Spirit guide
Rakia
Rakia is a Balkan fruit spirit, most often made from grapes, plums or apricots.
Quick facts
BaseDistilled fermented grain, fruit, wine or botanicals
AlcoholUsually 35-50% ABV
ServeNeat, chilled, with food or in cocktails
Taste mapClean, herbal, fruit, spice, smoke or oak
Where it matters
These places are strongly associated with rakia through origin, production, serving culture or everyday ritual.
How it is made
A fermented base is distilled to concentrate alcohol and aroma. Some spirits are aged, flavored with botanicals, or diluted before bottling.
Region and style table
| Bulgaria | Rakia has a visible cultural connection here through production, serving ritual or everyday drinking culture. |
|---|---|
| Serbia | Rakia has a visible cultural connection here through production, serving ritual or everyday drinking culture. |
What to compare
Grape rakiaClean fruit, warmth and light floral notes.
Plum rakiaRicher stone fruit and almond-like aroma.
Aged rakiaMore vanilla, oak and roundness.
How to read the drink
| Aroma | Smell first: fruit, grain, roast, herbs, spice, oak or fermentation tell you what to expect. |
|---|---|
| Texture | Notice body, bubbles, tannin, creaminess or alcohol warmth. |
| Finish | A short finish feels simple; a long finish keeps changing after you swallow. |
| Food match | Pair intensity with intensity: delicate drinks with lighter food, bold drinks with richer or saltier dishes. |