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Absinthe cocktailSummary
Description![]() I think no drink has more romantic lore than the Absinthe Cocktail! There's a lot of romance and mystery to poke through here to get to the simple truth that foodies need, so:
OK, so it's legal now and it won't make you murder your family with an axe (I HATE when that happens). But the Green Fairy is still a bitter sister, so let's work through a little therapy. What do we have to work with? Absinthe is a high-octane distillate of alpine herbs, including the notorious wormwood. Wormwood, despite its unappetizing name, is no more special than St John's Wort or other over-the-counter herbs/drugs. It's distilled into absinthe by any number of makers with their own family recipes, but it's all about making a high-octane herby product. Suppose your Absinthe were gin. You'd still have an herby base spirit that normal folk in polite society mix rather than drink straight. The difference here is that Absinthe has traditionally not been normalized to 80 or 90 proof. It's bottled strong and unapologetic, without excuses. It's up to the drinker to wield this power-tool correctly. This is where the force of convention and good taste saves us from disaster and fratricide. The combination of the sugar cube and the water turn the undiluted bitter absinthe into a classic cocktail. Ingredients
Instructions (1 vote)
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