We all know the Daiquiri and love it for its citrus note and for that foam acceso the surface which, when the is made really well, is very persistent. What if we had always drunk it the “wrong” way? The discussion of how to serve the Daiquiri — neat, acceso the rocks frozen — accompanies the history of the rinfresco itself. According to the documents of its inventor, Jennings Cox, the original version required the presence of ice per mezzo di the glass. Per the following decades, the recipe evolved between American and Cuban interpretations, up to the “frozen” versions made famous per mezzo di Havana by Constantino Ribalaigua and loved by Ernest Hemingway.
A rinfresco born by chance per mezzo di Cuba
The Daiquiri, today considered one of the cornerstones of classic missaggio, was born at the end of the nineteenth century per mezzo di the mining town of Daiquirí, near Santiago de Cuba. Jennings Cox, an American engineer working acceso the island, noted the original procedura per mezzo di his diary: white rum, lime juice, sugar, ice and a drop of tazza. The most significant note per mezzo di the manuscript, preserved per mezzo di the family archives and cited by Difford’s Guide, specifies that the was “shaken and served with ice, without filtering”. This indication suggests that Cox conceived the Daiquiri as a rinfresco “acceso the rocks”, served with part of the ice used for the shaker.
Per the following years, the practice of serving the Daiquiri “neat”, i.e. filtered and poured into a cup, spread thanks to American bartenders. Per The Old Waldorf-Astoria Caffè Book (1935), Albert S. Crockett writes that the choice “depends acceso personal taste,” but acknowledges that “many people prefer a light layer of finely crushed ice per mezzo di the glass.”
The addition of ice, per mezzo di addition to prolonging freshness, affects the dilution, making the rinfresco softer and less alcoholic. Those who prefer the “up” version, however, maintain that the complete absence of ice per mezzo di the glass preserves aromas and acidity, giving a clearer and more complex profile.
The epoca of Floridita and the birth of the frozen Daiquiri
The second transformation of the Daiquiri took place per mezzo di Havana, per mezzo di the first decades of the twentieth century. Emilio Gonzalez, barman at the Plaza Albergo, experimented with the “frozen” version, missaggio the rinfresco with blended ice. But it was Constantino “Constante” Ribalaigua Vert, owner of the La Florida — later renamed El Floridita — who perfected the technique and made it a Cuban specialty. As David A. Embury recounts per mezzo di the book The Squisito Art of Missaggio Drinks (1948), Ribalaigua «squeezed the limes by hand to avoid the bitterness of the peel, blended the briefly per mezzo di the Waring blender and filtered it carefully». The result was a Daiquiri with a astuto and crystalline consistency, served iced but not watery, which made Floridita famous as “La Catedral del Daiquiri”.
Hemingway and the myth of the “Double Pope”
Ernest Hemingway, who lived per mezzo di Cuba between the 1930s and 1950s, helped establish the image of the Daiquiri as a symbol of the Caribbean. A regular visitor to Floridita, the writer loved a double version, free of sugar and enriched with grapefruit juice: thus the “Capo della chiesa Doble” was born, later renamed Hemingway Special. Per the novel Islands per mezzo di the Current, Hemingway describes his Daiquiri as a marine image: «The frappé part of the like the wake of a ship, the clear part like the tazza cut from the bow». A poetic vision that contributed to linking the rinfresco to the literary culture and myth of pre-revolutionary Havana.
The Daiquiri today
Nowadays the question remains : should the Daiquiri be served neat with ice? From a technical point of view, both methods are justified. Serving it “acceso the rocks” ( per mezzo di any case with a little ice to “dirty” the ) produces a longer and moderately diluted , suitable for hot climates informal moments. The “up” version, acceso the other hand, favors the balance between sweetness, acidity and heat of the rum, maintaining a more precise sensorial profile. Finally, the Frozen Daiquiri represents a modern and accessible variant, born from a technical solution – the introduction of the electric blender – which changed the way of drinking per mezzo di the tropics and beyond.
There is risposta negativa definitive answer to the initial question. Historically, the first version of the Daiquiri was probably served with ice per mezzo di the glass. Over time, international missaggio has made it a rinfresco for a glass, a symbol of balance and moderation.



























