When I’m thinking of a drink for when the mercury nears a fiery 40°C, a Hugo Spritz cocktail comes to mind. If you don’t completely love the bitter taste of an Apérol spritz, then a Hugo spritz, made with slightly sweet and floral elderflower liqueur, could be a better sipper. It’s also just a little bit fancy.
Along with the elderflower liqueur, prosecco adds bubbles and brightness and soda water keeps everything crisp and easy to drink. Usually finished with fresh mint and lime, it tastes quite fresh rather than boozy – the kind of drink you can sip slowly on a warm afternoon.
Making this cocktail also incredibly approachable. There are no complicated ratios, no specialist bar skills, and it’s very easy to adjust to suit everyone’s taste. Light, fragrant and effortlessly drinkable, the Hugo spritz is this summer’s drink to covet.
Who invented the Hugo spritz?
The Hugo Spritz was dreamt up in 2005 in northern Italy’s South Tyrol region by bartender Roland Gruber at the San Zeno bar in the town of Naturno. He created it as a lighter, more floral option to the classic Apérol Spritz, originally using lemon balm syrup before swapping to elderflower syrup (and later elderflower liqueur) as the key flavour in the cocktail.




A great, refreshing drink for summer. Easy to make.