Serve in a Tiki mug or collins
1 1⁄2 oz | Navy rum (ideally 54.5% alc./vol.) |
3 oz | Pineapple juice |
3⁄4 oz | Orange juice (freshly squeezed) |
1⁄2 oz | Cream of coconut (e.g. Coco Lopez, Re'al etc.) |
4 drop | Difford's Daiquiri Bitters optional |
6th March 2025 is The day Aspirin was discovered
The broadside firepower of navy rum balances sweet pineapple and coconut in what is an all too delicious Tiki-style libation.
From the Soggy Dollar bar on the island of Jost Van Dyke in the British Virgin Islands. The bar's name is logical, as most of the clientele are sailors and there is no dock. Hence they have to swim ashore, often paying for drinks with wet dollars.
A variation on the classic Pina Colada. See our main Piña Colada page for the story behind the classic and for links to numerous other variations.
One serving of Painkiller contains 224 calories
Difford’s Guide remains free-to-use thanks to the support of the brands in green above. Values stated for alcohol and calorie content, and number of drinks an ingredient makes should be considered approximate.
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i. The Original Painkiller
1) 60ml orange juice
2) 30ml cream of coconut
3) 30ml pineapple juice
4) 30ml Smith & Cross
5) 30ml El Dorado
Given the limitations of the Soggy Dollar's island location in the 1970s, I am certain this drink was developed with standard bar ingredients of the time, including canned pineapple and orange juice.
Fresh juice is too sweet and lacks thrust. You need the acidic bite of the canned juice in order to cut through the sweet coconut. The acid is the tip of the marlin spike, to use a naval metaphor.
Try it both ways, I think you'll agree.