Added: 2 years ago
From: everydaydrinkers
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  • you got knocked off your socks

  • liqors with more alcohol are less dense, therefor lighter and will float over heaviers liquids

  • @iLik3c0o0ki3s alcohol will float on water, so yeah, more alcohol makes it get closer to the lightness of water. More sugars and such, not so light (grenadine has lots of sugar and zero alcohol, so that's gonna sink)

  • I remember when the absinthe became legal again. What a glorious day.  I bought a bottle of Lucid. It was very good.

  • Correction: Is legal to own it, but is illegal to sell it in the United States. And probably the absinth you are using is just absinthe flavored liquor. If you bought it inside the US, is not real absinthe since it does not contain wormwood.

  • Correction to correct: Absinthe is sold in the US today and it contains wormwood and it's real recipes. Absinthe flavored liquor usually states so on the bottle.

    Lucid Absinthe was the first to make it back to the US since 1912. The date was March 5th, 2007. Since then you can find Kübler, St. George Absinthe Verte and others.

  • From Lucid's website:

    "Wormwood is not illegal as long as the finished product meets U.S. standards for content. T.A. Breaux found that by adhering to the absinthe-making techniques used over a century ago, the result was not only a genuine, historically accurate product, but a product that also happens to meet U.S. requirements relating to alcoholic beverages, as would many of the highest quality absinthes from the 19th century."

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