For cocktails that call on pineapple juice, fresh is best, as “canned juice tends to be lifeless,” according to Proteau founder John deBary. In his version of the Singapore Sling, he dials down the pineapple quotient while maintaining the classic’s juicy nature, balancing it with a hint of spice from Bénédictine. Also folding pineapple between layers of spice, New York bartender Jelani Johnson’s Jamaican Mule combines the fruit juice with ginger syrup and a candied ginger slice garnish to put a tropical spin on the template.
To extend pineapple juice’s shelf life, it can be incorporated into a sweetener. This is the approach Alec Bales takes in his Rainmaker, where a simple cordial made with the fruit, sugar and water provides a caramelized tropical note. In Ned King’s Gem, pineapple juice imparts acid to either a gomme syrup (representative of the cocktail’s 19th-century origins) or a simpler rich cane sugar syrup, giving the drink a frothy finish.
No matter its form, pineapple makes an impression in any cocktail where it plays a role. In this dressed-up version of the Old-Fashioned, a wedge of pineapple is placed right in the glass, allowing the drinker to muddle it as much or as little as desired, as well as on the rim of the glass, where it acts as a show-stealing garnish. The over-the-top presentation for a typically austere cocktail is proof of the power of pineapple: With just a slice, the fruit can take any drink to the tropics.
Fairbanks Loan No. 2
This loose interpretation of the Douglas Fairbanks is “reminiscent of a Daiquiri on steroids.”
Dante’s Jungle Bird
A mashup of Dante’s beloved Garibaldi and the bitter tiki classic, the Jungle Bird.