Campari Milano Bitter 1L
Campari Milano Bitter 1L Original price was: AED 99.00.Current price is: AED 85.00.
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Martini Rosso Vermouth 1L

AED 44.00

Sweet, herbal, and a little bitter in the best way, this Italian red vermouth is the secret sauce behind a proper Negroni, Manhattan, or Americano. Think caramel, dried orange, warm spice, and a gentle wormwood bite that keeps things lively. It’s a bar-cart staple for a reason, and it plays ridiculously well with gin and whisky.

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Description

If your cocktails taste “fine” but not unforgettable, you’re probably missing vermouth. This Italian red vermouth brings that sweet, citrusy, herbal backbone that turns a two-ingredient pour into something you’ll want to make again.

  • Nose: Dried orange peel, cola-like spice, caramel, and a soft herbal edge.
  • Taste: Rich caramel sweetness up front, then a wave of baking spice, dark herbs, and bittersweet citrus that keeps it balanced.
  • Finish: Gently drying with a lingering orange-and-herb bitterness that makes the next sip feel mandatory.

This is the vermouth that basically built the “red vermouth” category for home bartenders. It’s got enough sweetness to round out a punchy spirit, plus a real bitter-herbal streak (thank you, wormwood) so your drink doesn’t collapse into candy territory. That balance is why it works so well in classic cocktails where vermouth isn’t just filler, it’s the co-star.

Use it when you want a Negroni that tastes like more than gin and bitterness. Or when your Manhattan needs that dark, spiced lift that whisky alone can’t give. Even in an Americano, it brings that easygoing, aperitivo vibe with orange-caramel depth and a gently snappy finish.

Flavour-wise, expect a layered mix of candied citrus, toffee, and warm spice, followed by a firm herbal bitterness that keeps everything in check. It’s sweet, yes, but it’s not lazy sweet. It gives structure, aroma, and that “why does this taste so complete?” feeling.

It also pulls its weight beyond the classics. Anytime a recipe calls for sweet vermouth, this is the bottle that makes it taste like the recipe was tested by someone who cared.

Fun Fact: The Martini name is older than the Martini cocktail. The brand started in the 1860s, decades before the famous drink became a thing.