Ass on Fire

A mule with a tropical edge, Ass on Fire leans on ginger beer to lift the pineapple, lime, and reposado tequila into a bright, balanced build. Coconut water keeps it smooth, while the habanero heat lands right where the name suggests.

Ass on Fire

Etymology Meets Mixology

This drink didn’t start out called Ass on Fire. Its original name during the concept build was Burro en Fuego—a nod to the mule format, the Mexican influence in the tequila and habanero, and the heat coming from the Piña de Fuego syrup. It worked. It was clever, a little restrained, and very much in line with everything else.

At some point, it became clear that the literal translation—Ass on Fire—wasn’t just more accurate, it was better. More direct, more memorable, and honestly, more aligned with how the drink actually lands. So it stayed. Because if you’re going to build something around pineapple and habanero, there’s no reason to pretend it’s anything else.

The Structure

At its core, this is a mule derivative, but one that’s been reworked with a bit more intention. The familiar structure is still there—spirit, citrus, sweetness, and lift—but the roles are more clearly defined. Pineapple carries the body, lime keeps it tight, ginger beer provides both spice and effervescence, and the heat is integrated rather than sitting on top. What changes is how those pieces interact. Instead of competing, they move in sequence, each one supporting the next.

Why Reposado Tequila

Reposado does the work that a neutral base never could here. The light oak and soft agave sweetness give the drink a center, something to anchor the brighter elements without pulling them down. It allows the pineapple to feel fuller and the ginger to sit more naturally, while keeping the heat from coming across as sharp or aggressive. A blanco would push everything forward—brighter, greener, more angular—but at the cost of balance. Reposado keeps it composed.

Coconut, Used Properly

Coconut shows up here in the smallest way possible, and that’s exactly why it works. Instead of adding sweetness or pushing the drink further into tropical territory, the coconut water softens the edges just enough to keep everything from feeling rigid. It doesn’t read as coconut-forward; it reads as smooth. More about texture than flavor, and more about restraint than expression.

Choosing the Right Ginger Beer

This is the piece that makes or breaks the drink. A good ginger beer should be spicy, bright, and just dry enough to keep the finish clean. Too sweet, and the entire structure softens. Too aggressive, and it overwhelms the pineapple and heat. What you’re looking for is something with real ginger bite and moderate carbonation—enough to lift the drink and carry the heat, but not so much that it takes over.

For this cocktail, I recommend one with medium spice so it doesn’t compete with the habanero and lower on the sweetness profile so it doesn’t compete with the pineapple. The recipe below calls for Q Mixers Ginger Beer for this very reason, but you can substitute with your favorite as long as it follows the rules I just mentioned: not too spicy, not too sweet. Want some guidance? Read my post on Choosing the Best Ginger Beer for your cocktail.

Final Thought

The first impression is bright—lime and pineapple landing cleanly without excess sweetness. As it settles, the reposado gives the drink its shape, rounding the mid-palate without adding weight. The ginger beer lifts everything through the center, spreading the heat so it builds gradually instead of spiking. By the time it finishes, the warmth is there, but controlled—lingering just long enough to feel intentional.

This is what happens when you take a mule and give it a bit more thought. The structure is familiar, but the balance is tighter, the ingredients are more deliberate, and nothing is doing more than it needs to. And the name tells you exactly what to expect.

The recipe card below breaks everything down. Keep your proportions clean, choose a ginger beer with a balanced bite—enough spice to lift the drink without overpowering it—and let the pineapple and habanero carry through on their own.

Ass on Fire

A mule with a tropical edge, Ass on Fire leans on ginger beer to lift the pineapple, lime, and reposado tequila into a bright, balanced build. Coconut water keeps it smooth, while the habanero heat lands right where the name suggests.
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Category: THIRST
Cuisine: Global, Mexican
Course: Drinks
Keyword: Coconut Water, Ginger Beer, Habanero, Lime Juice, Mule, Pineapple, Reposado
Prep: 3 minutes
Total: 3 minutes
Servings: 1 drink
Calories: 325kcal
Author: TastyDaddy

Ingredients

Drink

Garnish

Instructions

  • Fill a chilled copper mule mug with ice.
  • In Boston shaker, add 2 oz reposado tequila, ¾ oz Piña de Fuego syrup, ¾ oz fresh lime juice, and ½ oz coconut water.
  • Fill shaker with ice and shake vigorously until outside of shaker tin is frosty.
  • Use a Hawthorne strainer to strain liquid into prepared mule mug and top with 2-3 oz Q Mixers ginger beer.
  • Garnish with ½ wheel lime and 1 chunk pineapple (charred) on garnish skewer; serve.

Nutrition

Calories: 325kcal | Carbohydrates: 50g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 0.3g | Saturated Fat: 0.03g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.02g | Sodium: 22mg | Potassium: 265mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 42g | Vitamin A: 119IU | Vitamin C: 93mg | Calcium: 35mg | Iron: 1mg

Blood in the Sand

Structured and spirit-forward, Blood in the Sand builds on the classic with a deeper, more cohesive profile. Sherry-aged Scotch brings warmth and dried fruit, while Blood Ruby and citrus pull everything into a single, balanced line. The result is brighter than it looks, grounded without heaviness, and composed from first sip to finish.

Blood in the Sand

Where It Starts

The Blood & Sand has always had the right foundation—Scotch, citrus, and fortified wine built into something meant to balance brightness with depth. Named for the film Blood and Sand, it carries a sense of drama, but the drink itself can be less certain—often drifting depending on how those elements are handled. The structure is there. It just needs direction.

Reworking the Balance

Blood in the Sand keeps the original components in play, but changes how they’re doing their job. Blood Ruby syrup steps in to replace the looser sweetness of the classic build, giving the drink a more defined center. Instead of citrus and cherry competing to carry both brightness and depth, each element is given a clearer role—orange stays lifted, cherry sits in the background, and the Blood Ruby pulls everything into a single line. The result isn’t heavier or sweeter—it’s more controlled.

Built with Intent

The choice of Macallan 15 shifts the drink in a way the original often lacks. Its sherry cask aging brings dried fruit and soft spice, reinforcing the Blood Ruby and giving the drink a longer, more grounded finish. It’s a deliberate move. One that adds structure without sacrificing clarity.

If you’re looking for a more traditional profile, a blended Scotch will keep the drink brighter—but this version leans into depth without letting it take over.

How It Drinks

Orange carries the first impression—bright, immediate—but the Blood Ruby gives it more depth than the classic usually holds. It doesn’t read as juice-forward; it reads structured, with the citrus already pulled into line. From there, the Scotch follows with presence rather than smoke. The sherry cask aging brings dried fruit and soft spice that fold into the citrus instead of sitting apart from it, giving the mid-palate weight without heaviness. The vermouth sits quietly in the background, keeping everything connected without adding density. What stays on the finish is balance. The sweetness is already checked, the citrus remains defined, and a touch of bitterness keeps the drink from softening as it opens.

The original gets the idea right. This version refines how it lands—bringing the components into alignment so the drink reads clearly from start to finish.

Blood in the Sand

Structured and spirit-forward, Blood in the Sand builds on the classic with a deeper, more cohesive profile. Sherry-aged Scotch brings warmth and dried fruit, while Blood Ruby and citrus pull everything into a single, balanced line. The result is brighter than it looks, grounded without heaviness, and composed from first sip to finish.
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Category: THIRST
Cuisine: American, British
Course: Drinks
Keyword: Blood & Sand, Blood Orange, Cherry Heering, Orange Juice, Ruby Red Grapefruit, Scotch
Prep: 3 minutes
Total: 3 minutes
Servings: 1 drink
Calories: 215kcal
Author: TastyDaddy

Ingredients

Drink

Garnish

Instructions

Drink

  • In a Boston shaker, add 1 oz Macallan 15, ½ oz ambrato vermouth, ¼ oz Cherry Heering, ½ oz Blood Ruby syrup, ½ oz fresh orange juice, and 1 dash grapefruit bitters.
  • Fill with ice, and shake vigorously until shaker is frosty on the outside.
  • Use julep strainer to strain liquid contents into chilled coupe glass.
  • Garnish with 1 slice candied blood orange, floating on top of cocktail.

Nutrition

Calories: 215kcal | Carbohydrates: 24g | Protein: 0.4g | Fat: 0.1g | Saturated Fat: 0.002g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.01g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.002g | Sodium: 11mg | Potassium: 67mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 23g | Vitamin A: 230IU | Vitamin C: 10mg | Calcium: 10mg | Iron: 0.1mg

Blood in the Afternoon

Bright citrus, subtle bitterness, and a structure that holds from first sip to last—Blood in the Afternoon lands exactly where a summer drink should. Light rum and lifted lime keep it crisp, while the Blood Ruby syrup pulls everything into focus without adding weight. Served ice-cold with a suspended cherry, it’s clean, controlled, and just restrained enough to keep you coming back.

Blood in the Afternoon

The Origin Story

The foundation here is unmistakable: the Hemingway Daiquiri—a drink defined as much by what it leaves out as what it includes. Built at El Floridita and shaped to suit Ernest Hemingway himself, it leans sharp, dry, and direct—lime and grapefruit pulling tight against a clean rum base, with just enough maraschino liqueur to hold the line. It’s a drink with structure, but also with edges. One that doesn’t soften itself for anyone.

The Variation

Blood in the Afternoon starts from that same framework, but shifts how the pieces interact. The citrus remains bright and lifted. The grapefruit still carries its quiet bitterness. But instead of allowing those elements to sit in tension, the Blood Ruby syrup draws them into alignment—rounding the profile without dulling it, giving the drink a through-line where the original can feel angular. It doesn’t make the drink sweeter so much as it makes it complete. What was once sharp becomes precise. What was once austere becomes intentional.

The Homage

Blood in the Afternoon—drawn from Death in the Afternoon—isn’t just a reference, it’s the through-line for the entire drink. Hemingway wrote about Spanish bullfighting as a kind of tragic ballet—controlled, deliberate, and always carrying the weight of what’s coming. That sense of tension is what this variation is built around.

The original Hemingway Daiquiri is famously lean—bright, dry, and almost severe in its structure. This version keeps that foundation intact, but introduces the Blood Ruby element as a way to deepen it. Not to sweeten, but to add dimension—bringing in a darker citrus note that mirrors the contrast Hemingway wrote about: beauty alongside brutality, brightness cut with something more grounded.

Even the rum choice follows that same line of thought. Flor de Caña is a quiet nod to El Floridita, where the Hemingway Daiquiri took shape. Clean and structured, it keeps the drink anchored in its origin without pulling focus. And then there’s the cherry. Submerged, suspended—not sitting on top, not decorative. It becomes part of the composition, echoing the idea behind the name. A single, dark element held within an otherwise bright structure.

Nothing here is accidental. Each choice points back—to the original drink, to its history, and to the story that gave this version its name.

The Composition

Shaking the drink brings everything together—citrus, syrup, and spirit—into a slightly clouded, integrated base. That texture matters. It gives the drink presence and keeps it from reading thin or overly sharp. In the glass, this is where the build proves itself. The aeration gives it lift without dilution, keeping the texture light while the flavors stay defined. Citrus stays forward, bitterness stays controlled, and the sweetness never separates from the rest of the drink. Everything lands in proportion—and stays there.

The best variations don’t try to outdo the original. They understand it. Blood in the Afternoon keeps the bones of the Hemingway Daiquiri intact, but refines the way they move together—carrying the same identity, just brought into clearer focus.

Blood in the Afternoon

Bright citrus, subtle bitterness, and a structure that holds from first sip to last—Blood in the Afternoon lands exactly where a summer drink should. Light rum and lifted lime keep it crisp, while the Blood Ruby syrup pulls everything into focus without adding weight. Served ice-cold with a suspended cherry, it’s clean, controlled, and just restrained enough to keep you coming back.
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Category: THIRST
Cuisine: Cuban, Global
Course: Drinks
Keyword: Blood Orange, Lime Juice, Luxardo, Maraschino, Ruby Red Grapefruit, Rum, Simple Syrup
Prep: 3 minutes
Total: 3 minutes
Servings: 1 drink
Calories: 261kcal
Author: TastyDaddy

Ingredients

Drink

Garnish

Instructions

  • In a Boston shaker, add 2 oz Flor de Caña, ¼ oz Luxardo Maraschino Liqueur, ½ oz Blood Ruby syrup, ¾ oz fresh lime juice, ¼ oz ruby red grapefruit (optional—though recommended).
  • Fill shaker with ice, close tins, and shake vigorously until outside of shaker is frosty.
  • With a Hawthorne strainer, strain liquid into small tin of Boston shaker set.
  • Pour contents of small tin through a small mesh strainer into a chilled coupe glass.
  • Garnish with 1 whole Luxardo cherry, pierced with garnish skewer so that the cherry sits suspended under the liquid.

Nutrition

Calories: 261kcal | Carbohydrates: 21g | Protein: 0.2g | Fat: 0.1g | Saturated Fat: 0.002g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.01g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.002g | Sodium: 1mg | Potassium: 44mg | Fiber: 0.3g | Sugar: 19g | Vitamin A: 172IU | Vitamin C: 11mg | Calcium: 7mg | Iron: 0.04mg

Fire & Ash

Fire & Ash is built on contrast—smoke and citrus, heat and brightness, all held in balance. Mezcal lays down a deep, smoldering foundation while ancho chile liqueur brings a slow, warming heat. Blood orange and grapefruit from the Blood Ruby syrup sharpen the profile, with lime cutting through to keep everything lifted and precise. The result is a cocktail that opens bright, settles into smoke, and finishes with a lingering warmth that stays just long enough.

Fire & Ash

Smoke Meets Heat

Fire & Ash is built on two defining elements—mezcal and ancho chile liqueur—each bringing a distinct character that gives the drink its name. Mezcal lays down the foundation with its unmistakable smoke, a dry, lingering quality that reads as ash on the palate. Ancho Reyes builds from there, adding warmth and depth with a slow, controlled heat that doesn’t spike, but settles and carries through the finish. Together, they form the core of the drink—one grounded, one rising—setting up a structure that’s bold but measured.

Citrus with Structure

Where the drink opens up is in the citrus.

The Blood Ruby syrup brings together blood orange and ruby red grapefruit, adding both sweetness and a subtle bitterness that keeps everything in check. It doesn’t just brighten the drink—it gives it shape. The blood orange leans deeper and slightly richer, while the grapefruit sharpens the edges, keeping the profile clean and focused.

Lime reinforces that structure, cutting through the smoke and heat to keep the drink lifted. The result lands somewhere in the space of a Paloma, but darker, more layered, and more intentional.

Where There’s Smoke…

This isn’t a drink that leans in one direction—it evolves across the palate. It opens with bright citrus, lightly sweet but already in balance, before the mezcal begins to expand, bringing a grounded, smoky depth through the mid-palate. As the sip finishes, the warmth from the ancho chile liqueur builds gradually, lingering just long enough to leave an impression without overstaying.

The citrus carries the heat forward, while the smoke provides structure underneath. Each element moves into the next with purpose, creating a profile that feels continuous rather than segmented—nothing overpowering, nothing falling away.

Built with Intention

Shaking the drink brings everything together—citrus, syrup, and spirit—into a slightly clouded, integrated base. That texture matters. It gives the drink presence and keeps it from reading thin or overly sharp.

The garnish follows the same philosophy. A charred blood orange segment reinforces the citrus while adding a subtle caramelized note, and a flamed grapefruit peel expressed over the glass introduces a final layer of aroma—bright citrus oils ignited briefly, then settling into the drink.

It’s a small moment, but one that ties directly back to the name.

The process is straightforward, but the balance is deliberate. Each component plays a role, and small shifts will change how the drink reads from start to finish.

Fire & Ash

Fire & Ash is built on contrast—smoke and citrus, heat and brightness, all held in balance. Mezcal lays down a deep, smoldering foundation while ancho chile liqueur brings a slow, warming heat. Blood orange and grapefruit from the Blood Ruby syrup sharpen the profile, with lime cutting through to keep everything lifted and precise. The result is a cocktail that opens bright, settles into smoke, and finishes with a lingering warmth that stays just long enough.
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Category: THIRST
Cuisine: Global, Mexican
Course: Drinks
Keyword: Ancho Reyes (Red), Blood Orange, Lime Juice, Mezcal, Ruby Red Grapefruit, Solerno
Prep: 7 minutes
Total: 7 minutes
Servings: 1 drink
Calories: 286kcal
Author: TastyDaddy

Ingredients

Drink

Garnish

  • ¼ wheel blood orange (cut thick, charred rind)
  • 1 inch ruby red grapefruit peel (expressed with flame)

Instructions

Blood Orange Garnish Prep

  • Cut 1 blood orange into ½" thick wheels, then cut each wheel into four equal segments.
  • Using a set of metal kitchen tongs, gently hold the blood orange segments so that the rind side is face out.
  • Char each rind using a crème brûlée torch.
  • Let each cool and pierce with garnish skewer so that charred rind is on bottom; set aside in bowl or jar.

Drink Prep

  • Fill rocks glass with ice and garnish with charred blood orange segment so it is rind side down in glass.
  • In a Boston shaker, add 2 oz Mezcal, ½ oz Solerno, ½ oz Ancho Reyes (Red), ¾ oz Blood Ruby syrup, and ¾ oz fresh lime juice.
  • Fill shaker with ice and shake vigorously until the outside of the tin is frosty.
  • Using Hawthorne strainer, strain liquid from shaker into prepared rocks glass.

Flame Expressed

  • Using a vegetable peel, remove 1" wide piece of ruby red grapefruit rind.
  • With a lit match in your dominant hand and the peel in your other, warm the peel over the flame briefly to draw out the citrus oil.
  • Holding both over glass, give the peel a gentle squeeze to release citrus oil onto the flame; some of the oil will ignite while the rest will fall into the cocktail.
  • Rub the rind along the rim of the glass; drop into cocktail and serve.

Nutrition

Calories: 286kcal | Carbohydrates: 24g | Protein: 0.2g | Fat: 0.1g | Saturated Fat: 0.002g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.002g | Sodium: 2mg | Potassium: 40mg | Fiber: 0.1g | Sugar: 20g | Vitamin A: 130IU | Vitamin C: 10mg | Calcium: 6mg | Iron: 0.04mg

Blood Ruby Simple Syrup

Blood Ruby is built for balance—where the deep, slightly sweet citrus of blood orange meets the sharper edge of ruby red grapefruit. The result is a syrup that carries both brightness and structure, with just enough bitterness to keep the sweetness in check. A touch of pomegranate rounds out the color and depth, giving it a richer, more layered profile that adds clarity and contrast to whatever you pair with it.

Blood Ruby Simple Syrup

Built on Contrast

Blood Ruby is structured around two sides of citrus—the deep, almost jammy sweetness of blood orange and the sharper, more bitter edge of ruby red grapefruit. On their own, each brings something distinct. Together, they create a syrup that feels balanced rather than sweet, with enough acidity and bitterness to keep it focused.

A small addition of pomegranate doesn’t shift the flavor so much as refine it. It deepens the color, adds a subtle tannic edge, and helps round out the citrus so the final syrup feels cohesive instead of segmented.

Zest Before the Rest

Like your other syrups, this one starts in the sugar—not the pot. Zesting and muddling directly into the sugar ipulls out the essential oils before any heat is introduced. That early extraction matters. By the time liquid is added, the sugar is already carrying citrus aromatics, which means the final syrup doesn’t taste like fruit added to sugar—it tastes like the two were built together from the start.

Controlling the zest is equally important. Only the outer rind should be used. The white pith underneath carries a harsh bitterness that doesn’t mellow with heat and will throw the entire balance off.

Building the Base

Once the zest is worked into the sugar, the fruit follows. The blood orange segments go in first, broken down fully into the sugar until the mixture is stained and saturated. This sets the foundation with sweetness and depth. Grapefruit follows, adding structure and a more pronounced edge. By the time water is added, everything is already integrated—there’s no separation between juice, sugar, and aromatics. It’s a small shift in process, but it changes how the syrup reads. Instead of layers, you get a single, cohesive profile.

Simmer Down Now

This process is about extraction first, then integration. Bringing the mixture to a boil dissolves the sugar and activates the citrus oils already worked into the base. Once dissolved, the heat drops to a steady simmer—enough to pull flavor forward without dulling the brighter citrus notes or pushing the bitterness too far.

The pomegranate is added at the end of the simmer, just before the mixture comes off heat. It doesn’t need time to cook—just enough warmth to blend into the structure without taking over. From there, the syrup needs to rest. As it cools, everything settles into place—the citrus softens slightly, the bitterness integrates, and the aromatics round out. This is where the syrup becomes cohesive. Skipping or rushing this step leaves it tasting sharp and disjointed.

Strain & Store

Straining is where clarity and control come together. Set a mesh strainer over a deep bowl or pot and slowly pour the mixture through, allowing the liquid to pass cleanly. Use a muddler to gently press the solids, extracting as much liquid as possible without forcing bitterness from the pulp or pith.

Once strained, transfer the syrup into an airtight glass bottle and refrigerate. Let it chill for at least 4 hours—overnight is better—so the flavors fully settle and integrate. For best results, only pour out what you need and keep the rest sealed and cold, preserving both freshness and consistency with each use.

Recipes that use this syrup...

Follow the steps as written—especially the order. Each stage builds on the last, and small details make a noticeable difference in the final result.

Blood Ruby Simple Syrup

Blood Ruby is built for balance—where the deep, slightly sweet citrus of blood orange meets the sharper edge of ruby red grapefruit. The result is a syrup that carries both brightness and structure, with just enough bitterness to keep the sweetness in check. A touch of pomegranate rounds out the color and depth, giving it a richer, more layered profile that adds clarity and contrast to whatever you pair with it.
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Category: THIRST
Cuisine: Global
Course: Drinks
Keyword: Blood Orange, Pomegranate, Ruby Red Grapefruit, Simple Syrup
Prep: 30 minutes
Cook: 30 minutes
Cooling Time: 4 hours 15 minutes
Total: 5 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 24 servings
Calories: 102kcal
Author: TastyDaddy

Ingredients

Instructions

Infusion Ingredient Prep

  • Wash and dry 1 large ruby red grapefruit and 4 whole blood oranges
  • Take citrus zester to ruby red grapefruit rind until you have about 1 tbsp of grapefruit zest; set aside.
  • Zest one blood orange rind—this should yield about 2-3 tbsp blood orange zest, depending on size; set aside.
  • CAUTION: Be sure to only zest the rind and not the white pith underneath; the pith is extremely bitter and will ruin the flavor profile of the syrup.
  • Peel grapefruit and separate segments; set aside in small bowl.
  • Peel the 4 blood oranges and separate the segments, setting them aside in a small bowl.
  • TIP: If there is still a lot of white pith left on the fruit after peeling, take a small paring knife to remove any thick parts of pith before separating the segments.

Syrup Prep

  • Pour 3 cups granulated sugar into 6-quart stockpot.
  • Add both the grapefruit and blood orange zests and gently muddle to release the oils into the sugar.
  • Pour blood orange segments into stockpot and muddle into sugar until segments are thoroughly smashed and sugar is stained with blood orange juice completely.
  • Add grapefruit segments into stockpot and muddle into sugar until segments are thoroughly smashed.
  • Add 3 cups filtered water onto muddled sugar and stir to combine.

Cooking

  • Bring ingredients to a boil in the stockpot, stirring until sugar is completely dissolved.
  • Reduce heat and let ingredients simmer for at least 30 minutes.
  • Add ¼ oz pomegranate juice into the stockpot and stir
  • Remove stockpot from heat and ingredients steep while it cools for at least 1 hour.

Straining

  • Place mesh strainer over large pot or bowl (deeper than the depth of the strainer so that the liquid clears the bottom of the strainer).
  • Slowly pour contents of simmered liquid into strainer. Using muddler, gently press as much liquid from the contents of the strainer as possible (without damaging your strainer from the pressure).

Storing

  • Pour syrup into glass swing-top bottle (or jar if you don't have a bottle) and store at least 4 hours in the fridge to cool. Overnight cooling is even better.

Nutrition

Serving: 1oz | Calories: 102kcal | Carbohydrates: 26g | Protein: 0.1g | Fat: 0.1g | Saturated Fat: 0.003g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.01g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.003g | Sodium: 2mg | Potassium: 20mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 26g | Vitamin A: 159IU | Vitamin C: 4mg | Calcium: 4mg | Iron: 0.02mg