
Peach Mango Sangria
- Author: Emily Koch
- Prep Time: 10 mins
- Total Time: 10 mins (plus chilling)
- Yield: 6 to 8 servings
- Category: Drinks, Cocktail
- Cuisine: Sangria
Description
Peach Mango Sangria is a light, fruity drink made for warm days. Ripe peaches and mangoes steep in dry white wine with a touch of honey and a hint of fresh basil. The fruit stays pleasantly textured, making it as enjoyable to snack on as it is to sip. This sangria is bright, refreshing, and elegant for casual afternoons, brunches, or birthday celebrations.
Ingredients
- 1/4 cup honey
- 1/4 cup filtered water
- 3 to 4 ripe peaches, chopped (or slice 1 peach for garnish and chop the rest)
- 1 to 2 ripe mangoes, peeled and chopped
- 1 orange, sliced into rounds
- 1 lemon, sliced into rounds, seeds removed
- 6 to 8 fresh basil leaves, julienned
- 2 bottles (750 ml each) dry white wine (Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, or Chardonnay)
- Optional: unflavored sparkling water for topping
Instructions
- Make the honey syrup: In a small saucepan combine the honey and filtered water. Heat over medium-high, stirring until it reaches a gentle boil. Remove immediately from heat and let cool completely. This creates a simple honey syrup that blends evenly into the sangria.
- Assemble the sangria: Place all the chopped and sliced fruit into a large pitcher. Add the basil on top of the fruit to minimize bruising. Pour in the cooled honey syrup, then add both bottles of dry white wine. Stir gently with a wooden spoon to distribute the fruit and basil without breaking it apart.
- Chill: Cover the pitcher and refrigerate for at least 6 hours; 8 hours is ideal. Longer chilling allows the flavors to meld and the fruit to infuse the wine.
- Serve: Spoon some of the soaked fruit into serving glasses, then pour in the sangria. Garnish with a fresh peach slice if you like. For a lighter, fizzy finish, top with a splash of unflavored sparkling water just before serving.
- Storage: Drink leftover sangria within 24 hours for best texture and flavor. The soaked fruit is delicious but will gradually soften over time.
Notes & Tips
If you prefer sweeter sangria, increase the honey slightly or use a naturally sweeter wine. The honey simple syrup balances acidity without adding granulated sugar. Peaches and mangoes retain their texture better than berries, so they make excellent fruit choices for a sangria that’s pleasant to eat. Basil adds a fresh herbal note—tear or julienne the leaves to release their aroma without overpowering the fruit.
This recipe works well for gatherings: prepare it the night before and let the flavors develop. For a party, set out a bowl of additional fresh fruit so guests can spoon more into their glasses as the pitcher empties. Serve chilled and sip slowly—this sangria goes down smooth.
