neenee321 wrote:I'm hooked on Unibroue's Ephemere... an ale w/ fruit, apple. I'm not a huge beer drinker, I prefer cider... but Ephemere is my beer of choice now, they serve it at The Bluebird on Damen over here in Bucktown and sell it at Whole Foods. It's really quite lovely, my husband even enjoys it!
I'm also quite hooked on Crispin ciders.
jsagoff wrote:Sounds awesome, bjackson. How many vanilla beans did you use to make your syrup?
bjackson wrote:Don't know what this is called but:
1 Oz Gosling's Black Strap
1 oz Flor de Cana 7
muddled with 5 slices of ginger then combined with
1oz of mint infused simple syrup
1oz of lime juice
1oz of egg whites (or 1 egg white)
dry shake, then add ice and shake. A few dashes of ango across the top.
I really like this.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:Your office isn't anywhere near River North is it?I can be there right away if so
ronnie_suburban wrote:At the office, where we just popped open a bottle of 25-year Laphroaig. We certainly don't make a habit of the stuff but I can easily see how it could become habit-forming.
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MBK wrote:i have a newbie vodka question: i've read that the better vodkas are the ones that have been distilled more. for example, 3x distilled would not be as good as 4x distilled. that said, i've also read that my favorite mainstream vodka, Kettle One, is 3x distilled, while cheaper Seagrams Vodka is 4x distilled. my question to the vodka drinkers is, would this mean the Seagrams is better than Kettle One, or is this just BS.
disclaimer: ultimately, i'm looking for a good, but inexpensive vodka to do things like the pineapple infusion, which looks amazing btw
MBK wrote:i have a newbie vodka question: i've read that the better vodkas are the ones that have been distilled more. for example, 3x distilled would not be as good as 4x distilled. that said, i've also read that my favorite mainstream vodka, Kettle One, is 3x distilled, while cheaper Seagrams Vodka is 4x distilled. my question to the vodka drinkers is, would this mean the Seagrams is better than Kettle One, or is this just BS.
disclaimer: ultimately, i'm looking for a good, but inexpensive vodka to do things like the pineapple infusion, which looks amazing btw
ronnie_suburban wrote:...Grey Goose, otoh, is about $30 for a 750 bottle. GG is marketed as a "premium" brand and priced accordingly. Is it better? I certainly don't think so but some people obviously do.
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danimalarkey wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:...Grey Goose, otoh, is about $30 for a 750 bottle. GG is marketed as a "premium" brand and priced accordingly. Is it better? I certainly don't think so but some people obviously do.
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This talk of marketing with respect to Grey Goose gives me a reason to link this article from NY Magazine: The Cocktail Creationist. It might be from 2005 but in the background on how Grey Goose was created is pretty fascinating even today.
As for the topic on hand, I wish I could say I've had a vodka drink recently, but I always skip the stuff.
I did have a fantastic Negroni mixed by Adam recently at the Clark St. Ale House -- Rogue's Pink Spruce Gin, Campari and Sweet Vermouth (didn't catch the brand) and a lemon twist... perfection in a glass.
Seth Stevenson @ NYMag.com wrote:So, to steal away Absolut’s market share, your unborn new vodka should undercut this price, correct? No, you think, chomping your cigar as you watch a 30-foot putt roll straight into the cup. Why don’t I price my vodka extravagantly higher than Absolut, at wildly more profitable margins . . . and steal Absolut’s market share that way? This was the great insight of Sidney Frank (and not only him: The makers of Ketel One vodka had the same basic idea). Frank could see that there was a product missing from the shelves. Here were all these vodkas, in the $15-to-$17 range, vying to be the premium brand (with Absolut mostly winning). Frank just sidestepped the fray altogether and charged an unheard-of $30 a bottle. The markup amount was pure profit. “He was the first person to see,” says an executive at rival Bacardi, “that there was a superpremium category above Absolut, if you had a good product story.”
Seth Stevenson @ NYMag.com wrote:Pause for a reality assessment: Certainly, Grey Goose is a very good vodka. But is it really “the best”? Pace the Beverage Testing Institute, I’d venture that the answer is, ehhhhh, maybe. Of course, when I suggest to an SFIC vice-president that vodka is by definition odorless and tasteless, and thus one vodka couldn’t be much better than the next, his face goes tight. “That is a dinosaur statement,” he says, speaking slowly, then lectures me on water- filtration processes and Champagne limestone and special grains and such.
“Yes, some people may taste a difference,” says Wright of Liquid Intelligence. “But you’re talking about a grain-neutral spirit. The FDA definition is pretty narrow. At an elemental level, there is no difference. And anyway, you can’t possibly taste it when it’s in a Cosmopolitan. Grey Goose is about quality because Sidney Frank said it was about quality.”
G Wiv wrote:Alka-Seltzer.
I ate too much for dinner. (Leftover brisket, leftover polenta made into polenta cakes and sauteed okra, tomato, mushroom and onion.)
Khaopaat wrote:MBK wrote:i have a newbie vodka question: i've read that the better vodkas are the ones that have been distilled more. for example, 3x distilled would not be as good as 4x distilled. that said, i've also read that my favorite mainstream vodka, Kettle One, is 3x distilled, while cheaper Seagrams Vodka is 4x distilled. my question to the vodka drinkers is, would this mean the Seagrams is better than Kettle One, or is this just BS.
disclaimer: ultimately, i'm looking for a good, but inexpensive vodka to do things like the pineapple infusion, which looks amazing btw
I believe that, in addition to distillation, filtration helps quite a bit. Some of the more expensive vodkas tout the fact that they're filtered multiple times through activated charcoal.
I took a cue from this, and made infused vodka with the cheapest crap I could find (1.75L plastic mouthwash bottles of Smirnoff, found on sale at Jewel).
Before I started, I put a small sip's worth aside in a little Gladware container as a control. Then I ran it all through a Brita filter three times, and did a taste test. Control sip: gross. Post-Brita sip: significantly less offensive to the senses. I then used the filtered booze for my infused vodka, and was very happy with the results.
jsagoff wrote:Maybe we should start a good, cheap vodka list?
My faves: Boru, Tito's (more expensivish), Sobieski, Lukusowa.