Grapefruit-gate
The Paloma can be super simple to make - Just throw Tequila, lime juice and grapefruit soda in a glass. Some, like our recipe above, also add agave syrup into the mix and shake the ingredients before hand as we find it better that way. The controversy and seemingly endless variations between recipes centre around the grapefruit. Do you use fresh juice or flavoured soda, or both?
European and American versions tend to call for both fresh pink grapefruit juice and pink grapefruit soda. Many in Mexico just use Jarritos soda (that has a natural grapefruit flavour) and if you are looking to go authentic with yours - it's the more traditional way of making a Paloma.
Using both is a bit OTT, but it’s undeniably tasty. Our personal preference is to use fresh grapefruit and unflavoured soda. This achieves both the real fruit taste (while avoiding artificial sweeteners) and also adds in the much-needed effervescence.
Suffice-it-to-say, if you don't have grapefruit flavoured soda, or enough fruit juice to make another - it's okay. Just roll with it and adapt to what you have as it's still going to be tasty!
TOP TIPS:
If you don't have Agave syrup, use regular sugar syrup. Alternatively you can omit it entirely and just use Pink Grapefruit Tonic Water, that has a certain sweetness already compared to soda.
Blanco Tequila offers the best balance in a Paloma, but for those who are looking to experiment the subtle oaked notes of some Reposados can lend a unique depth to the cocktail and elevate it into a far more indulgent affair.
Some home-cocktail makers choose to rim the glass with salt or even add a pinch of straight into the drink. It's an optional extra that adds a savoury touch.
AN ABRIDGED, INEBRIATED HISTORY:
The history of the drink is obscure and to date, is without an origin.
For years, the legendary Don Javier Delgado Corona, owner of the beloved La Capilla bar (Tequila, Jalisco, Mexico) was credited with its invention. It was both a plausible and a popular theory, but according to Jim Meehan’s Bartender’s Manual, Don Javier denied ever creating the Paloma, ending that myth in its tracks.
Other lines of historical research show that it’s quite possible that the Paloma began its life in the 1950’s and evolved from there. Based on the amount of information that’s available and the fact there’s no clear start point yet despite the amount of time cocktail nerds have dedicated to finding out, it is highly likely we’ll never know!