
The Bob Marley drink is the cocktail I make when I want the glass to do some of the talking. It is layered with grenadine, pineapple juice, coconut rum, pineapple rum, and blue curacao, so the colors move from red to yellow to greenish blue when the pour goes well.
I have learned that this drink is more about patience than complicated bartending. If I dump everything in quickly, it becomes a tasty tropical drink in one color. If I use plenty of ice and pour slowly, the layers stay visible long enough to serve.
It is sweet, fruity, and beachy, with pineapple up front and a little orange-citrus note from the blue curacao. I do not pretend it is subtle. I make it cold, bright, and fun, then serve it right away before the colors drift together.
Why I keep coming back to this
- The ingredients are easy to find at most liquor stores.
- Layering makes the drink feel special without a blender.
- Pineapple juice gives enough body to slow the layers.
- Grenadine settles naturally at the bottom for the red stripe.
- Blue curacao and pineapple create the green top effect.
- The recipe makes 2 drinks, which is practical for a small patio round.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- Grenadine, 2 ounces.I divide it between the glasses first because it is heavy and sinks.
- Pineapple juice, 8 ounces.This is the middle layer and the main flavor. I chill it before mixing.
- Coconut rum, 1 ounce.Just enough coconut to make the pineapple taste rounder.
- Pineapple rum, 2 ounces.It strengthens the tropical flavor in the top layer.
- Blue curacao, 2 ounces.It brings orange flavor and the blue color that turns green against the pineapple.
- Ice.Not listed in the source, but I would not make the drink without it because the layers need the cold barrier.
How I make it
Step 1 — Fill the glasses
I fill two tall glasses with ice all the way up. The ice is not just for chilling; it breaks the fall of each pour and gives the liquids a chance to layer.
Step 2 — Add the red layer
I pour 1 ounce grenadine into each glass and let it sink. I do not stir. If some grenadine clings to the ice, that is fine because it settles within a minute.
Step 3 — Shake the pineapple layer
For each drink, I shake 4 ounces pineapple juice with 1/2 ounce coconut rum. I pour this slowly into the glass, aiming at the side or over the back of a spoon so it does not punch into the grenadine.
Step 4 — Mix the top layer
I shake 1 ounce blue curacao with 1 ounce pineapple rum for each drink. This layer is thinner, so I pour even more slowly. As it hits the pineapple, the color reads green at the top.
Step 5 — Serve right away
Once the drink is layered, I stop fussing with it. A garnish is fine, but stirring ruins the stripes. I serve it with a straw so the drinker can mix it when ready.
Tips from my kitchen
- Chill the juice.Cold liquids layer better than warm ones.
- Use crushed or small ice.Big cubes work, but smaller ice slows the pour more effectively.
- Pour from a jigger.A controlled spout makes cleaner layers than a wide measuring cup.
- Accept a little blending.Homemade layered drinks should look lively, not laboratory-perfect.
Variations I have actually tried
- Mocktail version:I use grenadine, pineapple juice, coconut water, and blue curacao syrup.
- Less sweet:I cut the grenadine slightly and add a squeeze of lime to the pineapple layer.
- Frozen version:I blend pineapple juice with ice and build the red and blue around it.
- Spiced rum:Replacing pineapple rum with spiced rum makes the drink warmer and less candy-like.
- Party tray:I pre-measure the layers in small pitchers and build glasses one at a time.
Storing and make-ahead notes
This drink is not a make-ahead cocktail if I want layers. I can chill the juice, rum, curacao, and glasses ahead of time, but I build the drink right before serving.
If I have leftover mixed drink, I refrigerate it as one blended cocktail and pour over ice later. It tastes fine, but the layered look is gone.
How I like to serve it
I serve this with salty snacks, grilled chicken, or spicy appetizers. The sweetness needs something savory nearby.
For garnish, I keep it simple: pineapple wedge, lime wheel, or a cherry. Too many decorations make the glass awkward to sip.
How I keep the layers clean
Layered drinks depend on density, temperature, and patience. Grenadine is heavy, so it goes in first. The pineapple layer is next because juice has more body than the rum and curacao mixture. The top layer is the easiest to disturb, which is why I pour it slowly over ice or a spoon.
I chill every liquid before building the glasses. Warm juice and warm liqueur blend faster, while cold liquids move more slowly. I also avoid stirring after the final pour. The first sip can come through a straw from the bottom, or the drink can be stirred at the table once the colors have been admired.
- For sharper layers:use a tall narrow glass with plenty of ice.
- For a sweeter drink:add a little extra grenadine, but expect a stronger red layer.
- For a brighter finish:squeeze a small wedge of lime over the top right before serving.
- For two matching drinks:measure each layer instead of eyeballing from the bottle.
When I make more than 2 drinks, I build them assembly-line style instead of finishing one completely before starting the next. First all the grenadine, then all the pineapple-coconut layer, then all the blue layer. The glasses look more consistent, and I am less likely to forget which one has what.
I also keep a towel nearby. Layered drinks ask for slow pouring, and slow pouring over ice sometimes drips down the side of the glass. A quick wipe before serving makes the colors look cleaner and keeps the glass from feeling sticky.
If the colors blur, I do not start over. I call it the stirred version and serve it cold. The flavor is still tropical and bright, even when the stripes are softer.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a cocktail shaker?
A shaker helps chill and blend each layer, but a jar with a tight lid works for this drink.
Can I reduce the alcohol?
Yes. I use less rum and replace the difference with pineapple juice. The layers still work if I pour slowly.
Why is the top not green?
The green comes from blue curacao meeting yellow pineapple. If the top looks blue, a little more pineapple in that layer helps.
Can I use orange juice?
A small amount works, but too much changes the flavor and color. Pineapple is the main juice here.
What glass works best?
A tall clear glass shows the layers best. Short rocks glasses are harder to layer cleanly.
If you make this Bob Marley drink, tell me whether you kept the stripes clean or happily stirred it into one tropical glass.

Bob Marley Drink
Description
A layered tropical Bob Marley drink with grenadine, pineapple juice, coconut rum, pineapple rum, and blue curacao. I pour slowly over ice so the red, yellow, and green layers stay visible.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Fill two tall glasses with ice. Pour 1 ounce grenadine into each glass and let it settle at the bottom.
- In a shaker, combine 4 ounces pineapple juice and 1/2 ounce coconut rum for each drink. Shake well.
- Pour the pineapple mixture slowly into each glass, aiming over the back of a spoon if you want a cleaner layer.
- In the shaker, combine 1 ounce blue curacao and 1 ounce pineapple rum for each drink.
- Pour the blue mixture slowly over the pineapple layer. It should create a greenish top layer. Serve right away.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 2
- Iron 0.0 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Use plenty of ice. The ice slows the pour and helps the layers hold.
Pour slowly. A spoon held against the inside of the glass makes the layers neater.
Serve immediately. The colors blur as the drink sits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Use pineapple juice, coconut water or coconut syrup, blue sports drink or blue curacao syrup, and grenadine.
Cherry syrup or pomegranate syrup can stand in, though the color and sweetness vary.
The pour was probably too fast or the glass did not have enough ice. Pour over a spoon and go slowly.
You can mix the flavors in a pitcher, but the layered look works best one glass at a time.
It is fruity, but it still has rum and liqueur. I sip it slowly and serve it with food.