Skip to main content

Blue Hawaiian

4.4

(4)

Two Blue Hawaiian cocktails garnished with an orchid and umbrella.
Photo by Elizabeth Coetzee, Food styling by Rebecca Jurkevich

It’s easy to confuse Blue Hawaiian and Blue Hawaii, two similarly named tropical cocktail recipes with nearly identical vibrant blue colors. But the two have different ingredients and origin stories. The Blue Hawaii dates to 1957 when Harry Yee, a bartender at what’s now the Hilton Hawaiian Village Waikiki Resort in Honolulu, Hawaii, created a cocktail for Dutch distiller Bols. Yee made his Blue Hawaii with vodka, white rum, blue curaçao liqueur, and sour mix.

The Blue Hawaiian recipe emerged from Yee’s rubric, but it brought cream of coconut to the mix. The resulting drink has an unapologetically luxurious texture and coconut flavor analogous to the piña colada, another frozen cocktail often poured into frosty hurricane glasses. While you could serve a Blue Hawaiian on the rocks, why would you? Build the drink directly in the blender with cubed or crushed ice. Add a squeeze of fresh lemon juice for brightness or splash of coconut rum to amplify its tropical flavors. This is no time for minimalism, so garnish your Blue Hawaiian with a wedge of fresh pineapple, a cocktail umbrella, and an edible flower.

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    5 minutes

  • Yield

    2 servings

Ingredients

4 oz. unsweetened pineapple juice
3 oz. light rum
2 oz. blue curaçao
2 oz. well-stirred canned cream of coconut (not coconut milk), such as Coco López
3 cups ice cubes
Pineapple wedge, paper umbrella, and edible flower for garnish (optional)

Preparation

  1. Combine 4 oz. pineapple juice, 3 oz. light rum, 2 oz. blue curaçao, 2 oz. cream of coconut, and 3 cups ice cubes in a high-powered blender; purée until smooth. Divide between two stemmed goblets or other cocktail glasses and garnish with a pineapple wedge, paper umbrella, or edible flower (if using).

    Editor’s note: This Blue Hawaiian recipe was first printed in the May 2003 issue of ‘Gourmet.’ Head this way for more of our best summer cocktail recipes

See Related Recipes and Cooking Tips

Read More
Frozen into a slushy, the classic tequila and grapefruit cocktail becomes even more refreshing.
Crème de violette is an exuberantly floral violet liqueur that gives vibrant color to this fun frozen cocktail.
Blend frozen mango, blanco tequila, and lime juice into these cooling margaritas. A Tajín rim adds a spicy-salty kick.
With elderflower liqueur, mint, and prosecco, the effervescent Hugo spritz cocktail is a hit year round, but particularly on warm nights.
Named for a Scottish revolutionary, a New York City operetta—or both—this effortless scotch cocktail is built to last.
With a crisp crust and fruity filling, pineapple pie is a Philippine bakeshop specialty.
With rich chocolate flavor and easy customization, this hot cocoa recipe is just the one you want to get you through winter.
A short list of ingredients comes together in this elegant sake martini.