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The water ice martini is the quintessential Philly summer cocktail

Invented by the current owner of John’s Water Ice, the cocktail has gone from South Philly secret to inspiring an array of boozy water ice in Philly and down the shore.

The Iceberg martini from Saloon, made with lemon water ice from John’s Water Ice.
The Iceberg martini from Saloon, made with lemon water ice from John’s Water Ice.Read moreAllie Ippolito / For The Inquirer

If you were to distill the energy of a South Philly summer into a cocktail, it might look like water ice shaken with vodka in a martini glass, garnished with a pretzel stick. It would taste like the syrupy-sweet melted ice left in the cup and be crushable enough to knock back on a hot afternoon.

That’s the water ice martini, a cocktail invented in the early 2000s at one of the neighborhood’s most famous red sauce joints. The drink was a hidden gem for decades, but has found new life this summer as copycats and riffs emerge at bars around Philly and down the Shore that are looking to stand out in a sea of Hugo spritzes, espresso ‘tinis, and soft serve margaritas.

“Anyone that’s grown up in South Philadelphia grew up on water ice with pretzel sticks and pumpkin seeds. Its been a thing in my family for three generations,” said Vera Masi, the sales manager at Popi’s Restaurant in Packer Park, where the cocktail recently went viral. “Pairing that with a martini is a guaranteed hit.”

The first water ice martini on record was poured in 2002 at Saloon by Anthony Cardullo, the third-generation John’s Water Ice owner who was then just a bartender. Called the Iceberg, the drink involves adding a scoop of John’s lemon water ice to a shaker with limoncello and Ketel One Citreon vodka. It then gets poured over a second scoop of lemon water ice in a glass.

Gigi Bello, bar manager at Saloon, makes an Iceberg martini using lemon water from John's. The cocktail has remained a bestseller since they started serving it in 2002.
Gigi Bello, bar manager at Saloon, makes an Iceberg martini using lemon water from John's. The cocktail has remained a bestseller since they started serving it in 2002.Read moreAllie Ippolito / For The Inquirer

It’s the restaurant’s most enduring cocktail hit, according to manager Frankie Santore. Saloon sells at least 150 Icebergs per week in the summer, he said, making it their bestseller. To keep up, Cardullo has to drop off gallons of fresh made water ice each week.

Other versions have cycled through Saloon — a pineapple ice painkiller and a melon ice midori sour, to name a few — but the Iceberg is the only one that has lasted, most recently inspiring a dupe that uses Cardullo’s recipe at the Ventnor Social in New Jersey. The restaurant has “never for a second” thought to use anything other than John’s water ice for its cocktails.

“It’s all fresh fruit,” Santore said. “Anthony’s squeezing the lemons himself.”

Gigi Bello, bar manager at Saloon, pours an Iceberg martini.
Gigi Bello, bar manager at Saloon, pours an Iceberg martini.Read moreAllie Ippolito / For The Inquirer

Popi’s started serving their own versions of the water ice martini last summer after getting the idea from Rowhome Magazine editors Dorette Jackson and Dawn Rhodes. The 33-year-old Italian restaurant sources its water ice from Pop’s for two reasons, owner Gina Rucci said: It’s down the street, and “our names went together.”

Popi’s has its own version of a lemon ice martini (aptly called the Limoncellotini), but its other offerings pull from the colors of the rainbow, like a neon orange mango water ice martini called the Gritty and a vibrant red strawberry water ice daiquiri. The restaurant used to sell about 20 a day last summer, said bar manager Laura Kreschollek. Now, they’re averaging 50.

“People were coming in just for these,” said Masi. “We kept running out of water ice and were sneaking out to Pop’s in the middle of the day.”

A strawberry daiquiri made with Pop's Homemade Italian Ice at Popi's Restaurant, 3120 S. 20th St.
A strawberry daiquiri made with Pop's Homemade Italian Ice at Popi's Restaurant, 3120 S. 20th St.Read moreBeatrice Forman / Staff

Naturally, the evolution would continue with spiked gelati. Philly could get its first in the early fall, when James Beard Award-winning South Jersey bartender Danny Childs aims to open his bar Field Day in Northern Liberties.

Childs told The Inquirer he plans to serve the treat year round using his signature Slow Drinks approach. While the vanilla soft serve will come from 1-900-ICE-CREAM, Childs said, the boozy water ice will be made from scratch with local and foraged produce that change with the season. He’s envisioning a lineup of cherry, blueberry, and pawpaw (a fruit native to the Mid-Atlantic that tastes like a mango) to start.

The cocktail-dessert hybrid was driven by a mix of nostalgia and peer pressure. Childs wanted a nod to his childhood in Delaware County, where he grew up using a soft pretzel as a spoon to scoop up water ice. He also wanted to one-up the alcohol-infused ice creams already on the market.

“I was like, ‘Someone is going to do spiked gelati before us,’” Childs said. ”We have to hurry."

The Iceberg martini from Saloon, which was created by current John's Water Ice owner Anthony Cardullo.
The Iceberg martini from Saloon, which was created by current John's Water Ice owner Anthony Cardullo.Read moreAllie Ippolito / For The Inquirer

Here are four places where you can find boozy water ice in all its forms, from vodka-infused scoops to martinis.

Where to find boozy water ice in Philly

Saloon

This classic Italian joint in Bella Vista has been serving its signature $18 Iceberg Martini since 2002, when current John’s Water Ice owner Anthony Cardullo invented it while working at the restaurant’s bar. It does indeed look icebergs disintegrating into the Arctic as it melts, but the drink goes down easy — sweet, icy, and citrusy without tasting artificial. Also be on the lookout for Cardullo’s nightly water ice cocktail specials.

📍750 S. Seventh St. 📞 215-627-1811, 🌐 saloonrestaurant.net

A line up of water ice martinis made with Pop's Homemade Italian Ice at Popi's Restaurant. Clockwise from left to right: The Pineapple Pizzaz, Limoncellotini, Piña Colada, Strawberry Daquiri, and The Gritty.
A line up of water ice martinis made with Pop's Homemade Italian Ice at Popi's Restaurant. Clockwise from left to right: The Pineapple Pizzaz, Limoncellotini, Piña Colada, Strawberry Daquiri, and The Gritty.Read moreBeatrice Forman / Staff

Popi’s Restaurant

At Popi’s, the pours are heavy and the water ice is extra sweet. This 33-year-old Italian restaurant near the sports complex in Packer Park gained a new reputation in 2025 when it started serving brightly colored cocktails sweetened with Pop’s Homemade Italian Ice. Normally $16 and $20 during the World Cup, the cocktails run the gamut from The Gritty (a vodka martini with orange juice and mango water ice) and Pineapple Pizzaz (a pineapple vodka martini with pineapple water ice) to a strawberry daiquiri with a disk of — you guessed it — strawberry water ice floating in the middle. If you’re not susceptible to a sugar rush, it’s easy to have several in one sitting.

📍3120 S. 20th St. 📞 215-755-7180 🌐 popisrestaurant.com

Triangle Tavern

Best known for its excellent vegan wings and cheesesteaks, Triangle Tavern also serves scratch-made boozy water ice year round. Flavors rotate seasonally and range from mango and pomegranate in the summer to pumpkin spice in the fall and crisp peppermint in the winter. Spun in a slushie machine with a handle of vodka, the $12 cocktails are served in a pint glass garnished with a hard pretzel rod for an extra dose of South Philly flare.

📍1338 S. 10th St. 📞 215-800-1992 🌐 triangletavernphilly.com

The Philly Phreeze sundae at Tipsy Scoop in Rittenhouse Square, which is comprised of vodka-infused cherry water ice topped with gummy candies.
The Philly Phreeze sundae at Tipsy Scoop in Rittenhouse Square, which is comprised of vodka-infused cherry water ice topped with gummy candies.Read moreJessica Griffin / Staff Photographer

Tipsy Scoop

This New York City-based ice cream chain has been infusing ice cream and sorbet with alcohol since 2013. After opening its first Philly outpost inside the Rittenhouse Square BOTLD location, the brand added a cherry water ice spiked with vodka to its menu. Our suggestion: Order the $14 sundae version — which comes topped with chewy cherry and pineapple gummies in a novelty cup — and consider springing for the chilled vodka shooter. It’s entirely too much in the best way possible, and the water ice is delightful despite being made by a New Yorker. Red enough to stain your tongue, it tastes like a handful of maraschino cherries.

📍119 S. 18th St. 📞 917-388-2862 🌐tipsyscoop.com/pages/philadelphia