It is 1919. Florence. A man in a well-cut suit walks into Caffè Casoni on Via de’ Tornabuoni and takes his usual seat at the bar.
He orders his regular drink — and then asks for something different.
That small change would become one of the most ordered cocktails in the world.

The Man With a Taste for Adventure
Count Camillo Negroni was not like other Italian noblemen of his era.
He had spent years in America — riding horses in New York, working on ranches, and reportedly running a gambling house in London. By the time he returned to Florence, he was a seasoned traveller with a serious appetite for strong spirits.
His favourite haunt was Caffè Casoni, a fashionable bar tucked into the heart of Florence on Via de’ Tornabuoni. His drink of choice was the Americano — a light blend of Campari, sweet vermouth, and soda water, popular across Europe at the time.
But that evening in 1919, the Americano felt a little too mild.
One Request That Changed Everything
He called over his bartender, a man named Fosco Scarselli, and made a simple request.
“Strengthen it,” he said. “Replace the soda water with gin.”
Scarselli obliged without hesitation. And then, without being asked, he made one small choice of his own — an orange slice instead of the usual lemon garnish. A quiet touch to distinguish the Count’s version from the standard Americano.
The result was something quite different. Complex, bold, and perfectly balanced. Bitter enough to wake you up. Sweet enough to keep you interested.
The Bartender’s Instinct Was Right
Scarselli had done more than follow instructions.
The gin transformed the drink. Its botanicals cut through the bitterness of the Campari and brought the sweetness of the vermouth into balance. The orange peel added a bright, citrus lift. Together, three simple ingredients clicked into place with unusual precision.
Other customers noticed the glass in the Count’s hand.
They asked what he was drinking. Soon they were ordering the same — uno come quello del conte, one like the Count’s. Scarselli was making them one after another.
The drink needed a name. It got one: Negroni.
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From Florence to the World
Within years, the Negroni had spread far beyond Tuscany.
Bartenders in Rome picked it up. Then Milan. Then Paris, London, and New York. By the 1950s, it appeared in cocktail guides across Europe and America. Orson Welles was among its early famous admirers — he wrote enthusiastically about it during his years in Italy. Today the drink has its own global celebration, Negroni Week, raising money for charities around the world each year.
It is now one of the most ordered cocktails on Earth — served in bars from Tokyo to São Paulo. Bartenders craft variations with mezcal, aged rum, or barrel-rested vermouth. Entire menus are built around it.
All of it traces back to a single request in a Florentine bar.
The aperitivo tradition that the Count loved — that Italian ritual of slowing the day down before dinner with a glass in hand — still shapes life across Italy today, one of the most civilised habits in the world.
The Recipe Has Not Changed
The original Negroni is deceptively simple.
Equal parts: gin, Campari, sweet red vermouth. Stirred over ice, not shaken. Strained into a tumbler over a large ice cube. Finished with an orange peel — always orange, never lemon.
That is it. No secret ingredient. No elaborate technique. The Count’s bartender knew that the best things rarely need to be complicated.
Where to Drink One in Italy Today
You can order a Negroni in almost any Italian bar. But for something closer to the original, go to Florence.
Caffè Roberto Cavalli on Via de’ Tornabuoni — formerly Bar Giacosa, which stood on the site of Caffè Casoni — is where the drink was born. The bar still serves a classic Negroni in its original home.
Nearby, dozens of Florentine bars line the streets around the Arno and the Medici-era heart of the city. Each has its own recipe, its own vermouth preference, its own orange twist technique.
Aperitivo hour begins around 6pm. Take a seat at the bar. Order a Negroni. Ask for the orange slice.
It is as close as you will ever get to sitting beside the Count himself.
Italy has a rare gift for turning small, ordinary moments into something lasting.
A restless nobleman. A patient bartender. A simple request for something stronger.
One hundred years later, that moment still lives in every glass.
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