Strawberry And Peach Sangria

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This fruity sangria is ready in minutes and the perfect sipper for summer porch parties.

Southern Living Strawberry Peach Sangria in glasses to serve with the pitcher beside
Photo:

Alison Miksch

Active Time:
15 mins
Chill Time:
3 hrs
Total Time:
3 hrs 15 mins
Servings:
8

Big pitchers of strawberry and peach sangria were made for hot summer nights or cool fall ones by camp fires. It's fruity and refreshing, but the addition of brandy and dry wine keeps them from being cloying. Find out how to make a batch of strawberry peach sangria, and enjoy a pitcher soon in a shady spot in your yard.

How To Make Strawberry and Peach Sangria

Strawberry and peach sangria is easy to make in just three steps—although you'll need to allow some time for the chilling. Here's a brief recap. The full recipe is below.

  • Step 1. Freeze mint ice cubes: Drop mint leaves into an ice tray, and then add water to fill the cubes. Put the tray in the freezer until the water is frozen, which will take three to five hours.
  • Step 2. Mix sangria: While you're waiting for the ice to freeze, stir together strawberries, peaches, lemonade, orange liqueur, peach brandy, and wine in a large pitcher or another vessel of your choice. Cover and refrigerate the container until all the flavors blend. Expect this to take at least three hours.
  • Step 3. Combine ice cubes and sangria: When you're ready to serve your drink, add the mint ice cubes and sparkling water to the sangria mixture. Stir to combine—and enjoy.

Strawberry Peach Sangria Ingredients

To make strawberry and peach sangria, you'll need:

  • Strawberries and peaches: These two fruits together impart a subtle sweetness, similar to a sweet wine.
  • Mint leaves: Add freshness to the sangria—and visual appeal to the drink, too.
  • Lemonade: Adds sweet-tart flavor that cuts through the richer liquors.
  • Orange liqueur: Such as Cointreau.
  • Peach brandy: To embolden the peach flavor.
  • Dry white wine: It's not a sangria without wine.
  • Sparkling water: To make the drink lighter for hot days.

How Long Should You Let Fruit Soak for Sangria?

For the best-tasting sangria, the fruits should have enough time to absorb the flavors of the alcohol and other ingredients. Plan to let the mixture soak for a minimum of a few hours.

Can You Let Sangria Marinate Overnight?

You can let all the ingredients of your sangria commingle overnight for a rich flavor. If you let our strawberry and peach sangria steep overnight, you'll end up with a color that resembles rosé in the final product.

But beware that there is such a thing as letting fruit marinate in sangria too long: If you overdo it, fruit could turn bitter and the texture could take a turn for the mealy.

What's the Best Fruit to Put in Sangria?

While this refreshing recipe calls for peaches and strawberries, a wide array of fruits work well in sangria recipes. Try watermelon sangria, citrus sangria—and just about any other type you can dream up. Check out our party-perfect sangria recipes for inspiration.

If you like red wine, try this red sangria recipe.

Do I Need Brandy for Sangria?

This recipe calls for a trifecta of alcohols: dry white wine, orange liquor, and brandy. For that reason, it goes down delightfully—even dangerously—easily while it packs a high-octane punch.

While brandy does contribute to a flavorful and aromatic sangria, it's not a requirement. For a little less alcohol content, you can skip the brandy or tweak the proportions as you prefer. Note that high-end brandy isn't a difference maker in this overall sweet batch cocktail; affordable varieties work just fine.

Editorial contributions by Alesandra Dubin.

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup lightly packed fresh mint leaves

  • 1 pt. fresh strawberries, stemmed and quartered (2 cups)

  • 3 peaches (1 lb. total), unpeeled, pitted, and sliced (about 3 cups)

  • 1/2 cup refrigerated lemonade

  • 1/3 cup orange liqueur (preferably Cointreau)

  • 1/4 cup peach brandy

  • 1 (750-milliliter) bottle dry white wine (such as Vinho Verde, Gruner Veltliner, or Albarino)

  • 1 1/2 cups sparkling water (such as Topo Chico Mineral Water)

Directions

  1. Prepare mint ice cubes:

    Fill 1 (12-cube) ice tray with mint leaves; fill cubes with water.

    Southern Living Strawberry Peach Sangria making the mint ice cubes

    Alison Miksch

    Place in freezer until frozen 3 to 5 hours. (This can be made ahead of time.)

    Southern Living Strawberry Peach Sangria mint ice cubes after freezing

    Alison Miksch

  2. Prepare sangria:

    Meanwhile, stir together strawberries, peaches, lemonade, orange liqueur, peach brandy, and wine in a large pitcher or other container. Cover and refrigerate until flavors blend, at least 3 hours or up to 12 hours.

    Southern Living Strawberry Peach Sangria mixture before adding sparkling water

    Alison Miksch

  3. Add sparkling water and serve:

    When ready to serve, add mint ice cubes and sparkling water to sangria mixture, and stir to combine.

    Southern Living Strawberry Peach Sangria adding the sparkling water

    Alison Miksch

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is peach sangria made of?

    This strawberry and peach sangria has plenty of fresh strawberries and peach slices, plus lemonade, orange liqueur, peach brandy, dry white wine, and sparkling water. This recipe also had mint leaves for minty ice cubes.

  • What fruits go in sangria?

    Sangria is great with citrus fruits, apple, strawberries, and cherries. In this recipe, we use fresh strawberries and peaches, but you could use any combination you want.

Additional reporting by Alesandra Dubin

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