Updated Jan. 3, 2026
We hope this running story, compiled throughout 2025, helps quench your thirst for detailed information, photos and deep dives into the cocktails served at the Mai-Kai restaurant in South Florida, est. 1956. Below you’ll find reports by journalist Jim “Hurricane” Hayward along with news and official updates passed along by beverage director Cory Starr as he resurrected the storied bar program, originally developed by legendary mixologist Mariano Licudine. This page served as a supplement to our Mai-Kai Cocktail Guide as we enjoyed the the Mai-Kai’s grand reopening. In 2026, get ready for all new reviews and recipes at the link above, or MaiKaiCocktailGuide.com. If you’re looking for more on the restaurant’s restoration and reopening in 2024-2025, along with anything beyond the cocktails and bar program, check out this related story.
• Jump straight to the news archive below

Okole Maluna Society 2.0: All the Mai-Kai cocktails ranked
Check out the sneak preview of our updated ratings, and stay tuned for new reviews and recipes, coming soon.
SEE THE RANKINGS: Updated rundown of 50+ Mai-Kai cocktails
More Atomic Grog coverage
• Mai-Kai Restoration & Reopening: Full story and photo archive
Official sites and social media
• MaiKai.com | Facebook page | Instagram
Facebook group: Friends of the Mai-Kai
• Instagram: Classics of the Mai-Kai
The Atomic Grog: AtomicGrog.com | Facebook | Instagram | YouTube | Bluesky
2024-2025 Mai-Kai bar and cocktail news
• Vintage cocktails return for 69th anniversary, more news
• The Mai-Kai’s Christmas cocktails explored: Ratings, reviews and insights
• Holiday treats come early with release of Mai-Kai Rum No. 1, Christmas Rum Barrel
• Mai-Kai Rum No. 1 set for Black Friday release
• Mai-Kai Rum No. 1 to make a splash during 2025 Miami Rum Festival
• Hulaween recap, tribute recipe (photos, video)
• Halloween cocktails invade the Mai-Kai for October
• New cocktails and Cannibal mug revealed, Rum No. 1 on the way (August-September)
• New secret bar menu, Rum Barrel mugs are back (July-August)
• The Hukilau brings special events, guest bartenders (June)
• Bars welcome special guests, live music, new cocktails (May)
• Cocktails at events near and far, new menus coming soon (April)
• Mai-Kai joins spirits festival, welcomes brands for cocktail and rum tasting events (March)
• New Bora Bora Bar menu just a taste things to come (February)
• Beverage director Cory Starr interviewed on Shift Drink Podcast
• Photos & video: Mai-Kai joins Miami Rum Congress festivities
• Is it 1956 or 2024? Forward-thinking Mai-Kai menus sport retro flair
• Mai-Kai welcomes Cory Starr as new chief mixologist

Vintage cocktails return for 69th anniversary, more news
Posted Jan. 3
The icing on the cake at the 69th anniversary celebration was a special menu of three historic cocktails, available in both the Bora Bora and Molokai bars. They were priced at $19.56 in honor of the Mai-Kai’s original opening date, but happy hour prices were in effect from 4 to 7 p.m., and we made sure to try all three.
Photos, video: Mai-Kai legends return to the stage for 69th anniversary celebration
Two of the drinks date back to the original 1956 menu. One of them, Zula #1, was only recently retired when the Mai-Kai reopened in November 2024. It was one of two classics dropped from the reopening day menu.

The other was Last Rites, another Mai-Kai classic that can be traced back to one of the groundbreaking tropical drinks created by Don the Beachcomber in the 1930s and ’40s. This is a personal favorite of beverage director Cory Starr, who brought it back at several special events over the past year. We last tried it at The Hukilau finale at the Mai-Kai in June.
The most rare was Don’s Own Grog, which pre-dates the Mai-Kai and was discovered by Starr in original mixologist Mariano Licudine’s secret notebook of Don the Beachcomber recipes. It was also featured at The Hukilau event, but using different rums. All three of these revived classics featured a healthy dose of the just-released Mai-Kai Rum No. 1, giving them added punch and spotlighting the new spirit designed to harken back to those golden days of Tiki cocktails.
Related: Holiday treats come early with release of Mai-Kai Rum No. 1, Christmas Rum Barrel
Last Rites was our favorite, better than the previous versions made with premium rums. Rum No. 1 seems to bring perfect balance to this classic that agricole rums don’t. Not far behind was Don’s Own Grog, another great spotlight for the rum featuring bold cinnamon (perhaps Angostura bitters), lime and blackberry notes. Zula was very solid, but it veered a bit from the original with an overly boozy profile that obscured the distinctive pineapple and anise flavors. Starr told us later that he and bar manager Michael DeMahy had a challenge getting the rum blend correct, but I’m sure they’ll figure it out in time for its next appearance.

Starr and DeMahy have lots of plans for the cocktail program in 2026, including a new menu for the Molokai Bar with more of a craft cocktail focus. But unlike the Bora Bora Bar, which has featured more modern-style cocktails, the older bar will take more of a classic Mai-Kai approach in keeping with its vintage theming.
DeMahy said they want to take “the classic Mariano, Trader Vic, Don the Beachcomber style cocktails and re-envision them as if they were alive today.” He said it will be “more of a modern twist, but paying homage to the history and the style.”
“You have to reset your mind and say, ‘I’m paying homage to these classics,’ but how would they think if they lived here today with the products that are now available versus what was available back then,” DeMahy added. “I’m very excited to start working on it.” The menu is still in the very early stages of development, however, with tentative plans for a release no earlier than the third quarter of the year.
Continue reading “Mai-Kai bar and cocktail news, reviews and exclusive insights, 2024-2025”


