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This Cava Slushy Is the New Drink of Summer

The Aperol Spritz is great, but there's a refreshing Spanish slushy we should all be making time as the weather heats up.

This Cava Slushy Is the New Drink of Summer
This Cava Slushy Is the New Drink of Summer

This Cava Slushy Is the New Drink of Summer

The Aperol spritz has been selfishly hogging the summer spotlight. With its fizzy refreshing bubbles, sunset hue, and cute orange slice—I mean enough is enough, already! Sure, it's delightful, but that doesn’t mean we can’t make room in these long balmy evenings for another refreshment: the slushy, foamy Cava sorbet.

Italians don’t get to have all the fun—the Spanish also know how to keep it cool when the sun feels like it's 20 feet from your face. Cava sorbet, or sorbete de limón al Cava, is made by mixing an icy, refreshing lemon dessert with a bubbly wine. The resulting drink (if served fast enough) is frothy, and temptingly slushy, but not in that suspicious frozen-margarita-mix kind of way. The foamy sweetness and bright citrus pop are sure to put a smile on your face, even through the sweat droplets.

How to make a simple cava sorbet

This drink is dead simple to make, it’s almost mind boggling how it isn’t more popular already. Add eight ounces of lemon sorbet to a blender container, or into a deep measuring cup if you’re using an immersion blender like I do. Pour three or four ounces of Cava over the dessert, and drop in a fresh mint leaf or two. If you like a creamy drink, you can add a spoonful of cream or sweetened condensed milk to the concoction. Blend it all until smooth. Divide the mixture into wine glasses and enjoy.

This Cava Slushy Is the New Drink of Summer

Chopped lemon sorbet popsicles ready to be transformed.Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Can’t find Cava? No sorbet to be found? Thankfully, it’s a rather flexible ingredient list. My Shoprite in Brooklyn didn’t have lemon sorbet in a typical pint container, and the freezer with the small tubs of Italian ice was broken. So necessity took the wheel. I used Talenti mini lemon sorbetto popsicles. Yes, that is the professional operation I’m running over here. I broke the sorbet chunks off of the stick and moved on.

That’s not the only thing you can fudge. You can switch up the sparkling wine if you’re partial to prosecco instead, or even better, champagne. Cava is a sparkline wine made using the same traditional fermentation method as Champagne. You could even say Cava is the Spanish version of Champagne, so if you can’t find Cava, you know what to do. You’ll get an equally delicious flavor and no one has to know your Spanish beverage is French. Or is it Italian if you use sorbetto? I’ll get back to you on that, after I finish my Cava sorbet.

This Cava sorbet drink recipe is a great alternative to the popular Aperol spritz, especially during long balmy evenings. To make a simple Cava sorbet, blend lemon sorbet, Cava, and a mint leaf until smooth. If you can't find Cava, you can substitute with prosecco or even champagne, as Cava shares the same traditional fermentation method.

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