Top 10 Beach Drink
A Mexican
concoction that's gone global, the margarita is popular on and off the beach.
Photograph
by Paul Poplis, Getty Images
By Margaret
Loftus
The pineapple, coconut, and rum slurry known as piña
colada had been popular in the Caribbean for at least a hundred years before
Ramon "Monchito" Marrero, a bartender at the Caribe Hilton’s
Beachcomber Bar (now called Oasis Bar) in San Juan, Puerto Rico, perfected it
in the 1950s using cream of coconut. Today, San Juan’s signature cocktail is
sipped all over the world, but tastes best in Puerto Rico, by the beach or
pool.
- Caipirinha, Brazil
Made with sugar, lime, and cachaça—a spirit fermented
from sugarcane juice— the caipirinha is ubiquitous in Brazil’s
seaside cafés. Even vendors on the beach mix them. Variations abound, the most popular
is caipifrutas, which adds one or more of the region’s wide array of fruits,
such as caju (cashew fruit), passionfruit, mango, or kiwi.
- Mai-Tai, Polynesia
Upon tasting this cocktail of rum, orange curaçao,
orgeat syrup (made from almonds), and lime at Polynesian-style lounge Trader
Vic’s (then called Hinky Dink) in Oakland, California, in 1944, a Tahitian
guest remarked, “maita'i ro'a 'ae,” meaning “out of this world.” Hence
the name mai-tai, or so the story goes. The drink got a boost in Elvis’s hit
movie Blue Hawaii and has since become a staple at tiki lounges
everywhere.
- Red Stripe Beer, Jamaica
So identified is Red Stripe with the Jamaican national
identity that when the island formally gained independence from Great Britain
in 1962, one columnist suggested the real date should have been 1928, when the
beer was first brewed on the island in Kingston. After a couple of marketing
glitches in the U.S. market, the lager is now the most popular of all Caribbean
beers.
- Daiquiri, Cuba
Thanks to the prevalence of rum, lime, and sugar in
the Caribbean, the trio became the base for many of the region’s cocktails (as
well as the British sailor’s grog). Named for a beach near Santiago, Cuba,
the first daiquiri was allegedly invented by a group of American engineers
working in the area whose gin supplies had run dry. The drink today is more
recognizable to Americans in its fruit-flavored frozen form.
6. Margarita, Mexico
Was it a Texas socialite in Acapulco who was
looking for something to refresh her party guests on a hot afternoon or a
bartender in Tijuana hoping to impress Rita Hayworth (née Margarita Cansino)
with a drink in her honor? Regardless of who invented the margarita—the stories
are legion—the tart blend of tequila, cointreau, and lime juice in a glass
rimmed with salt has become synonymous with Mexico.
It’s the top-selling tequila cocktail worldwide.
7. Limoncello, Southern Italy
When life gave farmers in southern Italy
surplus lemons, they soaked the peels in grain alcohol and added sugar to make
limoncello. The sweet-tart digestivo is traditionally sipped after
dinner, but is gaining ground as a base for simple cocktails, such as splashed
over ice with soda or tonic water, preferably enjoyed while taking in the
stunning seaside vistas of the Amalfi Coast.
8. Cape Codder, Massachusetts
When cranberry giant Ocean Spray began to promote
its juice cocktail as a mixer, suggestions to pair it with Canadian whiskey or
rum fell flat. But vodka and cranberry—named the Cape Codder in honor of the
beloved Massachusetts
peninsula where cranberries thrive—hit it big, spawning multiple variations,
including the trendier martini hybrid, the cosmopolitan.
9. Rosé, Côte d'Azur, France
Drinking pink has just started to catch on
stateside, but a glass of chilled dry rosé has long been de rigueur in the
seaside cafés of France’s
Côte d'Azur, alongside fish soup and langoustines. Typically made by removing
the skins of the red grapes after crushing, rosé is thought of as the
less-serious sister to white or red wine, making it the ideal beachside quaff
in Saint Tropez.
10. Gin and Tonic, India
Gin was first introduced to tonic to offset its
bitter taste so the British, who were occupying India
at the time, could stomach the stuff as an anti-malarial. The Brits ended up
fancying the crisp combo, adding a wedge of lime, and it became a mainstay of
the tropics long after the empire fell. Try it on the beach in Goa while
watching the sun set. Source
Share this article :