Skip to main content
2 oz Gin (or cognac)
3 oz Sparkling white wine (Brut, chilled)
1 twst Lemon zest
Instructions

Shake all but wine, strain into ice-filled highball glass, top with chilled wine.

Notes

Also very good with cognac. Said to have the power of a 75mm howitzer.

Cocktail summary
Posted by Dan on
Created by
Harry MacElhone, Harry's New York Bar, Paris.
Year
1915
Is an
authentic recipe
Curator
Not yet rated
User rating
4 stars
(55 ratings)
Yields Drink

From our sponsors

Cocktail Book
Log in or sign up to start building your Cocktail Book.
From other users
  • SEE ALSO: French 77 // Elder Fashion Royale // Brass Flower
  • 20200101 Pierre Ferrand 1840 5, 5 20200104 Whitley Neill Gin — ★★★★★
  • Quite light and refreshing — ★★★★
  • Definitely prefer with cognac
  • I had my first on of these during Brunch at Arnaud's in New Orleans
  • A refreshing and solid, if unchallenging, classic.
  • Works well with Prosecco but is obviously a bit sweeter — ★★★★★
  • These can really sneak up on you.
  • Delicous, festive cocktail. A great cocktail that appeals to a wide variety of drinkers, from wine lovers to craft cocktail geeks. Add more simple syrup and it serves as a good alternative to so-called girlie drinks. — ★★★★★
Similar cocktails
Comments
Rob Marais commented on 6/02/2011:

For brunch survival purposes I go with 1 oz gin instead of 2. Also I go more toward cava or prosecco. I haven't taken up Todd Maul's suggestion that this apéro requires cognac rather than gin - with the lemon/bubbly combo I'd think that gin would be a no-brainer.


Dan commented on 6/02/2011:

I prefer this with cognac. It is a very good, classic cocktail. The Elderflower version (French 77) is a nice variation, particularly if you haven't been overexposed to St Germain.


Zachary Pearson commented on 6/02/2011:

I've always been told that if it's gin, it's an English 75, and that Cognac is the way to go here.


Dan commented on 6/03/2011:

Interesting. Among my friends, I call the Cognac version a French French 75. I made these for a friend's 50's birthday party, which was catered. Big hit. It is one of those cocktails that appeals to a wide variety of imbibers.


DrunkLab commented on 10/29/2013:

Christopher James at the Ryland Inn in Jersey makes a version with Art in the Age's SAGE:

1.5 oz SAGE
0.75 oz lemon juice
0.75 oz 2:1 simple syrup
2.0 oz brut champagne
Toasted rosemary garnish

Served in a Champagne flute.


wesafari commented on 2/06/2022:

For a fun variation, try using an Earl Grey Tea Syrup


smparkes commented on 1/06/2024:

We've always made this with gin. Tried a nice cognac tonight and decide both are 5s!