Grenadine is probably the second home bar syrup you’ll get, right after you make some simple syrup. Wikipedia says Grenadine is “a commonly used bar syrup, characterized by a flavor that is both tart and sweet, and a deep red color…..Grenadine was originally prepared from pomegranate juice, sugar, and water.” As you can see, this can cause some confusion: does grenadine contain pomegranate? Not always. In fact, many popular brands have no pomegranate at all, which you’ll see below.
Here’s a bottle-by-bottle comparison of several popular grenadine brands, including some of the newer craft varieties. They’re pictured here from left to right.
- Visual: Light red, almost orange.
- Ingredients: Pure cane sugar, pomegranate juice from concentrate, filtered water, citric acid, vanilla extract, vitamin C (ascorbic acid), sea salt.
- Cost per ounce: 95¢
- Sonoma is the most expensive and is marketed as “Pomegranate Grenadine Simple Syrup” and you can tell. It’s the most subtle and mild flavor of all those we tasted, and it tastes the most like pomegranate. You may have to increase the amount of this syrup just to get the flavors right in your cocktails.
- Visual: Natural reddish-brown.
- Ingredients: Pomegranate, cane sugar, citric acid, orange flower water.
- Cost per ounce: 94¢
- You may recall when I tried Jack Rudy tonic too, which is great. This grenadine, like Sonoma, actually tastes like pomegranate. This syrup is sweeter than Sonoma, but natural ingredients lead to a different colored drink than some may expect, leaving Shirley Temples more copper-colored than red as a result. This one has good balance and isn’t overly sweet.
- Visual: Dark syrupy red.
- Ingredients: Corn sweetener, water, natural and artificial flavor, citric acid, less than 1/10 of 1% Benzoate of Soda as a preservative, FD&C Red #40 and Blue #1
- Cost per ounce: 83¢
- “Corn sweetener” in this ingredient list is just another word for corn syrup. Comparing the ingredient list with Rose’s (below), it’s a very similar product at nearly triple the price. Fee Bros. definitely has a very familiar grenadine flavor, and it’s the most syrupy and sticky of this bunch.
- Visual: Bright red.
- Ingredients: Pure cane sugar, water, citric acid, natural and artificial grenadine flavor, FD&C red #40
- Cost per ounce: 63¢
- I like Monin’s syrup the best of these 5, because it’s a happy medium of the traditional (syrupy, red, sweet) and the craft grenadines (more fruity in flavor, less sweet, less red). Plus, because the Monin bottle is so big (750 ml), the cost per ounce is very low.
- Visual: Bright red.
- Ingredients: High fructose corn syrup, water, citric acid, sodium citrate, sodium benzoate, Red #40, natural and artificial flavors, Blue #1.
- Cost per ounce: 33¢
- Rose’s is the iconic brand of bar grenadine, and you’ll be able to find it in grocery stores nationally. As you can see, it has the dreaded HFCS in it as ingredient #1. There’s no pomegranate in it, it’s really just a sticky, syrupy red and features water as the only natural ingredient. Cost is the only advantage here – Rose’s tastes like snow cone flavoring.
Click here to get the Simple Cocktails Guide to Grenadine as a downloadable PDF.
Just make your own. Its not hard and you will love it more than any of these because it is yours. You will also get that girl you like to go out with you once you tell her “Yeah, I made this right here girl”.
Yeah Jamie, I imagine you’re right, but I am dreadfully lazy and that almost always trumps bragging rights.
Also – “Rose’s tastes like snow cone flavoring.” – You win my vote.
Have a look on the back of your Monin bottle, here in Sweden some of the text says “Can cause concentration problems and moodswings”.. it´s only flavoured by essence and not “real” fruit. Nothing I would like my kids to have it their Sharley temple. I agree with Jamie, make your own 🙂