El Diablo Cocktail

Difford’s Guide
Discerning Drinkers (154 ratings)

Serve in a Collins glass

Ingredients:
1 12 oz Patrón Reposado tequila
12 oz Joseph Cartron Double Crème de Cassis de Bourgogne
34 oz Lime juice (freshly squeezed)
2 oz Thomas Henry Ginger Beer
× 1 1 serving
Read about cocktail measures and measuring

How to make:

  1. Select and pre-chill a Collins glass.
  2. Prepare garnish of lime wedge.
  3. SHAKE first 3 ingredients with ice.
  4. STRAIN into ice-filled glass.
  5. TOP with ginger beer and briefly stir.
  6. Garnish with lime wedge.

Strength & taste guide:

No alcohol
Medium
Boozy
Strength 6/10
Sweet
Medium
Dry/sour
Sweet to sour 5/10

Review:

The tequila, rich red berry fruit, lime and ginger aren't exactly a subtle combination but it is one that has proved both popular and enduring.

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History:

The El Diablo started life as a mere "Diablo" in the "Tropical Specialties" section of Hyman Gale & Gerald F. Marco's 1940 book The How and When.

Diablo
½ ounce Lime Juice
1½ ounce Ronrico White Rum
½ ounce Creme de Cassis
Shake well with 3 ounces of ice and serve in 10 ounce glass ¼ full of shaved ice and the rest with large lump ice. Add Ginger Ale, round of lime, red and green cherry. Serve with coloured straws.

Hyman Gale & Gerald F. Marco, The How and When (2nd Edition), 1940

The first reference to this cocktail with tequila in place of rum is as a "Mexican El Diablo" in Victor Bergeron's 1946 Trader Vic's Book of Food and Drink, where crucially the book denotes this as being a Trader Vic original cocktail. By the time the drink reappears in his 1968 Trader Vic's Pacific Island Cookbook the name has been shortened to "El Diablo." The recipe throughout four of Vic's books, including his 1972 , remains consistent as follows:
"½ lime
1 ounce tequila
½ crème de cassis
Ginger Ale
Squeeze lime juice into a 10-ounce glass over ice cubes; add spent lime shell. Add tequila and crème de cassis. Stir. Fill glass with ginger ale. Serve with a straw."

Tellingly, both the above recipes call for a 10oz glass, which is the maximum size of a true Highball glass. Modern-day El Diablo recipes (including ours) call for larger, typically 12oz, Collins glasses.

Due to the "TV" denoting Trader Vic original cocktails in the books disappearing from the El Diablo in the 1972 edition, some have questioned whether this was originally a Trader Vic cocktail. It wasn't; he merely swapped rum for tequila and tweaked the name.

Some suggest that Victor Bergeron created the Mexican El Diablo for his Señor Pico Mexican-themed restaurant concept, but TraderVics.com says, "The Señor Pico restaurant concept was first established in San Francisco by "Trader" Vic Bergeron in 1964," some 20 years after the cocktail appeared in his first book.

Nutrition:

One serving of El Diablo Cocktail contains 178 calories

Alcohol content:

  • 1.1 standard drinks
  • 10.76% alc./vol. (10.76° proof)
  • 15.3 grams of pure alcohol

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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Egg McKenzie’s Avatar Egg McKenzie
25th May at 19:05
it's pleasant, of course.
2nd May at 23:34
Interesting - I think I used a little less ginger beer as I was using lowball glasses, but I quite liked how the spicy bite of the ginger played into the tequila, giving it almost a smoky sensation. I had to take a second to recall I did use tequila and not mezcal. Lime comes through, but the cassis flavor seems a mere accent - though it is likely also countering the tartness of the lime as well.
james McMakin’s Avatar james McMakin
3rd February at 03:44
Love the drink with ginger beer but haven’t tried with ginger ale, but I think it’s probably better with G beer.
Mike Hillis’ Avatar Mike Hillis
15th December 2024 at 03:18
Enjoyable cocktail. I’m interested in trying it with mezcal next - I would anticipate it being a bit more complex.
Erik Maloney’s Avatar Erik Maloney
15th March 2023 at 20:41
I heartily second the use of mezcal in this cocktail--I call it the Smoky Devil (Diablo Ahumado? Diablo Humeante?).
Tony Jones’ Avatar Tony Jones
1st July 2022 at 19:41
You can have refreshing drinks. You can have strong liquor drinks. This is both. Wow.
Tony Jones’ Avatar Tony Jones
1st July 2022 at 19:35
I'm with TV that cassis=lime, otherwise it's overpowered.
I had 45\20\20 with mezcal topped with FeverTree Light Ginger ale.
The excellent ginger ale helps make it. mezcal
The mezcal stands out despite the oomph of the lime and the FeverTree. Amazing.
Chris Corboy’s Avatar Chris Corboy
31st January 2022 at 10:36
Delicious. Will make many more.
17th August 2020 at 16:00
Just tried it. Well I am not especially fan of cassis, but I loved this cocktail. I also saw this recipe in a tiki cocktail box, I think they recommend it with tequila blanco. I might try another time