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Best Easter Drinks for Brunch: Champagne, Rosé, Cocktails & Mocktails

Easter brunch is the one meal where bubbles make sense before noon, rosé feels mandatory, and the cocktails should be light, fresh, and easy to batch. Whether you’re hosting a full table (ham, quiche, hot cross buns) or doing a casual “come by whenever” spread, the best Easter drinks follow one rule: keep it bright and celebratory.

Below is a brunch-friendly playbook—organized by style—with crowd-pleasing Champagne and sparkling picks, crisp rosés, a few foolproof cocktails, and elevated zero-proof options that feel just as festive.



Build the Perfect Easter Brunch Drink Bar (Simple, Not Stressful)

The best brunch bar isn’t complicated—it’s well curated. Aim for four lanes: (1) Champagne/sparkling, (2) rosé, (3) one “signature” cocktail, and (4) one zero-proof option. That’s it.

Serving formula that always works

  • 10–12 guests: 6 bottles sparkling + 3 bottles rosé + cocktail ingredients + 1–2 zero-proof packs
  • 4–6 guests: 2–3 bottles sparkling + 1–2 bottles rosé + cocktail ingredients + 1 zero-proof option

Glassware & ice rules

  • Flutes look pretty, but a white wine glass makes Champagne taste better (more aroma).
  • Use one large ice bucket for sparkling and another for rosé/ingredients. Cold bottles = less fuss.
  • Garnish small and fresh: orange twists, lemon wheels, strawberries, mint.

Champagne & Sparkling: The Brunch MVP

Easter brunch is practically built for Champagne. It pairs with salty foods (ham, smoked salmon), creamy dishes (quiche, eggs Benedict), and even sweet pastries because acidity + bubbles keep everything feeling fresh.

What to choose: a quick guide

  • Classic crowd-pleaser: balanced, easy-drinking Brut
  • Food pairing champ: Brut Nature / zero-dosage styles (crisp, mineral)
  • Special bottle: vintage Champagne for the centerpiece toast
  • Rosé Champagne: perfect for strawberries, pastries, and “spring vibes”

Shop-worthy Champagne picks for Easter

Moët & Chandon Brut Impérial Champagne

A reliable brunch staple: bright fruit, elegant bubbles, and the kind of “everyone likes this” balance that makes hosting easier. Serve with salty appetizers and anything creamy.

Shop Moët & Chandon Brut Impérial

Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label Brut Champagne

A house classic that feels instantly celebratory. Great with ham, buttery pastries, and anything with a little richness. If you want one “fancy but familiar” bottle, this is it.

Shop Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label

Delahaie Brut 1er Cru Cuvée Prestige Champagne

Premier Cru value with bright acidity and a refined mousse—ideal if you want something impressive that still drinks effortlessly. Excellent for aperitif pours and brunch boards.

Shop Delahaie Brut 1er Cru

Louis Roederer 2018 Brut Nature Champagne (Roederer & Philippe Starck)

Crisp, modern, and mineral—this is a “food Champagne” that shines with oysters, smoked salmon, and spring vegetables. If you like your bubbles clean and precise, go here.

Shop Louis Roederer 2018 Brut Nature

Perrier-Jouët Vintage 2014 Belle Epoque Brut Champagne

The statement bottle. Vintage Champagne brings extra depth and finesse—perfect for the “toast moment” or as the centerpiece pour if you’re celebrating with family.

Shop Perrier-Jouët Belle Epoque 2014

Nicolas Feuillatte Brut Rosé Réserve Exclusive Champagne (1.5L Magnum)

Magnum energy = instant party upgrade. Rosé Champagne is tailor-made for Easter: berries, florals, and a fresh finish that works with fruit plates, pastries, and brunch sweets.

Shop Nicolas Feuillatte Rosé Magnum


Rosé for Easter: What to Buy & What to Serve It With

Rosé is the “spring uniform” for a reason: it’s refreshing, food-friendly, and looks gorgeous on a brunch table. For Easter, you want rosés that are crisp, bright, and not overly sweet—think citrus, strawberry, and a clean mineral finish.

Rosé pairings that hit every time

  • Ham + mustard glaze: rosé’s acidity cuts the sweet/salty richness
  • Smoked salmon + capers: mineral rosé + briny flavors = magic
  • Spring salads: rosé loves herbs, vinaigrettes, and fresh greens
  • Strawberries + whipped cream: Provence rosé is basically designed for this

Rosé picks for Easter brunch

Domaines Ott 2024 Rosé Château Romassan Bandol

A more “serious” rosé with texture and elegance—still refreshing, but with extra depth for food. Great if your brunch spreads into a long afternoon lunch.

Shop Domaines Ott 2024 Bandol Rosé

Flowers Winery 2024 Rosé Wine Sonoma Coast

Coastal freshness, delicate fruit, and a clean finish—an easy crowd-pleaser if you want rosé that feels crisp and modern. Perfect for lighter brunch tables and sunny patio pours.

Shop Flowers Winery 2024 Rosé

M de Minuty x Elliott Routledge 2024 Rosé Côtes de Provence (Limited Edition)

Bright, classic Provence style: citrus, red berries, and that unmistakable “spring in a glass” energy. Also: it’s a limited-edition bottle—always a fun hosting flex.

Shop M de Minuty 2024 Limited Edition Rosé


Easy Easter Brunch Cocktails (3 Recipes)

Brunch cocktails should be low effort and high reward. Choose recipes that can be built quickly, don’t require obscure ingredients, and taste refreshing at daytime volume. Here are three that always perform.

1) Aperol Spritz (Spring Brunch Standard)

Light, bitter-sweet, and photo-friendly. Make it self-serve and watch guests build their own.

  • 3 oz sparkling wine or Champagne
  • 2 oz Aperol Aperitivo
  • 1 oz soda water
  • Orange slice

Pro tip: For a brunch-friendly version, keep it a little lighter on Aperol and a little higher on bubbles.

2) Elderflower French 75 (Bright, Elegant, Crowd-Pleasing)

This is the “fancy brunch cocktail” that’s still easy. Elderflower adds floral lift and makes the drink feel like spring.

Want a Mediterranean angle? Use a botanical gin like Gin Mare Mediterranean Gin for extra herb-and-citrus complexity.

3) Brunch Margarita (Citrus-Forward & Not Too Heavy)

Margaritas aren’t just for nighttime. Keep it bright, not sugary—perfect with savory dishes and spicy brunch bites.

  • 2 oz tequila
  • 0.75 oz fresh lime juice
  • 0.5 oz orange liqueur like Ferrand Dry Orange Curaçao
  • Optional: 0.25 oz agave syrup (only if you like it slightly softer)
  • Salt rim + lime wheel

Batching tip (because it’s brunch)

If you’re hosting, batch the base (spirits + citrus + liqueur) in a pitcher and keep it chilled. Then shake single servings with ice so each pour tastes fresh.


Mocktails & Zero-Proof: Elevated Options (Not an Afterthought)

A great brunch includes at least one zero-proof option that feels intentional—especially on a holiday where some guests might be driving, pacing themselves, or simply going alcohol-free. The goal: complexity, texture, and presentation.

Zero-proof “spirit” base that tastes like something

Seedlip Grove 42 Non-Alcoholic Spirit

Citrus-forward and botanical, built for zero-proof spritzes and tonic-style brunch drinks. Serve with tonic, lots of ice, and an orange twist for an instant “grown-up” NA option.

Shop Seedlip Grove 42

Ready-to-drink mocktails for effortless hosting

Mocktails Nitro The Vida Loca Mockarita (Non-Alcoholic, 4 x 200 ml)

Brunch-friendly, zesty, and fun—this is your “grab a can, pour over ice, garnish, done” solution. Perfect for guests who want something festive without alcohol.

Shop Mocktails Nitro Mockarita

How to make NA drinks look (and feel) premium

  • Use the same glassware you’d use for cocktails.
  • Add one garnish per drink: citrus peel, mint, or a salted rim.
  • Keep NA options just as cold as Champagne—temperature is half the experience.

Quick Shopping List: 15 Easter Brunch Picks (Shop & Serve)

Here’s a curated, brunch-ready list—covering Champagne, rosé, cocktail building blocks, and zero-proof options. If you want one “do-it-all” setup: pick 3 Champagnes, 2 rosés, plus 2 cocktail ingredients, and one NA option.

  1. Moët & Chandon Brut Impérial Champagne
  2. Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label Brut Champagne
  3. Delahaie Brut 1er Cru Cuvée Prestige Champagne
  4. Louis Roederer 2018 Brut Nature Champagne (Starck)
  5. Perrier-Jouët Belle Epoque 2014 Brut Champagne
  6. Nicolas Feuillatte Brut Rosé (1.5L Magnum)
  7. Domaines Ott 2024 Rosé Château Romassan Bandol
  8. Flowers Winery 2024 Rosé Sonoma Coast
  9. M de Minuty 2024 Rosé Côtes de Provence (Limited Edition)
  10. Aperol Aperitivo
  11. St-Germain Elderflower Liqueur
  12. Gin Mare Mediterranean Gin
  13. Ferrand Dry Orange Curaçao
  14. Seedlip Grove 42 Non-Alcoholic Spirit
  15. Mocktails Nitro The Vida Loca Mockarita (NA)

FAQ: Easter Brunch Drinks

How much Champagne do I need for brunch?

A safe rule is half a bottle per person if Champagne is the main drink, or one bottle per 3–4 people if you’re also serving rosé, cocktails, and NA options.

Should I serve rosé cold like white wine?

Yes—serve rosé well chilled. If it warms up, it can taste softer and less crisp, which is the opposite of what you want for brunch.

What’s the easiest “signature” cocktail for a crowd?

The Aperol Spritz wins because it’s self-serve and hard to mess up. The Elderflower French 75 is the “wow” cocktail if you want something more elevated.

How do I make mocktails feel as special as cocktails?

Use proper glassware, add a garnish, and choose a zero-proof base with real botanical complexity—then keep everything ice-cold. That combination makes NA drinks feel intentional (and genuinely delicious).

Typos happen. Errors & omissions exempt. Product availability and website pricing override blog content.

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