The Italian sparkling wine’s high sugar content could leave frequent drinkers with rotten teeth, dentists are warning.
Prosecco has taken the nation by storm as a cheaper alternative to champagne, but young women in particular risk gaining an unwelcome ‘prosecco smile.’
Daily Mail


her smile’s so lovely her laughter is bubbling

her hair is frizzante her perlage is perky 
fresh light and simple she’s frothy uncorked above 

all she’s social she’s pouring out plenty but two 
is enough she goes straight to your head—her every 
hiccup sounds like a yes her arms are like bottles

cold hard and brittle but her center’s a pillow,
she’s old-fashioned stuff rap her back tenderly hold 
the white napkin tent-ly while we thumb her top off 
then she’s pissing prosecco fizzing and sighing 

let her breathe as you nose her effervescent hic-
cough and if the label says Cava she calls it 
prosecco meaning cheapest of specials last on

the rung now she’s tranquil and sparkling she’s swill-gilled 
with sulfites we can’t have her turning it’s sweetness 
we want her smiling and smiling her blanc de blancs 
gums you should drink her with food but nobody does

and her smile is crumbling incisors jumping 
three years on the rack then her vintage is up her 
whistle is showing, her laughter’s abraded tell 

her to shut up still her mouth moves to much chalk it 
down to her drinking her red palm to the bar top—

she smiles prosecco! it’s prosecco she wants

Evangeline Riddiford Graham is an artist and writer from Aotearoa. She is the author of the poetry chapbooks La belle dame avec les mains vertes (Compound Press, 2019), and Ginesthoi (hard press, 2017). She is in the second year of the New School Creative Writing MFA and lives in Queens.

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