Full Review

Absente

Absente
Absinthe

Category: Absinthe

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 55%
92 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$44

Absente
Absinthe

Category: Absinthe

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 55%
Brilliant golden green color. Aromas and flavors of star anise, anise Christmas cookie, and fennel and star anise black tea with a glycerous, lively, dry-yet-fruity medium-to-full body and a hot, engaging, medium-long finish with accents of anise, black jelly bean, sassafras tea, and licorice root. Unmistakably Absinthe but a bit sweeter, more floral, and more delicate than other versions.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: star anise, anise Christmas cookie, and fennel and star anise black tea
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with accents of anise, black jelly bean, sassafras tea, and licorice root
Smoothness Smoothness: Hot
Enjoy Enjoy: in cocktails, neat and with drops of water
Cocktail Cocktails: Amaretto Sour, Pimm's Cup
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Unmistakably Absinthe but a bit sweeter, more floral, and more delicate than other versions.

The Importer

Crillon Importers Ltd.

The Importer
80 Route 4 East
Paramus, NJ 07652
USA
1 201-368-8878

Absinthe

Spirits Glass Copita Emerald Green.jpg
Serve in a Copita
Absinthe is a distilled beverage made from a number of seeds and herbs, especially that of the wormwood plant. It is high in alcohol (between 45%-74%) and has, in literature, been referred to as a hallucinatory beverage, known as "the green fairy."

In reality, absinthe is a anise-flavored spirit that can contain ingredients such as fennel or aniseed. While there are many different styles of anise-based spirits throughout the world, such as Ouzo from Greece or Sambuca from Italy, absinthe is generally higher in alcohol.

Absinthe is diluted with water to make it palatable, given is high alcohol and bitter qualities. For some time, it was banned in France, as a neurotoxin in wormwood caused drinkers to become ill. Today, however, improved distillation methods have created a more tame absinthe and the spirit has regained much of its popularity, as well as its mysterious legend.