This guide covers everything you need to know about wine spritzers: how to make them properly, which wines work best, and how to elevate this simple drink into something you are proud to serve.
The Case for Wine Spritzers
Wine spritzers deserve more respect. Here is why:
The Nutritional Math
| Drink | Serving | Calories | Carbs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full Glass Dry Wine | 5 oz | 120 | 3 to 4g |
| Wine Spritzer (50/50) | 5 oz | 60 | 1.5 to 2g |
| Light Spritzer (1/3 wine) | 5 oz | 40 | 1g |
A 50/50 wine spritzer cuts your calories in half. A light spritzer brings wine drinking under 50 calories. Over an evening of 3 to 4 drinks, that is a savings of 200+ calories.
Other Benefits
- Hydrating: The sparkling water adds hydration instead of pure alcohol
- Lower ABV: Easier to pace yourself and stay coherent
- Refreshing: Bubbles and lower alcohol content make these perfect for warm weather
- Volume: Same serving size feels more substantial
- Flexibility: Easy to adjust strength to your preference
Basic Wine Spritzer Recipes
Classic White Wine Spritzer
Calories: 60 to 75 | Carbs: 1.5 to 2g
Recipe:
- 2.5 oz dry white wine
- 2.5 oz sparkling water or club soda
- Lemon or lime twist
- Ice
Best wines: Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio, dry Riesling, Albarino
Rosé Spritzer
Calories: 60 to 70 | Carbs: 1.5 to 2g
Recipe:
- 2.5 oz dry rosé
- 2.5 oz sparkling water
- Fresh strawberry or raspberry
- Ice
Best wines: Provence style rosé, Spanish rosado, dry American rosé
Red Wine Spritzer
Calories: 65 to 80 | Carbs: 2g
Less common but works well with lighter reds:
Recipe:
- 2.5 oz light red wine
- 2.5 oz sparkling water
- Orange slice
- Ice
Best wines: Beaujolais (Gamay), light Pinot Noir, Lambrusco
Elevated Wine Spritzer Recipes
Grapefruit Spritzer
Calories: 70 to 85 | Carbs: 3g
- 2.5 oz Sauvignon Blanc
- 2 oz sparkling water
- 0.5 oz fresh grapefruit juice
- Grapefruit twist
Cucumber Mint Spritzer
Calories: 65 | Carbs: 2g
- 2.5 oz Pinot Grigio
- 2.5 oz sparkling water
- 2 cucumber slices
- 3 mint leaves
- Ice
Berry Rosé Spritzer
Calories: 75 | Carbs: 3g
- 2.5 oz dry rosé
- 2 oz sparkling water
- 3 to 4 fresh raspberries (muddled lightly)
- Splash of lime juice
Elderflower Spritzer
Calories: 90 | Carbs: 5g
- 2 oz dry white wine
- 2 oz sparkling water
- 0.5 oz St. Germain elderflower liqueur
- Lemon twist
Peach Bellini Spritzer
Calories: 85 | Carbs: 5g
- 2 oz prosecco
- 2 oz sparkling water
- 1 oz fresh peach puree (or 2 peach slices muddled)
Best Wines for Spritzers
Not all wines work equally well diluted. Look for:
Ideal Characteristics
- High acidity: Crisp wines hold up to dilution
- Dry: Sweet wines become cloying when diluted
- Aromatic: Flavors should persist through the water
- Light to medium body: Heavy wines get watered down taste
Best White Wines
- Sauvignon Blanc: Perfect acidity and citrus notes
- Pinot Grigio: Clean and neutral, works with any addition
- Vinho Verde: Already slightly effervescent, very light
- Dry Riesling: Aromatic enough to persist through dilution
- Albarino: Spanish white with bright acidity
Best Rosés
- Provence rosé: Pale, dry, perfect for spritzers
- Spanish rosado: Crisp and affordable
- Dry American rosé: Look for Pinot Noir based
Wines to Avoid
- Oaked Chardonnay: Becomes thin and odd
- Sweet wines: Diluted sweetness tastes off
- Heavy reds: Tannic reds dilute poorly
- Very expensive wines: Wasting the nuance
Sparkling Water Selection
The sparkling water you choose affects the final drink:
Best Options
- Plain club soda: Neutral, lets wine shine
- San Pellegrino: Mineral content adds complexity
- Topo Chico: Aggressive bubbles, very refreshing
- Perrier: Classic choice, smaller bubbles
Flavored Options
- La Croix Lime: Adds citrus without calories
- Waterloo Grapefruit: Pairs well with Sauvignon Blanc
- Spindrift: Contains trace real fruit juice (check calories)
Serving Wine Spritzers
Glassware
- Large wine glass: Shows off the color and bubbles
- Stemless wine glass: Casual but appropriate
- Highball glass: Works for more casual settings
Ice Considerations
- With ice: More refreshing, drinks colder longer, dilutes as ice melts
- Without ice: Purer wine flavor, chill glasses and ingredients instead
- Compromise: One large ice cube melts slower
Batch Spritzer for Parties
Serves 8:
- 1 bottle (750ml) dry white wine or rosé
- 750ml sparkling water (add at service)
- Sliced citrus or berries
- Fresh herbs
Keep wine and sparkling water cold separately. Combine in pitcher or glasses at service to maintain bubbles.
Commercial Wine Spritzers
Pre made wine spritzers have improved significantly:
Good Options
- Bev: Dry wine spritzers, ~90 calories per can
- Haus: Aperitif style, interesting flavors
- Ramona: Organic wine spritzers, ~80 calories
Watch Out For
- Added sugar in some brands
- Artificial flavors
- Higher calorie counts than DIY versions
Conclusion
Wine spritzers are legitimately excellent drinks, not just calorie compromises. The combination of crisp wine, refreshing bubbles, and elegant garnishes creates something that stands on its own merits. At 60 to 90 calories depending on ratios and additions, they let you enjoy wine’s pleasures at half the caloric cost.
Start with dry Sauvignon Blanc or Provence rosé, add sparkling water, and experiment with fresh fruit and herbs. You will discover a refreshing drink that works perfectly for summer afternoons, dinner parties, or any time you want to enjoy wine more mindfully.
Use our DrinkLeader database to look up specific wines and plan your spritzer creations.
Nutritional values based on standard ratios. Adjust wine to water ratio based on your preferences and calorie goals.
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