Jai Alai Special

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==Historic References==
 
==Historic References==
  
===“My Cuban Cocktail Recipe Book” by Ramon Pedreira Rodriguez, second English-language edition: 2000, Pg. 68===  
+
===“My Cuban Cocktail Recipe Book” by Ramon Pedreira Rodriguez===  
 +
 
 
"JAI ALAI - This cocktail was very popular among professional jai alai players since colonial times."
 
"JAI ALAI - This cocktail was very popular among professional jai alai players since colonial times."
  
  
==="Havana: The Magazine of Cuba" 28 February 1930, pg. 30, col. 1===  
+
==="Havana: The Magazine of Cuba" 28 February 1930===  
 +
 
 
"Marolo," I sex [sic] to the concoctioneer, "fix me up a Jai-Alai." This is the kind of drink that you don't know what's in it and after four drinks you don't care what is in it.
 
"Marolo," I sex [sic] to the concoctioneer, "fix me up a Jai-Alai." This is the kind of drink that you don't know what's in it and after four drinks you don't care what is in it.
  
  
 
[[Category:Recipes]][[Category:Rum Cocktails]]
 
[[Category:Recipes]][[Category:Rum Cocktails]]

Revision as of 02:23, 12 March 2007

The Jai Alai Special was the signature drink of the Fronton Palacio in Tijuana, Mexico, and is a cocktail which consists of Rum, Lime Juice, Orange Juice and Crème de Cacao. It may have its origins from a cocktail from Cuba, where the sport of jai alai is also very popular.

Contents

Recipe

Ingredients according to a postcard for the Fronton Palacio (circa 1940s)

  • Lime Juice
  • Orange Juice
  • Crème de Cacao
  • Bacardi Rum


Recipe from bartender Michael Ruiz of the Whistle Stop bar in San Diego, Calif. (2006)

  • 1-1/2 oz Light Puerto Rican Rum
  • 1 oz Crème de Cacao
  • Juice from two limes
  • Orange Juice
  • Dark Jamaican Rum

In a shaker, combine light rum, crème de cacao and lime juice with 1/2 cup of ice and shake vigorously. Pour into a Collins glass filled with crushed ice. Fill rest of glass with orange juice. Top with dark rum. Garnish with a lime wedge.

Historic References

“My Cuban Cocktail Recipe Book” by Ramon Pedreira Rodriguez

"JAI ALAI - This cocktail was very popular among professional jai alai players since colonial times."


"Havana: The Magazine of Cuba" 28 February 1930

"Marolo," I sex [sic] to the concoctioneer, "fix me up a Jai-Alai." This is the kind of drink that you don't know what's in it and after four drinks you don't care what is in it.

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