Bar Basso, Milan, 1968. Bartender Mirko Stocchetto accidentally grabbed the Prosecco bottle when making a Negroni for a customer, mixed it in, and liked the result. The drink became a Bar Basso signature. Stocchetto's son Maurizio continues to serve it at the same bar using the same recipe. The drink achieved global viral fame in October 2022 after an HBO interview with House of the Dragon cast members.
The Negroni Sbagliato — Italian for 'wrong Negroni' or 'mistaken Negroni' — is what happens when Campari, sweet vermouth, and Prosecco replace the gin of a standard Negroni. Created by accident in 1968 at Bar Basso in Milan when bartender Mirko Stocchetto reached for the Prosecco bottle instead of the gin, the resulting mistake was too good to discard. It is lower in alcohol than a Negroni, more effervescent and approachable, and has the same bitter-sweet-herbal framework but with the sparkling wine's carbonation lifting it into a lighter, more sessionable aperitivo. The House of the Dragon actress Emma D'Arcy's viral 2022 interview description of it as 'a Negroni Sbagliato... with Prosecco in it' drove the drink to unprecedented cultural prominence.
FOOD PAIRING: The Negroni Sbagliato's lower alcohol and effervescence makes it a versatile food companion. Provenance 1000 pairings: prosciutto e melone (the bitter-sweet contrast against cured meat is classic), bruschetta al pomodoro (the carbonation lifts the tomato's acidity), pizza margherita (the Campari bitterness cuts through the cheese fat), risotto al Parmigiano (the bubbles refresh the palate between rich bites), and mortadella with pistachio.
{"Equal parts Campari and sweet vermouth (1 oz each) is the standard. Carpano Antica Formula vermouth adds vanilla depth; Dolin Rouge produces a lighter result.","Prosecco DOC is the sparkling wine: its light body and low tannin allows the Campari's bitterness to dominate. Champagne (used in some premium versions) adds minerality and complexity. Do not use cava or cheap sparkling wine.","Build in the glass over ice — do not shake or stir vigorously. Add ice, pour Campari, add vermouth, top with Prosecco. One gentle stir only.","The ratio to Prosecco varies: the classic Bar Basso version uses equal parts Campari, vermouth, and Prosecco (approximately 1 oz each). A more sparkling-forward version uses more Prosecco (1 oz Campari, 1 oz vermouth, 2–3 oz Prosecco) for a spritz-style format.","Serve in a rocks glass or large wine glass over ice. The orange slice garnish (wheel inside the glass) is standard.","The drink is served and consumed promptly — the carbonation dissipates quickly, and the Negroni Sbagliato at 5 minutes old is a different and lesser drink than one freshly built."}
For a premium Negroni Sbagliato: use Franciacorta DOCG (Italy's finest sparkling wine, made by the traditional method) instead of Prosecco. The additional depth and fine bubbles of Franciacorta elevate the drink significantly. The Bar Basso original in Milan is served in a large, oversized wine glass — a format that gives the carbonation room to breathe and makes the drink feel simultaneously casual and luxurious.
{"Shaking: destroys the Prosecco's carbonation entirely. This is built, not shaken.","Using too much Prosecco and turning it into a Campari Spritz: the Negroni Sbagliato should retain the bitter-sweet intensity of a Negroni framework, not become a light spritz.","Using flat or stale Prosecco: the carbonation's freshness is half the drink. An open bottle of Prosecco that has been sitting without a stopper is not acceptable.","Over-stirring after adding the Prosecco: each additional stir degrades the carbonation."}