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Daiquiri

Frozen Daiquiri

Ditch the shaker and break out the blender. We’re cooling off with lightning-fast frozen daiquiris.

Classic Daiquiri

Using just three ingredients—light rum, fresh lime, and simple syrup—this cocktail shows how good the classics can be.

Mixed Citrus Daiquiri

Aged white rum seems like an oxymoron, but it adds an edge to this beach vacation of a cocktail.

Daiquiri

There’s a simple structure behind all sours, a family of citrus-based cocktails.

Cranberry Daiquiri

Daiquiri

The elegant Cuban combo of lime and rum has nothing to do with the syrupy slush you'll find at swim-up bars.

Kaimuki Daiquiri

This drink is named for the Honolulu neighborhood where Town, Chef Kenney's restaurant, is located.

Classic Daiquiri

The British Royal Navy, like every armed force, loves rules and discipline. So in 1740, they issued a rule that every sailor be supplied with a daily ration of grog, which he had to consume. No exceptions! By 1795, the recipe for grog called for rum, water, lime or lemon juice, and sugar. What a splendid idea! You’ve got to love the British; with that act, not only did they cure and prevent scurvy, but they also ensured that the crews had something to look forward to every day on long voyages. It was so popular that it quickly spread across the whole Caribbean and South America. The origins of the Daiquiri itself are somewhat vague, but most clues lead to a bar in Santiago, Cuba, called Venus. Near that bar there is a beach called Daiquiri—hence the name. The drink itself was supposedly invented by an American engineer, Jennings Cox, general manager of the Spanish American Iron Company who while stationed in Cuba ran out of gin and turned to rum to entertain his guests. The original recipe is simply beautiful, relying on the freshness of the limes and the quality of the rum. It is an exercise in balancing sweet and sour while letting the light, grassy, earthy rum flavor carry through.

Hemingway Daiquiri

They say that the Hemingway Daiquiri was invented for Ernest Hemingway in the La Floradita bar in Cuba. Whether the stories are true or false, no person in history can match Ernest Hemingway as an Olympian cocktail connoisseur.

Classic Daiquiri

The real thing, not the frozen kind, an elegant and delicious drink, especially when made with good aged dark rum.

Strawberry Daiquiri

We felt so fancy and elegant as children, sipping “virgin” strawberry daiquiris out of beautiful glasses. I still enjoy these without the rum, but when I do add it, I always choose a flavored rum for the delicious tropical fruit flavor it adds.

Strawberry Daiquiri

Soon after the invention of the home blender, the machines were whirring about turning out all manner of cocktails including a raft of fruit-infused daiquiris. It might seem that strawberries are not Caribbean fruit, but anyone who has traveled to Haiti knows that in Kenskoff in the hills above Port-au-Prince and Petionville, the climate is cool enough to support strawberries and they grow there—small, sweet, and delicious.

Daiquiri

Eben Freeman, bartender of Tailor Restaurant in New York City, developed this adaptation of the classic rum-lime-sugar cocktail.

Hemingway Daiquiri

Said to be created for Ernest Hemingway by Constantino Ribalaigua Vert at El Floridita in Havana. Editor's note: This drink comes from And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the World in Ten Cocktails by Wayne Curtis (Crown Publishers) and was featured as a Cocktail of the Month.

Avocado Daiquiri

This delicious tweak on a classic is from Hip Sips by Lucy Brennan (Chronicle Books, Spring 2007) and was featured as a Cocktail of the Month.

Blueberry Daiquiris

Frozen Watermelon Daiquiris

Strawberries and kiwi wedges are threaded onto lemongrass skewers for a fun garnish. To make the skewers, cut a four-inch piece from the tough end of a lemongrass stalk, then peel away the outer layers until only a 1/4-inch-diameter skewer remains. (Look for lemongrass in the produce section of some supermarkets and at Asian markets.)

Frozen Mango Daiquiri

Lime Daiquiri with Apricot Brandy

At the restaurant this is called the Periodista ("journalist") because drinking it loosens the lips.