FUCK THE POLICE
911 EVERY DAY
Is it more than 10 bucks a fifth? Then it's out of my budget range.
You would have to be insane to pay that much for a bottle of vodka. I mean the whole idea of vodka is to distill it multiple times to remove con joiners. And who cares if it is fog water? When you're distilling water is water. Also, what's the pretentious bullshit on the taste? I seriously doubt this shit has hints of pears, foo foo and ambrosia. It's fucking vodka! It taste like a polar solvent unless you add flavoring.Interesting. I must admit I'm not familiar with this nor come across it. I've heard of hanger 1 and know they have multiple flavors but it's not something I hear people order a lot. I'll have to check it out.
Mercury hydride could be. It's very fucking unlikely but chemically possible. None of which maters as vodka isn't filtered. Doesn't need to be. Once the fog water has been distilled it just water and any inorganics, other than water, will remain in the pot.Are you being serious, do you really think that something like mercury is present in fog? If I tell you that it is impossible, will you believe me?
I was going to ask that but figured you would too. I was right.Do understand how distillation works?
That's not true about vodka. It's not whisky. It's distilled multiple time. Starting out with a pure quality counts from the stand point of making distillation easier but once you've distilled more than once virtually all impurities have been removed and a quality vodka is distilled five to ten times.Actually, yes, since I do distill, myself. And I know that the impurities in the water make a huge difference in the final product. If you think that commercial distilleries extract 100% alcohol and leave all else behind, then you might want to read up a bit about the process. Distilling laboratory pure ethanol is the only process that reduces impurities to insignificant levels. Do you think that rum tastes different from whiskey because flavors are added after distillation? No. Rum tastes like rum because of the fermented molasses, and whiskey tastes like whiskey because of the fermented malted grains. Gin of course, gets it's flavor from juniper actually added into the distillation column.
Vodka, is in essence, the lack of any flavor. But that does not mean that it is distilled to pure alcohol and then watered down. Commercially, it is distilled typically to forty to seventy-five percent percent alcohol. That means that sixty to twenty-five percent of the final product contains the most volatile compounds from the original ferment liquid. Mostly water, of course, but many nasty compounds are distilled along with the water, especially in first liquid out of the still, but also in the tailings, or final output. If you an astute home distiller, there is nothing better than that middle portion coming out of a well run still. Commercial? Well, that depends a lot on the integrity of the distiller.
If you think that the water in the original ferment has no effect on the final product, then my question is, why smog?
Except he's right. Vodka is supposed to be neutral in flavor. That's why it's the base to so many cocktail recipes. It carries the flavors you add to it. Distilling out volatiles and conjoiners means it reduces the severity of hangovers. Anyone who pays more than $20 for vodka is pissing money away.Fuck You.
Is it more than 10 bucks a fifth? Then it's out of my budget range.
The supermarket down the road sells French Grey Goose vodka at £38 ($55) for 75cl or a fifth in old money!! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_Goose_(vodka)Except he's right. Vodka is supposed to be neutral in flavor. That's why it's the base to so many cocktail recipes. It carries the flavors you add to it. Distilling out volatiles and conjoiners means it reduces the severity of hangovers. Anyone who pays more than $20 for vodka is pissing money away.
I bought a local made potato vodka that was distilled 10 times. Paid $17 for 75 cl. Every bit as good as grey goose but they really hit you folks hard on the tax over there. I think grey goose is like $25 for 75 cl here.The supermarket down the road sells French Grey Goose vodka at £38 ($55) for 75cl or a fifth in old money!! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_Goose_(vodka)
It's not tax so much as charging what the market can stand. Most vodkas like Smirnoff are around $20-25 per bottle. http://www.mysupermarket.co.uk/sainsburys-price-comparison/Spirits/Smirnoff_Red_Label_Vodka_1L.htmlI bought a local made potato vodka that was distilled 10 times. Paid $17 for 75 cl. Every bit as good as grey goose but they really hit you folks hard on the tax over there. I think grey goose is like $25 for 75 cl here.
Flavored "vodka" is candy, not a proper alcoholic beverage. It's an appropriate item for a niece, or grandmother, not a grown man.
I told my buddy about this vodka and he laughed. I suggested to him we make vodka from the tears of those who fall to the Seahawks greatness in the stadium and sell it for $12.
So which one of the "candy" flavors do you like the best??![]()
It's not tax so much as charging what the market can stand. Most vodkas like Smirnoff are around $20-25 per bottle. http://www.mysupermarket.co.uk/sainsburys-price-comparison/Spirits/Smirnoff_Red_Label_Vodka_1L.html
Except he's right. Vodka is supposed to be neutral in flavor. That's why it's the base to so many cocktail recipes. It carries the flavors you add to it. Distilling out volatiles and conjoiners means it reduces the severity of hangovers. Anyone who pays more than $20 for vodka is pissing money away.
Except he's right. Vodka is supposed to be neutral in flavor. That's why it's the base to so many cocktail recipes. It carries the flavors you add to it. Distilling out volatiles and conjoiners means it reduces the severity of hangovers. Anyone who pays more than $20 for vodka is pissing money away.
That's kind of a misnomer too. Whisky are mainly distilled once in a pot still via simple distillation where the heads and tails are discarded and the body is collected congeners and all. Due to the congeners they don't taste good immediately after distillation and need to be aged for their flavors to develop.Hmm, I bought Smirnoff the other night for 13 bucks a fifth. It claimed to be distilled 10 times too.