Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Freezing the ingredients first means you can use less ice, leading to a more flavorful, less diluted drink.
  • Ripe fresh pineapple or canned pineapple chunks are more flavorful than pineapple juice, plus their fiber helps thicken the drink.
  • Coconut cream has a more natural flavor than Coco Lopez.
  • Measuring solids by weight gives you better control over the ingredient ratios.

I would like to offer a few basic facts about myself:

  • I sometimes like getting caught in the rain... when it's warm.
  • I am not into yoga (though I used to be).
  • I'm pretty sure I have half a brain. Maybe even a little more.
  • Making love at midnight? My schedule is flexible, for sure.
  • And yes, I do indeed like piña coladas. At least, I like good ones.

These are important answers to important life questions. What's not answered though ishowto make a good piña colada. It's tricky for a couple reasons. The first is that piña coladas require ingredients that are highly variable in quality, which means it's difficult to create a recipe that yields a consistent result. The second is that it's a frozen drink, and all frozen drinks share a similar problem: How do you chill the drink down with enough ice to make it slushy without overly diluting it in the process?

Most recipes solve the first problem in the most un-delicious of ways, calling for canned ingredients like pineapple juice and Coco Lopez, which, while not great in the flavor department, are extremely consistent. They may not make the best piña colada, but they'll make a reliably okay one.

I've been playing with solutions to this, and have come up with some answers, which I'll review on an ingredient-by-ingredient basis.

The Rum: Pick Your Favorite

Let's start with the booze. I'll be honest—this is the component that interests me the least. Not because I don't care about the rum, but because I think most of us at home are going to make the drink within the limitations of our home bar.

If you look at some of the piña colada recipes from top bartenders, you'll often notice that they like to blend specific rums in an effort to nail their most perfect version of the drink. But bartenders have the luxury of having access to multiple bottles of the stuff at once. At home, we use what we've got, restock when we can, and that's it. Recipes that call for blending three different rums may work at a fancy co*cktail bar, but it's just not a realistic option for the rest of us.

My feeling is that you can make a good piña colada with many kinds of rum, whether it's white, aged, or some combination; each brings its own personality to the party. Use whatever you have—I promise you'll like it. One thing that is important: add enough so you can taste it. I like a roughly 2.5-ounce pour for a single serving of the drink.

The Pineapple: Use Fresh or Canned Pineapple

Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe (1)

Pineapple is, I think, one of the trickier elements of a piña colada, because while fresh juice and/or fruit is usually better, pineapples can vary wildly in terms of their ripeness, sweetness, and acidity. If you make the drink with fully fresh fruit, you're more likely to have to tinker with other components like the sugar and lime juice to dial in on the perfect balance of sweet and tart. That can be tricky for a lot of folks at home, since it requires making on-the-spot adjustments—sometimes drastic ones if the pineapple is a dud—with each new batch. No wonder most recipes just call for a can of Dole.

I experimented with a handful of options, including using only fresh pineapple, canned pineapple juice, and canned pineapple chunks, both alone and in combination with each other.

My final recipe gives a couple options: fresh pineapple chunks, or canned pineapple chunks along with some of their juices.

When ripe, the fresh pineapple is the best tasting, so if you can get your hands on a truly ripe specimen, that's the way to go. If you can't, I found that the chunks of canned pineapple deliver a better pineapple flavor than canned juice alone.

The Coconut: Use Unsweetened Coconut Cream

There's a legitimate argument to be made for Coco Lopez, the canned, ultra-sweet coconut cream. Sure, it tastes like tanning oil, but it's practically become the drink's calling card. There's real nostalgia associated with that. But in the end, as much as I can appreciate and often enjoy what it brings to a piña colada, it tastes like tanning oil. I want my recipe to taste like coconut. Real coconut.

I suppose I could have insisted on an elaborate sub-recipe for turning a fresh coconut into coconut purée, but piña coladas are supposed to be fun, not work. I'll leave the homemade purées to the bartenders who have time to do that. Far easier is to open a can of unsweetened coconut cream, which is thicker and more concentrated than coconut milk.

The Ice: Use Less

Ice is a challenging but necessary ingredient in any frozen drink because the more you add, the colder and slushier the drink gets, but it also gets more diluted. Add too little, and your piña colada is cold but not frozen. Add too much and your drink is frozen, but its taste pales in comparison to what it could be, like a memory of a trip to Puerto Rico you took 10 years ago compared to being on the island in the flesh. It can be a frustratingly difficult balance to strike, and at times it feels like there is no sweet spot.

But then I had an idea: What if I freeze my pineapple chunks and everything else—the rum, the coconut cream, the additional splashes of lime juice and sugar—then cut down on the ice? I could get an incredibly slushy, full-on tropically flavored drink without having to add as much water in the form of ice.

It's as simple as shoving a bottle of rum in the freezer, and pre-batching the rest of the ingredients and putting them in to freeze as well. Because of its high alcohol content, the rum won't freeze, but it will be cold enough that it won't warm the other components up when you mix everything together. Combined with the fiber in the chunks of actual pineapple (as opposed to just plain juice), the result is a much thicker and slushier piña colada.

The rest is simple: throw it all in ablender, pour it into a glass, and... don't forget the little paper umbrella. You really do need one of those.

July 2017

Recipe Details

Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe

Active10 mins

Total70 mins

Serves1 serving

Ingredients

  • 5 ounces (140g) very ripe peeled and cored fresh pineapple, frozen pineapple, or drained canned pineapple chunks (see note)

  • 1 3/4 ounces (50ml) unsweetened coconut cream, shaken or stirred well to incorporate fat

  • 1 ounce (30ml) simple syrup (see note)

  • 3/4 to 1 ounce (20 to 30ml) freshjuice from 1 lime

  • 2 1/2 ounces (75ml) white or gold rum, kept in freezer until freezer-cold

  • 4 ounces (115g) ice cubes

  • Pineapple slice and/or maraschino cherry, for garnish

  • Paper umbrella and straw, for serving (optional)

Directions

  1. In an airtight plastic container, combine pineapple, coconut cream, simple syrup, and 3/4 ounce lime juice, and transfer to freezer until frozen, at least 1 hour (the sugar in the mixture may prevent it from freezing solid; this is okay).

    Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe (2)

  2. In a blender, combine frozen pineapple mixture with ice-cold rum and ice and blend until thick and slushy. Taste, then blend in the remaining 1/4 ounce lime juice, if desired. Pour into a large glass, garnish with pineapple and/or a cherry, and serve, with or without a paper umbrella and straw.

    Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe (3)

  3. If you want to make multiple drinks, you can pre-batch up to a double recipe (a blender may not hold much more than that easily) in a single container, then divide after blending; for more than 2 drinks, use separate containers to hold more servings.

    Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe (4)

Special Equipment

Blender

Notes

Only use fresh pineapple if you can find a truly ripe and sweet fruit; otherwise frozen or canned will be better.

To make simple syrup, combine equal volumes of granulated sugar and water, then stir until the sugar is completely dissolved; extra simple syrup can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 1 month.

Make-Ahead and Storage

The pre-batched frozen ingredients can be assembled and kept in the freezer up to 12 hours before serving.

Read More

  • 15 Frozen-co*cktail Recipes Worth the Brain Freeze
  • Boozy Piña Colada Popsicles
  • Pina Colada Cupcakes
  • The Serious Eats Guide to Rum
  • The 10 Best Budget Rums
Ultra-Tropical Piña Colada Recipe (2024)
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