Blackberry Pineapple Smash
It’s a simple cocktail of muddled blackberries, clear rum, fresh lime juice, pineapple juice and a touch of mint. Done. Easy as that.
Prep Time5 minutes mins
Total Time5 minutes mins
Course: Drinks
Cuisine: American
Servings: 2 cocktails
- 1 cup fresh blackberries
- 1-2 sprigs fresh mint
- 1 ounce freshly squeezed lime juice
- 4 ounces blanco tequila or gin, or clear rum
- 6 ounces pineapple juice
- club soda
Muddle the blackberry, mint and lime juice in the bottom of a cocktail shaker.
Add the tequila and pineapple juice, along with a few pieces of ice, and secure the lid onto the shaker. Shake for 30 seconds until the liquid is chilled.
Pour the cocktail, muddled bits and all, into 2 ice-filled cocktail glasses and top with a spritz of club soda. Serve immediately.
- Muddle blackberries firmly but not violently. You want to break the berries down enough to release their juice and pigment, but over-muddling crushes the seeds and releases bitter tannins into the drink. About 8 to 10 firm presses with a muddler is the sweet spot.
- Add the mint to the muddler at the same time as the blackberries. Muddling mint alongside the berries lets the oils release gradually and evenly into the lime juice, rather than bruising the mint on its own which can turn the flavor sharp and vegetal.
- Always use freshly squeezed lime juice, not the bottled stuff. Bottled lime juice contains preservatives and has a flatter, slightly metallic flavor that throws off the balance of the whole cocktail. Fresh lime juice is brighter and integrates better with pineapple.
- Use cold pineapple juice straight from the fridge. Starting with cold juice means your ice does less work diluting the drink during shaking, so the final cocktail stays more concentrated and flavorful.
- Shake for the full 30 seconds. Shaking chills the liquid, dilutes it slightly with water from the melting ice, and emulsifies the fruit pulp into the tequila and juice. Cutting it short means a warmer, less integrated drink.
- Pour the muddled solids into the glass along with the liquid. The pulp and berry skins carry a huge amount of color and flavor. Straining them out gives you a thinner, less vibrant cocktail. Leaving them in is what makes this a smash, not just a juice drink.
- Fill your glasses with fresh ice before pouring. The ice you shook with is now partially melted and warmer. Fresh ice in the glass keeps the drink cold longer without adding extra dilution right at the moment of serving.
- Add the club soda after pouring, not before. Adding carbonation to the shaker or before the juice would cause it to go flat immediately from agitation. A spritz on top after pouring preserves the bubbles and keeps the drink lively.
- Use blanco tequila as the default spirit here. Blanco tequila is unaged and has a clean, slightly grassy flavor that lets the blackberry and pineapple lead. Reposado or anejo would overpower the fruit with oak and vanilla notes.
- If swapping to gin, choose a London Dry style over a floral gin. Heavily floral gins compete with the mint and blackberry rather than complementing them. A London Dry gin brings juniper backbone that bridges the citrus and fruit without muddying the flavor profile.
- Taste your pineapple juice before mixing and adjust lime accordingly. Pineapple juice varies significantly in acidity and sweetness depending on the brand. If your juice is very sweet, lean toward the full ounce of lime. If it is already tart, start with three-quarters of an ounce.
- Serve immediately after building the drink. Carbonation dissipates quickly, ice melts fast, and the mint starts to oxidize once muddled. This cocktail is designed to be consumed fresh, not made ahead and held.
Calories: 211kcal | Carbohydrates: 19g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 0.5g | Saturated Fat: 0.01g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.05g | Sodium: 3mg | Potassium: 248mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 12g | Vitamin A: 187IU | Vitamin C: 28mg | Calcium: 35mg | Iron: 1mg