Space Needle Blast-Off Punch
Submitted by jerryh
Space Needle Blast-Off Punch: a Seattle World’s Fair-era rum cocktail with orange curacao, orange juice, and sweet-and-sour. Tropical, citrus-forward, and easy to shake up.
YIELD
2 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
0 minREADY
10 minA bit of Pacific Northwest cocktail history in a Tom Collins glass. This rum-and-orange concoction takes its name from the iconic Seattle landmark and dates back to the era when tiki-adjacent punches dominated American bar menus.
The drink is essentially a tropical sour built around a generous pour of rum. Two pours, actually, which earns the “blast-off” name. The orange curacao adds a perfumed orange-peel sweetness that’s deeper than orange juice alone could deliver. The sweet-and-sour mix and fresh OJ round it out into a bright, citrus-forward sipper.
Shake it hard. Long enough that the outside of your shaker gets painfully cold. That dilutes the drink the right amount with melted ice and chills it through, which is what makes any sour-style cocktail come together properly.
Use a light or amber rum, not a dark or spiced one. Dark rum overwhelms the citrus; spiced rum throws the orange-curacao balance off entirely.
Pro Tips
- Make your own sweet-and-sour with equal parts fresh lemon juice, fresh lime juice, and simple syrup. Bottled mixers taste artificial in a clean cocktail like this.
- Use a quality orange curacao (Pierre Ferrand is the gold standard) rather than the bright-blue stuff, which is mostly food coloring.
- Garnish properly: a maraschino cherry plus a wide orange peel twist over the glass to release the citrus oils.
- Serve in an actual Tom Collins glass (tall, narrow, 10-14 oz). The shape concentrates the aromatics at the rim where you’ll smell them.
Variations
- Float a half ounce of dark rum on top after pouring for a layered, more rum-forward version.
- Add a dash of orange bitters to amplify the citrus complexity.
- Top with a splash of soda water for a longer, lighter highball treatment.
Ingredients
Directions
Combine all ingredients.
Shake well and pour over ice in Tom Collins glass.
Garnish.
Comments
The first ingredient (orange syrup) is incorrect. It's supposed to be orgeat syrup (which is almond syrup, and I usually use the Torani brand most commonly used to flavor coffee drinks). The ingredient mistake in the recipe listing might explain the undeserved low rating for this recipe, because the slight hint of almond adds a crucial element that make this drink so delicious.