Skip to main content

What is Aperol? The bittersweet Italian liqueur your home bar needs

It's time to learn about Aperol

Aperol
federica ariemma/Unsplash

If you’re an avid cocktail fan, you’ve probably enjoyed a before-dinner Aperol Spritz before during the sweltering summer months. This simple, elegant, refreshing drink consists of Prosecco (Italian sparkling wine), soda water, and Aperol.

If you’ve never tried this aperitif, you’ve likely at least heard of Aperol or at the very least have seen the world written on a cocktail menu. There’s also a chance that you have no idea what Aperol is and never thought about it before. That’s okay. We’re here to help.

Recommended Videos

What is Aperol?

Aperol
Gabriella Clare Marino/Unsplash

If you’ve ever seen a bottle of Aperol, you might have noticed its unique appearance. Aperol is well-known for its bright orange hue. But if you think you’re going to pour it into a glass and your taste buds will be met with a sweet, sugary, orange-flavored liqueur, you are sadly mistaken. While there is orange flavor in there, like Campari, Aperol is a bittersweet Italian liqueur.

Flavored with a blend of roots, fruits, flowers, herbs, and botanicals, it’s best known for its flavors of gentian root, rhubarb, cinchona, orange peel, and various citrus oils. Referred to as an amaro (also known as a bitter Italian liqueur like Campari, Averna, and others), this spirit was created to be enjoyed before a heavy meal to help stimulate your appetite.

With a lower alcohol content than many liqueurs (at 11% ABV), it’s a semisweet, citrusy, spiced ingredient coveted by bartenders and drinks alike.

What is its history?

Aperol
Julia Solonina/Unsplash

Brothers Luigi and Silvio Barbieri spent more than seven years macerating and experimenting with various roots, botanicals, fruits, and spices at the family’s Padua, Italy-based distilled before they came up with the recipe for Aperol in 1919. In the following decade, the amaro became very popular throughout Italy. Its popularity exploded when the Aperol Spritz was invented in the 1950s.

The brand was steadily popular in Italy for the next half-century. But like with many classic mixed drinks, the cocktail renaissance brought the drink to the mainstream as it became a go-to before-dinner drink in Italy, the US, and throughout the world. Today, Aperol is arguably at its most popular level to date.

What does Aperol taste like?

Aperol
Aperol

When it comes to bittersweet Italian bitter liqueurs, Aperol leans more toward the sweet side. The bitterness is there, but it’s tempered by a sweet, vanilla-like sugary hit. You’ll also find flavors of candied orange peels, gentle spices, roots, and an enveloping herbal quality. It’s the kind of liqueur that requires multiple samplings to unlock all the flavors. It’s also well-known for being a spirit that tastes slightly different to everyone.

How should you drink it?

Aperol
Erika Osberg/Unsplash

There are many ways to imbibe Aperol. If you enjoy bittersweet amaro, you can drink Aperol neat or on the rocks. But most drinkers enjoy it as an ingredient in a variety of cocktails including the aforementioned Aperol Spritz. It’s best when it’s used to complement another flavor as opposed to on its own. Whether or not you drink it neat or in a cocktail, due to its mix of roots, herbs, citrus, and other fruits, it’s best enjoyed as a way to prepare your stomach for a heavy, savory, rich meal.

Aperol versus Campari

Aperol
Dennis Schmidt/Unsplash

If you’re new to Italian bitter liqueurs, you might assume Aperol and Campari are the same thing. They aren’t. Sure, they are both reddish-orange in color and both are owned by the same brand, but Campari was created sixty years earlier than Aperol in Milan.

Both bitter liqueurs have spiced orange-centric flavor profiles, but Aperol is much sweeter with a much higher sugar content while Campari is much more bitter with much less sugar included. Also, while Aperol is low in alcohol content at only 11% ABV, Campari is more than double that with 24% ABV.

Bottom line

Aperol
Paul Hanaoka/Unsplash

While you might stock your home bar with bottles of vodka, gin, tequila, rum, and various types of whiskey as well as bitters and other ingredients, you might not think a bottle like Aperol (or Campari) is important. It absolutely is.

It’s a great bottle to have on hand for a summery, refreshing Aperol Spritz alone, but you will also use it in a wide variety of cocktails. This includes the Paper Plane, Naked and Famous, and more. It’s also a great bottle to have in your home bar for experimenting with flavors. If you enjoy slightly bittersweet flavors, add them to your favorite cocktails to elevate them. Who wouldn’t want to turn a boring Old Fashioned or Gin & Tonic up to eleven? We know we would.

Christopher Osburn
Christopher Osburn is a food and drinks writer located in the Finger Lakes Region of New York. He's been writing professional
What is triple sec? The underrated hero of your favorite cocktails
What exactly is triple sec?
Bottles

When you write about alcohol for almost two decades, you tend to learn at least a little about sometimes overlooked spirits, liqueurs, and cocktail ingredients. While I’ve spent a long time learning about (and drinking) bourbon, single malt Scotch, rye whiskey, tequila, gin, rum, and even vodka, sometimes the lesser thought of spirits are the most interesting. This is the case with triple sec.

If you’re a fan of cocktails, especially the Margarita, Sidecar, or Cosmopolitan and more, you know all about the prowess of triple sec. But while you know that it adds flavor to your favorite cocktail, do you really know what those flavors are? Also, what exactly is triple sec.
What is triple sec?

Read more
Fancy up your Gin & Tonic with these recipes from bar experts
Valerie

I'll never get enough of Gin & Tonic variations, and I'm always on the lookout for different combinations of gin, tonics, and garnishes that people love to experiment with. At the New York bar Valerie, the staff have access to more than 90 gin expressions, allowing them to create a huge range of G&Ts to suit every taste.

From spicy options using poblano liquor to a tea-infused version that you could sip even at breakfast time, here are a selection of just some of the many G&Ts that the bar offers, showing the endless ways you can vary this drink.

Read more
Does decaf coffee keep you awake? What you need to know before bed
How decaf coffee affects your alertness
roasted coffee beans

Do you drink coffee because of its flavor or for the energy boost? If you love to sip on a delicious cup of fresh coffee for the taste alone, decaf coffee is the best option for drinking all day, anytime (it's quickly becoming an integral part of my daily routine). Decaf coffee is also one of the greatest inventions for coffee drinkers who are highly sensitive to the effects of caffeine. Coffee drinkers experience a win-win" with decaf coffee, packed with all the flavor but free of caffeine. But is decaf coffee truly decaffeinated? Does decaf coffee keep you awake? I'll help you explore the caffeine content in decaf coffee and how it can impact your sleep.
Does decaf coffee keep you awake?

According to James from Decadent Decaf Coffee Company, decaffeinated coffee will not keep you awake. Although decaffeinated coffee is not 100% caffeine-free, the caffeine that remains is minimal and unlikely to affect your ability to sleep. For example, decaffeinated coffee using the Swiss Water decaf process removes 99.9% of the caffeine from coffee beans. This method removes the most possible caffeine out of any of the decaf coffee methods. However, according to Swiss Water Decaf, several variables can affect how much caffeine remains in a cup of coffee after undergoing the Swiss Water decaf process. Regardless, the average cup of decaf coffee still only contains about 2 milligrams of caffeine.

Read more