This two-ingredient tequila soda is betting that less is more in the canned cocktail boom
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Blowfish Tequila & Soda—premium tequila, soda water, and nothing else—is riding the better-for-you wave from Southern California liquor shelves to a nationwide Caesars Entertainment contract.
In a year when most of the liquor aisle went flat, two categories kept the lights on: tequila and canned cocktails. Spirits-based ready-to-drink (RTD) cocktails surged more than 16% last year to $3.8 billion in sales, more than doubling their share of the spirits market since 2021. Sitting squarely at the intersection of both trends is Blowfish Tequila & Soda, a Southern California brand making an unusually contrarian pitch in a category built on flavor engineering: a canned cocktail with exactly two ingredients.
Each 8.45-ounce can contains premium Blowfish tequila—available in Blanco or Reposado—and soda water. That’s it. Zero added sugar. Zero added flavors. At 10% ABV, every can carries the equivalent of two full shots, which is why the brand bills itself as “the purest canned cocktail ever created.”
Two ingredients, two shots
The timing is deliberate. Better-for-you (BFY) beverages are the fastest-growing corner of the drinks business, and nowhere is that more visible than in the RTD category, where health-conscious Millennial and Gen Z drinkers—who now make up 57% of RTD consumers—are scanning labels for sugar, sweeteners, and mystery “natural flavors.” The first wave of the canned cocktail boom was won on convenience; the second is being fought on ingredient decks. Hard seltzers taught consumers to expect lighter drinks, but left many wondering what was actually in the can.
The category Blowfish is attacking has been drifting in the opposite direction. Some of the fastest-growing names in ready-to-drink—BeatBox and BuzzBallz among them—are built on flavored wine and malt bases loaded with added sugars, sold in candy-shop flavors like bubblegum and mango madness. Blowfish’s counterpunch is its tagline: “Drink Like an Adult.” The brand is openly campaigning to pull drinkers away from added sugars and chemical fake flavors and toward premium spirits, simplified—tequila, soda water, done.
“We looked at every label in the cooler and saw the same thing—sugar and lab-built flavor systems pretending to be an adult beverage,” says founder Adam Prange. “A real tequila soda is two ingredients. So that’s what we put in the can. If you can’t pronounce it, it’s not in there.”
A can designed to open all the way
Blowfish’s answer to the flavor question is mechanical, not chemical. Every can features a full-aperture opening lid—the entire top peels away, converting the can into a drinking vessel. The brand’s tagline for the feature: “bring your own real fruit.” Drop in a lime wedge, a slice of fresh grapefruit, or a scoop of ice, and the can becomes a built cocktail rather than a pre-mixed one. It’s a simple piece of packaging innovation that flips the category’s logic on its head—instead of simulating fruit with additives, Blowfish hands the garnish back to the drinker. The black-and-gold can, embossed with the brand’s pufferfish mark, was designed to read more like a premium spirits label than a seltzer—“simple, elegant, premium,” in the company’s words.
From Boise to the Vegas Strip
The minimalist pitch is translating into shelf space at a pace that belies the brand’s size. Blowfish recently launched into Idaho with distribution partner Stein Beverage and into Nevada with Morrey Distributing, and is now entering Georgia with Empire Distributors—its first move into the Southeast. The brand also landed Jacksons Food Stores statewide; the convenience chain operates 773 locations, putting two-ingredient tequila sodas in the grab-and-go cooler next to the energy drinks. In Southern California, Blowfish launched in 27 Total Wine & More stores, San Diego’s nine-location Keg N Bottle chain, and an eight-store pilot with Northgate Market.
The biggest win came at the casino floor. Blowfish was awarded a three-year nationwide contract through Caesars Entertainment’s RFP program, putting the cans in front of millions of guests across the gaming giant’s resorts and venues—the kind of on-premise validation that emerging RTD brands typically wait years to land. For a product that doubles as its own cocktail glass, a pool deck on the Strip is close to a perfect use case.
Investors are taking notice, too. Blowfish has raised more than $850,000 to date and is currently in an open investment round, with $530,000 left to hit its goal—capital earmarked for fueling the brand’s multi-state expansion and the Caesars rollout.
Blowfish Tequila & Soda retails at a suggested $16.99 for a four-pack and $4.99 per single can—premium pricing, the brand argues, is justified by what’s inside the can, and by what isn’t.
The broader bet is on where the category is headed. With the global RTD cocktail market projected to nearly triple to $10.7 billion by 2033, growing at roughly 14% a year, the space is getting crowded—and noisier. Blowfish is wagering that as the category matures, drinkers will trade flavor gimmicks for the thing they wanted all along: a proper tequila soda, cold, in hand, with real fruit on top.
Sources: NIQ retail sales data via CNBC (Feb. 2026); Straits Research, Ready-to-Drink Cocktails Market Report; Grand View Research.
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