruit) emerged in early 1800s America. The Sherry Cobbler was the breakout star, popular through the 1870s and 80s. Charles Dickens raved about it in The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (1844), where his protagonist tried one in New York and thought it was the most wonderful invention.
The Sherry Cobbler is widely credited as the drink that introduced the drinking straw to the world. Hollow ryegrass straws were used to sip the cobbler without getting fruit and ice in your moustache. Modern paper and steel straws all descend from this innovation.
Why sherry
Sherry is fortified Spanish wine, around 15-20 percent ABV. It comes in dry styles (fino, manzanilla), nutty styles (amontillado, oloroso) and sweet styles (cream sherry, PX). The Cobbler typically uses amontillado for its nutty caramel notes that play beautifully with citrus and sugar.
Because sherry is lower ABV than spirits, the Cobbler is a long-sipping daytime drink rather than a quick punchy cocktail. The fruit and crushed ice make it feel like a grown-up snow cone.
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Ingredient Spotlight
The bottles that make or break this drink.
The sherry
- Use
- Amontillado sherry: Lustau Los Arcos, Hidalgo Napoleon
- Try
- Oloroso for a richer version, or fino for a drier and brighter one
- Skip
- Cream sherry or PX, both far too sweet for this drink
The fruit
- Use
- Whatever is in season: berries in summer, citrus in winter, stone fruit in autumn
- Try
- Pineapple wedges, pomegranate seeds, fresh figs, peach slices
- Why
- The Cobbler is a fruit drink. Use multiple varieties for visual drama and layered flavour.
The ice
- Use
- Crushed ice, mounded above the rim
- Try
- Pebble ice (Sonic-style nugget ice) for the perfect texture
- Why
- Crushed ice dilutes slowly, chills the drink and gives the proper texture for straw drinking.
What if I don't have…
Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.
Oloroso, fino or even tawny port works. Avoid sweet sherry (cream, PX) which is too cloying.
At minimum, an orange wheel and a maraschino cherry. The drink works but loses its visual identity.
Wrap regular cubes in a tea towel and crush with a rolling pin.
Swap sherry for bourbon (60ml). Different drink, same architecture.
Top with a splash of soda water or sparkling wine for a Champagne Cobbler.
Frequently Asked Questions
Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.
What is in a Sherry Cobbler?
Amontillado sherry, simple syrup, muddled orange and a generous garnish of seasonal fruit. Standard build is 90ml sherry, 15ml syrup, two muddled orange wheels, served over crushed ice in a goblet with fruit piled on top. Drink with a straw.
Why is the Sherry Cobbler called the drink that invented the straw?
In the mid-1800s the Sherry Cobbler’s popularity coincided with the introduction of the drinking straw, originally hollow ryegrass tubes used to sip the cobbler without getting fruit in your moustache. The first patented paper straw (1888) was specifically marketed to cobbler drinkers.
What kind of sherry should I use?
Amontillado is the classic choice for its nutty caramel character. Fino is drier and lighter; oloroso is richer and more wine-like. Avoid cream sherry or Pedro Ximenez (PX), both far too sweet.
How strong is a Sherry Cobbler?
About 8-10 percent ABV in the glass. Sherry is around 15-20 percent ABV and the ice and juice dilute it further. A great daytime sipper that will not knock you out.
Can I use port instead of sherry?
Yes. Tawny port works well, the nuttiness suits the fruit. Avoid heavy ruby ports which can be too sweet and tannic.
What fruit should I put in a Cobbler?
Whatever is in season. Summer: berries, peach, citrus. Autumn: pomegranate, fig, persimmon. Winter: orange, blood orange, grapefruit. Spring: strawberry, mint. The visual abundance is part of the drink.
Why does it need crushed ice?
Crushed ice chills the drink quickly, dilutes the sherry to drinking strength, and creates the right texture for straw drinking. Cube ice keeps the drink too strong and warm and the fruit harder to reach.
What food goes with a Sherry Cobbler?
Tapas: Manchego cheese, Iberico ham, marinated olives, croquetas. Also great with summer salads, fresh seafood and anything fruit-forward.



