NOW EXPERIENCING:Enzoni cocktail recipe
total time 3 MINS | serves 1 | standard drinks per serve 1.5 approx.

Read time 2 Mins

Posted 23 Apr 2024

By
James Fisher


The Enzoni cocktail, which is made with muddled grapes

Fresh green grapes have entered the chat to shake things up for the traditional Negroni.

About the cocktail

If you try ordering an Enzoni at a noisy bar, you might walk away with a Negroni. But that wouldn’t be too far off – their names sound similar because they share similar DNA. A classic Negroni is gin, Campari and sweet vermouth. This modern classic, the Enzoni, swaps sweet vermouth for muddled green grapes, and adds fresh lemon juice and sugar syrup, to create the perfect gateway cocktail for those who may be newer to Campari and bitter aperitivos.

Negronis, and their numerous variants, are now de rigueur, but when Vincenzo Errico created the Enzoni at Match Bar in London in the early 2000s, it was ahead of its time. However, despite the rise of aperitivo culture, many are yet to embrace Campari and bitter cocktails. That’s where the Enzoni comes in. By subduing the Campari’s bitterness, and lifting the cocktail into sour territory, we’re left with a hybrid that’s new, familiar, and downright mouthwatering.

If you’re a Negroni fanatic wondering whether the Enzoni is for you, the answer is yes. Bringing a cocktail shaker to a Negroni party might feel like breaking the rules, but it’s the right tool for this job. Think of it as a cross between a Negroni and a Sour, offering a new perspective on what you already know and love. There’s a Negroni at its core, with all the bitter-sweet interplay, but the Enzoni adds a punchy sour element from the fresh citrus, and a new dimension in the subtle grape fruitiness that really shines with the Campari and gin.

And if you’re still wondering why Enzoni sounds like Negroni, Enzoni is a nod to the creator's first name and the cocktail that inspired it.

Holding the Enzoni cocktail
Up close with the Enzoni cocktail

Ingredients

  • 5 fresh green grapes
  • 30mL gin
  • 30mL Campari
  • 20mL fresh lemon
  • 15mL sugar syrup
  • Glass: double old fashioned or rocks
  • Garnish: orange slice and/or fresh grapes

Method

  1. Add the grapes to a cocktail shaker and muddle
  2. Add all remaining ingredients to the shaker with cubed ice
  3. Shake until the outside of the tin is frosty
  4. Carefully strain into a chilled glass
  5. Garnish with an orange slice and/or grapes

Dan’s top tips

Don’t have green grapes? Try red, but remember, green will provide more acidity.

Too sweet? Or, too sour? Adjust the fresh lemon juice and sugar syrup to taste. Alternatively, try muddling more, or fewer, grapes.

Fresh out of Campari, but you’ve got Aperol? Give it a try. Keep in mind that Aperol is sweeter, and less bitter, than Campari, and has approximately half the ABV.

Not a gin fan? Try rye whiskey, and make what’s known as a Fall Enzoni.

image credits: Shelley Horan (photography), Bridget Wald (stylist).