More and more Christmas tables are choosing cava from start to finish. Not just for the toast or the desserts, but also for the aperitif, seafood, fish, and even the main courses.
If this is your case, the calculation changes slightly… but it’s still simple.
Cava as a gastronomic wine at Christmas
Cava —and especially cava reserva— has enough structure, freshness, and complexity to accompany the entire meal. It works very well with:
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Appetizers and starters
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Seafood and fish
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White meats and festive dishes
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Cheeses and dessert
One bottle (6 glasses) comfortably serves 3 people, since cava is meant to be enjoyed slowly, not continuously.
One bottle of cava for every 3 people
This is the most balanced standard when cava takes center stage, but is not the only wine on the table.
How much cava to buy depending on the number of guests
If you are planning a Christmas lunch or dinner where:
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Cava is served from the aperitif
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It is combined with another wine
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Brut or reserva cavas are used
The recommended quantities would be:
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4 people → 1–2 bottles
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6 people → 2 bottles
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8 people → 3 bottles
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10 people → 3–4 bottles
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12 people → 4 bottles
Using different types of cava
Combining styles remains a very valid strategy and does not require increasing the total number of bottles:
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Brut or brut nature cava → aperitif and starters
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Reserva cava → main courses
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A special Gran Reserva bottle → dessert or toast
Consumption is spread out, but the total stays around 1 bottle for every 3 people.
Why this calculation works best at Christmas
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Christmas meals are long, but cava is not drunk constantly
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Reserva cavas are enjoyed slowly
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There are usually other wines on the table
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It prevents both excess and running short
Even so, the traditional Christmas principle still applies: it’s better to round up slightly than to run out of cava.
Summary
For a Christmas lunch or dinner where cava accompanies most of the menu and is combined with other wines, the most balanced approach is one bottle of cava for every three people. With this consumption, a table of ten people usually needs three to four bottles, enough to enjoy without rush and without falling short.
This approach works especially well with cava reserva, such as the range offered by Castell d’Or, which has the structure and complexity to accompany starters, main courses, and dessert. Because at Christmas, cava is not just the wine for the final toast: it is a gastronomic wine, meant to be present at the table and accompany the meal from start to finish.