For a Festive Caipirinha, Add Pomegranate and Sparkling Wine

20151104-Sparkling-Pomegranate-Caipirinha-cocktails-Elana-Lepkowski.jpg
Elana Lepkowski

我觉得自己是一个漂亮的wh知识渊博的人en it comes to cocktails. And yet, a few years back, I found myself too intimidated to order a Caipirinha. The problem was the name. My own name is mispronounced about 60% of the time—you're probably saying it wrong right now—so I just hate not knowing how to pronounce a drink's name correctly.

However you say it (kye-peer-EEN-yah, shall we practice?), the Caipirinha is delicious. Worth embarrassing yourself in front of a bartender for. It's a bit like a classicDaiquiri, only it calls for sugarcane juice–basedcachaçainstead of rum, and wedges of lime instead of just the juice. Those swaps give the drink an earthy, husky character that's a fascinating departure from the bright and smooth Daiquiri.

20151104-Sparkling-Pomegranate-Caipirinha-ingredients-Elana-Lepkowski.jpg

In this wintry variation, the sour bite of the lime gets punched up with sweet-tart pomegranate juice (and fresh pomegranate seeds give it a little crunch). The rosy color feels just right for holiday parties, and a little sparkling wine makes it even more celebratory. The wine serves as a bridge between flavors, heightening the drink's fruitiness and floral notes. In order to incorporate the wine without shaking it (and losing its bubbles), you'll add the bubbly to the shaker last, after everything else is shaken and chilled. Tipping the mixture into your serving glass will help combine the wine with all the other ingredients, so it doesn't just sit on top.

If you don't want to pop open a whole bottle of sparkling wine, consider grabbing a split, which is a quarter bottle—just right for two of these drinks. Once you make one, I'm certain you'll want another.

20151104-Sparkling-Pomegranate-Caipirinha-muddled-Elana-Lepkowski.jpg

And, by the way, it'se-LAY-nuh.