Cuba Libre

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This drink is designated as an
IBA Official Cocktail
Cuba Libre
A Cuba Libre served in a short tumbler.
Type: Cocktail
Primary alcohol by volume:
Served: "On the rocks"; poured over ice
Standard garnish: lime slice
Standard drinkware:
Highball glass
IBA specified ingredients:
Preparation: Combine ingredients in glass and stir. Squeeze the lime slice into the drink and garnish with the pith.
For other meanings of 'Cuba Libre' see Cuba libre (disambiguation)

The Cuba Libre (IPA /'kuβ̞a'liβ̞ɾe/ in Spanish, /kjuːbʌ liːbɹeɪ/ in English, "Free Cuba") is a cocktail made of Cola, lime, and rum. This cocktail is often referred to as a Rum and Coke in the United States and Canada, where the lime juice is optional. Bacardi claims ownership of the original, while some have also claimed it for Havana Club. It seems unlikely, however, that anyone could safely identify the first individual to combine rum and Coca-Cola—when seven or eight individuals lay claim to the creation of the Margarita, a far more complex drink—let alone identify the brand.

Both the cocktail and its name remain politically loaded due to the history and current status of Cuba-United States relations. The situation is further complicated by Bacardi's political involvement in Cuba. Cuba Libre is sometimes called "Mentirita" ("little lie") by Cuban exiles opposed to the current Communist government run by Fidel Castro, as a comment that Cuba is currently not free.

Contents

Accounts of the invention of the Cuba Libre vary. One account claims that the drink (Spanish for Free Cuba) was invented in Havana, Cuba around 1900. Patriots aiding Cuba during the Spanish-American War[citation needed] — and, later, expatriates avoiding Prohibition regularly mixed rum and Cola as a cocktail and a toast to this West Indies island.

According to Bacardi:

"The world's most popular drink was born in a collision between the United States and Spain. It happened during the Spanish-American War at the turn of the century when Teddy Roosevelt, the Rough Riders, and Americans in large numbers arrived in Cuba. One afternoon, a group of off-duty soldiers from the U.S. Signal Corps were gathered in a bar in Old Havana. Fausto Rodriguez, a young messenger, later recalled that a captain came in and ordered Bacardi (Gold) rum and Coca-Cola on ice with a wedge of lime. The captain drank the concoction with such pleasure that it sparked the interest of the soldiers around him. They had the bartender prepare a round of the captain's drink for them. The Bacardi rum and Coke was an instant hit. As it does to this day, the drink united the crowd in a spirit of fun and good fellowship. When they ordered another round, one soldier suggested that they toast ¡Por Cuba Libre! in celebration of the newly freed Cuba. The captain raised his glass and sang out the battle cry that had inspired Cuba's victorious soldiers in the War of Independence." [1]

However, there are some problems with Bacardi's account, as the Spanish-American war was fought in 1898, Cuba's liberation was in 1898, and the Rough Riders left Cuba in September 1898,[2] but Coca-Cola was not available in Cuba until 1900.[3] According to a 1965 deposition by Fausto Rodriguez, the Cuba Libre was first mixed at a Cuban bar in August of 1900 by a member of the U.S. Signal Corps, referred to as "John Doe".

This drink was once viewed as exotic, with its dark syrup, made (at that time) from cola nuts and coca.

Soon enough, as Charles H. Baker points out in his Gentlemen's Companion of 1934, the Cuba Libre "caught on everywhere throughout the [American] South ... filtered through the North and West," aided by the ample supply of its ingredients. In The American Language, 1921, H.L. Mencken writes of an early variation of the drink: "The troglodytes of western South Carolina coined 'jump stiddy' for a mixture of Coca-Cola and denatured alcohol (usually drawn from automobile radiators); connoisseurs reputedly preferred the taste of what had been aged in Model-T Fords." This comment throws further doubt on Bacardi's account of the drink's Cuban origins.

The drink gained further popularity in the United States after the Andrews Sisters recorded a song (in 1945) named after the drink's ingredients, "Rum and Coca-Cola." Cola and rum were both cheap at the time and this also contributed to the widespread popularity of the concoction.

In the Canadian television series Trailer Park Boys, the character of Julian always has a rum and coke.

A homemade Cuba Libre
A homemade Cuba Libre

To make a Cuba Libre, rub the rim of a highball glass with a cut lime. Fill with ice. Pour a 2:1 mixture of Coca-Cola and rum. Squeeze the lime, and drop it in as a garnish. Another way of preparing is 30 ml rum, 20 ml lemon juice, and 150 ml Coca-Cola. May be served on the rocks.

The Cuba Pintada (stained Cuba), and Cuba Campechana are also popular, especially among young people. The first is rum with club soda and just a little bit of cola (just enough that it stains the glass); the Campechana contains half club soda and half coke. The drink's name has evolved somewhat in both Cuba and the United States, where some choose to refer to it as a Mentirita ("a little lie"), in an opinionated reference to Cuban politics.

A recent variation is the Coppertone which specifically uses Malibu Rum (rum with a natural coconut extract) and Cherry Coke (or Cherry Pepsi or Cherry RC Cola) for the cola component. The resulting drink has an aroma not entirely unlike suntan lotion and the name is an allusion to that.

Another variation of the Cuba Libre is the Cuban Missile Crisis. Compared to a normal Cuba Libre, it uses a higher proof rum, such as Bacardi 151 (75.5%).

The drink is also popular in Nicaragua, where it is often mixed using the national brand of rum, Flor de Caña, and Pepsi and called a "Nica Libre".

A Venezuelan variation : the "Cuba Libre Preparado" (Well-Prepared Cuba Libre) includes a dash of gin and a dash of Angostura bitters.

An alternate name for kalimotxo, a Spanish mix of red wine and cola, is Rioja Libre after the Rioja wine region.

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