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Sea Breeze

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A sea breeze cocktail in a wine glass garnished with a grapefruit wedge.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Micah Marie Morton

The Sea Breeze may sound like something Zack Morris ordered in Saved By the Bell: The College Years, but this easy cocktail dates back nearly a century. Some trace its origins to the Savoy Cocktail Book (1930), where bartender Harry Craddock’s “Sea Breeze Cooler” mixed gin, apricot brandy, and grenadine. Others credit a midcentury Ocean Spray campaign, which helped popularize the version we know today.

The classic Sea Breeze cocktail formula is simple and summery: vodka, grapefruit juice, and cranberry juice, served over ice in stemware or a highball glass, accompanied by a grapefruit wedge. It’s easy to make, easy to drink, and endlessly refreshing.

This summer drink recipe is part of a family of easy vodka cocktails. A Bay Breeze swaps the grapefruit for pineapple juice, while a Cape Codder doubles down on cranberry and adds a lime wedge. A Greyhound is vodka plus grapefruit, hold the cran, and if you add on a salted rim, it becomes a Salty Dog.

With minimal ingredients and zero fuss, the Sea Breeze remains a warm-weather favorite nearly 100 years after its debut.

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