
Made with Vermouth
Cocktails with Vermouth
Vermouth (/vərˈmuːθ/ ver-MOOTH; also UK: /ˈvɜːrməθ/;[1][2]) is an aromatized, fortified wine flavored with various botanicals (roots, barks, flowers, seeds, herbs, and spices). The modern versions of the beverage were first produced in...
Open this page when vermouth is one of the ingredients already on hand and you want drinks where it is doing real work, not just showing up in the background.
Read full ingredient background
Vermouth (/vərˈmuːθ/ ver-MOOTH; also UK: /ˈvɜːrməθ/;[1][2]) is an aromatized, fortified wine flavored with various botanicals (roots, barks, flowers, seeds, herbs, and spices). The modern versions of the beverage were first produced in the mid to late 18th century in Turin, Italy. While vermouth was traditionally used for medicinal purposes, its true claim to fame is as an aperitif, with fashionable cafes in Turin serving it to guests around the clock. However, in the late 19th century it became popular with bartenders as a key ingredient in many classic cocktails that have survived to date, such as the Martini, the Manhattan, the Rob Roy, and the Negroni. In addition to being consumed as an aperitif or cocktail ingredient, vermouth is sometimes used as an alternative white wine in cooking. Historically, there have been two main types of vermouth: sweet and dry. Responding to demand and competition, vermouth manufacturers have created additional styles, including extra-dry white, sweet white (bianco), red, amber (ambre or rosso), and rosé. Vermouth is produced by starting with a base of a neutral grape wine or unfermented wine must. Each manufacturer adds additional alcohol and a proprietary mixture of dry ingredients, consisting of aromatic herbs, roots, and barks, to the base wine, base wine plus spirit or spirit only – which may be redistilled before adding to the wine or unfermented wine must. After the wine is aromatized and fortified, the vermouth is sweetened with either cane sugar or caramelized sugar, depending on the style. Italian and French companies produce most of the vermouth consumed throughout the world, although the United States and the United Kingdom are also producers.
What to make
Drinks built around vermouth.
Start with the top cards if you just want the clearest examples, then filter when you want to push toward a different spirit, style, or level of effort.
Results
3 cocktails

Gin
Addison
Addison is a easy alcoholic cocktail for date night with Gin, Vermouth.

Wine & Sparkling
Hunter's Moon
Hunter's Moon is a medium alcoholic cocktail for date night with Vermouth, Maraschino Cherry, Sugar Syrup.

Wine & Sparkling
Ziemes Martini Apfelsaft
Ziemes Martini Apfelsaft is a easy alcoholic cocktail for house party with Vermouth, Apple Juice.
Follow the flavor
Lead with the flavor in your head and let the right lane answer back.
This is the better route when taste matters more than bottle choice. Each card leans into a distinct flavor mood rather than a rigid spirit category.
Citrus with lift
Bright, brisk drinks with snap, freshness, and the kind of finish that keeps the whole glass feeling awake.
See the bright, fizzy sideOrange afterglow
Rounder, juicier drinks that land softer and easier - less snap, more glow, more instant appeal.
Open the softer citrus picksTropical side trip
Softer, sweeter, and more playful - the lane for beach-leaning flavors, warmer energy, and a little escapism.
Take the tropical detourTry it another way
These next steps help if you want to widen back out from one ingredient to a bottle, a broader lane, or the strongest all-rounders.