Americano cocktail is a classic Italian aperitivo drink made by combining equal parts Campari and sweet vermouth over ice, topped with soda water and garnished with an orange slice. Light, bitter, and refreshing, the Americano is considered one of the oldest vermouth-based cocktails and the direct precursor to the Negroni, occupying a foundational position in Italian bar culture.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
The IBA (International Bartenders Association) standard Americano uses 30 ml Campari, 30 ml sweet red vermouth (typically Cinzano or Carpano Antica), and a splash of soda water served in a highball glass or old-fashioned glass over ice with an orange slice or lemon twist. This formula creates a balanced interplay between Campari’s bitter herbaceousness, the vermouth’s sweet-spiced complexity, and the soda’s effervescent dilution.
The Milano-Torino (Mi-To) is the Americano’s direct ancestor, omitting the soda water entirely. Named for Campari’s Milanese origins and the Turinese production of vermouth, the Mi-To is a stronger, more concentrated drink that showcases the two ingredients without dilution. Some Italian bars serve this as a short aperitivo in a rocks glass, emphasizing the bitter-sweet balance without carbonation.
Modern variations play with the bitter component. Substituting Campari with Aperol produces a lighter, less bitter version popular with those new to amaro-style cocktails. Using Cynar (artichoke-based amaro) or Averna creates darker, more herbaceous interpretations. The Sbagliato (“mistaken” Negroni) replaces the soda water and gin with prosecco, bridging the gap between the Americano and the Negroni with elegant simplicity.
Preparation Technology
Fill a highball glass or large rocks glass with fresh ice cubes to the rim. Large, clear ice cubes are preferable to small crushed ice — they melt more slowly, maintaining the drink’s concentration and temperature over a longer serving period.
Pour 30 ml Campari directly over the ice, followed by 30 ml sweet (rosso) vermouth. The standard ratio is 1:1, but this can be adjusted to taste: more Campari for a drier, more bitter drink; more vermouth for a sweeter, rounder profile. Use quality vermouth stored in the refrigerator after opening — vermouth is a fortified wine that oxidizes within 4–6 weeks at room temperature.
Top with 60–90 ml chilled soda water. Pour gently down the inside of the glass to preserve carbonation. Stir briefly (3–4 gentle rotations) with a bar spoon to integrate the ingredients without over-diluting or losing fizz. Excessive stirring flattens the drink and weakens the bitter-sweet balance.
Garnish with a half-wheel of orange or a long orange peel twist. Express the orange oil over the drink’s surface by gently squeezing the peel, then drop it in. The citrus oil adds an aromatic brightness that lifts the heavy, bitter notes of the Campari. Serve immediately. The Americano is designed to be sipped slowly over 15–20 minutes as an aperitif before a meal.
Tips and Common Mistakes
The most common error is using too much soda water, which dilutes the cocktail into a vaguely bitter, watery drink. The soda should supplement, not dominate — no more than twice the volume of the Campari and vermouth combined. Pour conservatively and let the drinker add more soda to taste rather than over-diluting from the start.
Vermouth freshness is critical and frequently overlooked. Once opened, vermouth begins oxidizing and loses its aromatic complexity within weeks. Treat it like wine: store in the refrigerator and use within 4–6 weeks. Flat, oxidized vermouth produces a dull, lifeless Americano that fails to balance against the assertive Campari.
Ice quality matters more than most home bartenders realize. Cloudy, small ice cubes from a standard freezer melt rapidly, diluting the drink before it can be enjoyed. For the best result, use large-format ice molds that produce clear, slow-melting cubes. For more on Italian cocktails and aperitivo culture, see our A-Z Encyclopedia of Food Products and Dishes.
History and Cultural Significance
The Americano originated in the 1860s at Gaspare Campari’s bar in Milan, originally called the Milano-Torino for its ingredients’ cities of origin. The name changed to “Americano” in the early twentieth century, likely in recognition of the American tourists who favored the drink during Prohibition-era travel to Europe. The cocktail gained additional cultural currency as the first drink ordered by James Bond in Ian Fleming’s 1953 novel Casino Royale.
The Americano occupies a pivotal position in cocktail history as the template from which the Negroni evolved. According to cocktail lore, Count Camillo Negroni requested his Americano be made with gin instead of soda water at Caffè Casoni in Florence around 1919, creating the drink that would become one of the world’s most celebrated cocktails.
Today, the Americano anchors the Italian aperitivo tradition — the pre-dinner ritual of light drinks and snacks that remains central to Italian social culture. From Milanese rooftop bars to Roman piazza cafés, the Americano continues to serve its original purpose: a light, bitter, appetite-stimulating drink that marks the transition from the workday to the evening meal.