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Green Fairy https://forum.costaricaticas.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=8699 |
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Author: | Gringotim [ Thu Oct 27, 2005 11:19 am ] |
Post subject: | Green Fairy |
Has anyone ever tried absinthe, AKA the 'green fairy'? It's mostly produced in Europe I believe. It's supposed to induce hallucinations. I've read that you're supposed to drink it with sugar and a spoon, as it's very bitter. What's that all about? Why would any 'sane' person drink it? |
Author: | Bilko [ Thu Oct 27, 2005 10:34 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
I had some absinthe in Prague. It was very alcoholic but not hallucinogenic, for me at least. Tasted a bit like the usual anisette/ouzo thing, if I recall. It wasn't that interesting, imho. |
Author: | Prolijo [ Fri Oct 28, 2005 12:27 am ] |
Post subject: | |
Its one of those urban legends, like eating the worm at the bottom of a bottle of mezcal. Drink enough of a 120 proof liquor and just about anyone is likely to have visions. It is a strong herbal liqueur distilled with a wide variety of flavorful herbs. The chlorophyll of the herbs is what gave it a greenish color and hence the nickname "Green Fairy". The contemporary version tends to rely mainly on anise or licorice for its flavor. Apparently that is what Bilko tried. It was actually an earlier version that used wormwood that gave Absinthe its notoriety and was later banned. It was traditionally served with ice water and a cube of sugar; the sugar cube was placed on a slotted "absinthe spoon", and the water was drizzled over the sugar into the glass of absinthe. The sugar helped take the bitter edge from the absinthe and when the water is drizzled into the the liquor it all turns milky greenish-white (the effect is called "louche"). Some early disreputable distillers cut corners and used some toxic chemicals to mimic the color and the louche effect and that may have been another source for Absinthe's bad rap. Anyway getting back to wormwood. Wormwood had been used medicinally to exterminate tapeworm infestations while leaving the human host uninjured and even rejuvenated by the experience. At the end of the 18th century, the herb developed a recreational vogue. People discovered they could get high off it. The problem was the means of delivery, as it was unacceptably bitter in taste. BTW, the British in colonial India found a similar way of making the quinine that was used for malaria more palatable. They mixed it with gin. A Frenchman living in Switzerland found the answer by inventing absinthe, which delivered both the herb and alcohol in a stunningly tart beverage, with a flavor resembling licorice. The most well-known maker of absinthe was French distiller Henri-Louis Pernod. Absinthe would eventually enjoy its greatest popularity in fin-de-siècle Paris, with Vincent Van Gogh, Oscar Wilde and others among its most ardent imbibers. In this country it became especially popular in New Orleans, which makes sense given its franco-european character. Around the turn of the century, temperance groups started to notice a particularly growing bunch of alcoholics that were "Absinthists" and noted that heavy absinthe users had a propensity toward madness and suicide, by the second decade of this century it became banned in the Western world, unfairly lumped in with opiates, cocaine, and marijuana. One must also consider the contribution of the high alcohol content to "absinthism", as well as the flood of cheap and adulterated products in the market at its heyday. When someone consumes 20 or more glasses a day of a 120-150 proof alcoholic beverage (which were possibly contaminated with toxic metals as well), it can tend to have a deleterious effect on them. After its banning, imitations, using anise and other legal herbs in place of wormwood, appeared. The most well-known is contemporary Pernod, which was originally the best and most famous brand of absinthe; it's still made today but the similarity is only in color and brand-name. Regarding the issue of thujone content in absinthe (which some less than scrupulous makers tout as a reason to buy their brand) ... thujone from wormwood herb is present in absinthe, but in such trace amounts that by the time you consumed a toxic dose you'd be dead of alcohol poisoning, many times over. Apparently the distillation process removes most if not all of the toxicity of the wormwood in well-made absinthe; that, plus its trace amounts in the elixir, make absinthe -- consumed responsibly, as any strong spirit -- perfectly safe. Additionally, wormwood is also one of the herbs used (in trace amounts) to make that flavored wine and essential Martini ingredient that we all know as vermouth. The name of the drink comes from the German wermuth, which means wormwood. I'll throw one more thing in here. If you really want to talk about the crazy things people eat and drink you should do a google on "fugu" or specially prepared pufferfish that they serve in Japan (and only 2 restaurants in the US). It has to be cooked by specially trained chefs. If it is overcooked, it is just regular fish. If its undercooked, it will either kill you or put you into a deathlike coma (which is why they always wait several days before burying anyone that dies after eating fugu in Japan).If it is cooked just right it supposedly produces a pleasant numbing sensation in your mouth. And that's no urban legend. |
Author: | Circus the younger [ Fri Oct 28, 2005 9:00 am ] |
Post subject: | |
As Pops would say: Phuck THE FUGU !! Just give this boy some fried catfish, grits, taters and drop bisquits cooked on the banks of the river. It tastes finger licking good and won't kill ya. Not to mention, you can leave the sushi (BAIT) in Japan. A cup of Georgia shine added in will put a glow to the morning. |
Author: | Gringotim [ Fri Oct 28, 2005 11:32 am ] |
Post subject: | |
Thanks Prolijo for the informative response. I'd heard a lot about absinthe and just wondered how much of it was hype, myth, etc. |
Author: | LostinKentucky [ Sun Oct 30, 2005 5:15 am ] |
Post subject: | absinthe |
I am by no means an authority and thus do not state anything categorically, but .... I seem to remember having heard long ago and quite often that true absinthe was not just lumped in with other drugs as Prolijo said, but actually contained opiates and was quite popular in Arabian and/or Moorish locales such as Morocco. Maybe I'm way off the mark.. just thought I'd mention |
Author: | JazzboCR [ Fri Jan 30, 2009 8:39 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
Wow, talk about dredging up one from the past! But just read an article on superpremium absinthe and thought I'd share: www.nytimes.com/2009/01/29/world/europe/29swiss.html |
Author: | El Viejo [ Fri Jan 30, 2009 10:32 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
I drink Absinthe on occasion, but consider it an after dinner drink due to the sugar content. I also catch, clean and eat my own atlantic fugu. Remember to use only the 'sandpaper' skinned puffer fish. Do not use the long spined variety! Slit the skin over the backbone and remove the sweet white meat along the backbone WITHOUT CUTTING THROUGH THE SKIN ON THE GUT SACK!!!! These backstraps are great fried. I like sushi, but leave that for restaurants or species other than puffer fish. |
Author: | Spanky [ Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:39 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
You can buy the stuff in Maryland now. It's legal in the state. I personally hate the taste as I had it in Amsterdam at the bar named Absinthe. To me it tasted like NyQuil. The whole sugar cube, light on fire, cut it with water was tedious and the taste just not worth it. |
Author: | Jmacaula [ Sat Jan 31, 2009 1:38 am ] |
Post subject: | |
A friend and I bought a bottle in Cambodia at the airport. As I recall it was quite expensive, especially for duty free standards. None the less, we followed the instructions and gave it a shot. IMHO, its overrated. Tastes like some sort of licorice type concoction. I personally felt no special effects, and continued my night drinking as if I hadnt drank any. My wingman however, consumed two drinks of the stuff and ended up going back to his hotel about 2 hours later because he just didnt feel himself. Was it psychological? Was it the absinthe? I really have no idea. The guy is by no means small, nor a lightweight drinker, so I cant see how the alcohol content would have thrown him off. But its not as if he was on all fours barking like a dog because he was so out of it. |
Author: | Whtnot [ Sun Feb 01, 2009 10:50 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
I found Absinthe at the old Zona Blue and asked the bartender (the philipina) for a drink. She told me that it was $60 for a drink which is ridiculously expensive. Recently, I think last year, Absinthe is being sold in the US, but without the wormwood. I usually get my supply whenever I travel to Europe. You can buy the usual green absinthe, but also the purple one if you happen to travel to Hungary, both of which have the wormwood. I drink mine without the water and sugar though. I can get bottle if anyone wants to try. I am there from the 19th - 26th @ the Amistad, Room 212. ![]() |
Author: | CaptainCohiba [ Sun Feb 01, 2009 11:46 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
I'm glad the KL bartenders aren't selling it a la Patron shots ![]() |
Author: | Thirdworld [ Mon Feb 02, 2009 12:55 am ] |
Post subject: | |
My friend, I'm gonna definitely try to catch up with you... Always been very curious to try it and just was in the wrong place at the wrong time when I was bumming around Europe. |
Author: | Icemon [ Fri Feb 20, 2009 4:59 am ] |
Post subject: | |
I had some about three weeks ago. I was out bar hoping with some friends and one of them had a bottle of the stuff in the car. A few of us went to the parking lot and did the whole flaming sugar cube thing and whatnot. I had been drinking pretty hevilly, so I do not know if it was this stuff or the combination, but soon after this I have no recollection of. I did not hallucinate or anything, just I really don't remember the rest of the night. |
Author: | Tstef527 [ Fri Feb 20, 2009 7:31 am ] |
Post subject: | |
Well since I have never tried the stuff....here is a hilarious story written by someone that has..... http://www.tuckermax.com/archives/entri ... .phtml#280 |
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