Merken My friend Sarah showed up at my door one scorching July afternoon with a bottle of prosecco and the wildest request: make something that tastes like summer but smells like a spa. I had dried culinary lavender sitting in my pantry from some baking experiment gone wrong, and suddenly this drink came together—it's become the thing people ask me to make now, especially when the heat settles in and everyone's tired of plain lemonade.
I served this at a backyard dinner party last summer and watched my very serious uncle—the one who drinks black coffee and complains about "fancy food"—have three glasses without comment. Later he asked if I could teach him how to make it, which felt like winning an award.
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Ingredients
- Dried culinary lavender: This is not the same as decorative lavender, so don't get creative here—it should smell like flowers you actually want to drink, not like someone's linen closet.
- Freshly squeezed lemon juice: Bottled juice will work in a pinch, but fresh lemons give you that bright, almost electric tartness that makes people pause mid-sip.
- Honey or agave syrup: Both dissolve differently in cold liquid, so honey adds richness while agave stays neutral—pick based on what flavor direction you want.
- Sparkling wine or prosecco: You don't need anything expensive; the lemonade and lavender do the heavy lifting, so save your good bottles for sipping solo.
- Ice cubes: Make them ahead if you can because there's nothing worse than watered-down spritz from melting ice.
- Lemon slices and fresh lavender sprigs: These are your garnish moment, so go a little wild with presentation if the mood strikes.
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Instructions
- Steep that lavender gently:
- Combine water, sugar, and lavender in a small saucepan and let it simmer until the sugar dissolves—you'll notice the water turning faintly purple and smelling absolutely gorgeous. Let it steep covered for exactly 10 minutes, then strain it through a fine mesh strainer while still warm so the syrup flows through easily.
- Build your lemonade base:
- In a pitcher, whisk together fresh lemon juice, cold water, and your chosen sweetener until everything's dissolved and the mixture tastes balanced—tart but not puckering. This is your foundation, so taste as you go.
- Assemble with intention:
- Fill each glass with ice cubes, then add 2 tablespoons of cooled lavender syrup followed by 1/4 cup of your lemonade mixture—the order matters because the syrup settles beautifully at the bottom. Give it a gentle stir to distribute the flavors.
- Top and finish:
- Pour about 1/3 cup of chilled sparkling wine or prosecco into each glass and stir once more—not aggressively, just enough to marry everything together. Garnish with a lemon slice and a sprig of fresh lavender if you have it, then serve immediately while everything's still cold and effervescent.
Merken There's something quietly magical about watching someone taste this drink for the first time—their eyes widen a little at the unexpected floral note, and you can see them mentally filing it away as something they want to remember. It's the kind of drink that makes an ordinary afternoon feel intentional.
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Making Lavender Syrup That Actually Works
The syrup is genuinely where the magic lives, and I learned this the hard way after making batches that tasted like perfume. The trick is respecting the 10-minute steep time—going longer turns it bitter and cloying, while shorter doesn't extract enough flavor. Once it's cooled, you can store it in the fridge for up to two weeks, which means you can make impromptu spritzes whenever the mood hits.
Customizing for Your Crowd
I've learned that not everyone drinks alcohol, and honestly, this recipe handles that beautifully—swap the sparkling wine for plain sparkling water and you've got something equally special. Kids love it, people watching their alcohol intake feel included, and it costs way less while tasting just as lovely. The real star is the lavender lemonade anyway; the wine is just an elegant addition rather than the whole point.
Serving and Timing Tips
Prep your lavender syrup and lemonade base several hours ahead on a hot day, and you're set for quick assembly when guests arrive. The beauty of this drink is that everything comes together in minutes at the very end, so you're actually present with people instead of stuck in the kitchen juggling glasses.
- Pour the sparkling wine last, right before serving, so you capture all those bubbles that make the drink feel special.
- Keep backup ice in the freezer because nothing kills the mood faster than melted, watery drinks.
- Taste your lemonade before you build the spritzes so you know if adjustments are needed.
Merken This drink has become my answer to the question "what should we drink?" on warm days, and I hope it becomes yours too. There's something honest about a drink you made yourself, something that says you care enough to take 20 minutes and create something beautiful.
Fragen & Antworten zum Rezept
- → Wie stelle ich den Lavendelsirup her?
Wasser, Zucker und getrockneten Lavendel aufkochen und ziehen lassen. Anschließend abseihen und abkühlen lassen.
- → Kann ich den Spritz alkoholfrei zubereiten?
Ja, ersetze den sprudelnden Wein einfach durch prickelndes Wasser für eine alkoholfreie Variante.
- → Welche Zitronen eignen sich am besten?
Frisch gepresster Saft von unbehandelten, reifen Zitronen sorgt für den besten Geschmack.
- → Wie lange hält sich der Lavendelsirup im Kühlschrank?
Im luftdichten Behälter etwa zwei Wochen, gut gekühlt, haltbar.
- → Womit passt dieser Drink gut zusammen?
Leichte Sommersalate und Ziegenkäse als Begleiter harmonieren wunderbar mit den floralen Aromen.