Skip to main content

How to make Frosé for a heat wave cool off

Your guide to making this staple summer drink

Bar Primi Frose
Bar Primi

It’s hot out there, people. And one of the absolute best ways to cool off is by way of a great frozen cocktail. So, let us introduce you to the pink wine-inspired Frosé, an ideal drink for the next heat wave.

But first, a little history. The Frosé was allegedly born at Bar Primi in NYC. The drink is very much as advertised, a rosé wine-centric frozen cocktail (hence, the name). The Italian joint’s general manager, Justin Sievers, came up with the drink, treating guests to an ice-cold pink concoction that’s all the better during the middle of summer.

Recommended Videos

How to make Frosé

Rose wine in ice bucket
Maor Attias / Pexels

Throwing some pink wine and ice in a blender might yield something vaguely drinkable, but that’s not how you make a proper Frosé. There are some details that need to be addressed regarding the Frosé recipe. For starters, the wine. Sievers said to go with fuller, juicier rosé wines. “Some rosés can be quite light and not have much flavor,” he explained. “That is not what you want here. You need that juicy fruit-forwardness in order for the flavor to punch through when it’s frozen.”

Examples include Le Veli ‘Torrerose,’ a product of the Primitivo grape. Sievers also likes fruit-forward pink wines made from Sangiovese. Begin with the strawberries. “You’ll need to puree them ahead of time and freeze that puree in an ice cube tray,” Sievers said. “To make the puree, you’ll just put 1 pound of whole strawberries (be sure to cut off the green tops!) in a blender with 2 tablespoons of sugar and about 6 ounces of water. Blend it all up and pour it into your ice cube trays. This allows you to use them in smaller quantities depending on how much Frosé you are making.”

Additional tips

Ice cubes for an ice bath
Jan Antonin Kolar / Unsplash

There are other tricks to the Frosé-making trade. Sievers suggests keeping everything in the fridge so it’s all cold when it goes into the blender. “You can also pre-mix the rosé wine and rosé vermouth and put it in the freezer, but it will freeze solid, so make sure to put them in a plastic container first and not a glass bottle,” he said.

The secret weapon is the flavored cubes. “When you put it all together in the blender to finally make your refreshing libation, the strawberry puree ‘ice cubes’ will act as your freezing agent that will give you that smooth texture. There is no additional water in our original recipe, but if you are having trouble getting the consistency frozen enough, you can throw a few additional regular ice cubes in as well,” he added.

Sievers jokes that if you’re really serious about nailing that texture, you can shell out $1,200 for a good frozen drink machine.

Try a Frosé on a hot day this summer and see why we’re smitten. While you’re at it, check out The Manual’s takes on the frozen lemon drop as well as classic frozen cocktails. There’s no reason for you to feel as hot as the forecast.

Mark Stock
Mark Stock is a writer from Portland, Oregon. He fell into wine during the Recession and has been fixated on the stuff since…
From sangiovese to syrah: the ultimate guide to dry red wines
Some of the greatest wines ever made
Cut of grilled steak with glass of red wine

Chances are your favorite red wine is dry. I know that not because I have a crystal ball, but because pretty much every popular red wine is dry. (I urge you to discover the many delights of sweet red wine, but not right now.) Before we get into types, let’s address the big question: What makes a wine dry?

Wines are called dry when they have comparatively low amounts of residual sugars, meaning they taste less sweet (technically below 1%, or nine grams of sugar per liter). All wines would be dry if fermentation weren’t halted or they were back-sweetened. Yeast will “ferment until dry,” meaning it will gobble up all the sugar there is, no crumbs left. This dry descriptor applies to all types of wine – sparkling, white, red, and rosé. The first time dry appears in writing referring to wine was in Richard Ames’s 1691 poem “The Last Search After Claret, &C.” in which the narrator is looking for a red Bordeaux but is offered sweet port instead:

Read more
Don’t be afraid of using Scotch in cocktails – these bartenders show you how
Beatnick on the River

As today is National Cocktail Day, lots of us will be reaching for our home bars to try out something new. That could be working with a new spirit or an unusual liqueur -- or even digging in the garden for some fresh herbs to add to a mixing glass. But there's one spirit which plenty of people enjoy drinking but rarely mix with, and that's Scotch.

Scotch is most often enjoyed neat, and it used to be the case that even thinking about mixing with it was considering wasteful and unsophisticated. But that time has passed, and now plenty of bartenders and experts are interested in what this powerful, smokey whisky style can add to a cocktail.

Read more
The simple science behind how to cook medium steak
A foolproof guide to perfect doneness
Steak levels of doneness

Every backyard grill master has their version of steak perfection. For me, that perfect middle ground came into focus the day a guest asked, “Can you make mine medium?” The slight panic was real. I had always shot for medium-rare or well-done — I didn't even know there was an in-between.

But learning how to cook steak medium turned out to be less about guesswork and more about a few reliable cues and a good meat thermometer. Cooking steak to a juicy medium pink center, warm throughout, and just the right touch of resistance, means paying attention to detail from start to finish.

Read more