Full Review

MVP

MVP
Vodka

Category: Unflavored Vodka

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 40%
92 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$19
Best Buy

MVP
Vodka

Category: Unflavored Vodka

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 40%
Clear color. Aromas and flavors of wheat toast, mint, grass clippings, and wild clover flower with a glycerous, vibrant, dry medium body and a tingling, rapid finish that exhibits impressions of white pepper, kale, saline solution, and vanilla. Lots of soft subtle flavors enhance this nearly blank canvas allowing you to paint an elegant cocktail.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: wheat toast, mint, grass clippings, and wild clover flower
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with impressions of white pepper, kale, saline solution, and vanilla
Smoothness Smoothness: Tingling
Enjoy Enjoy: in cocktails and neat
Cocktail Cocktails: Bloody Mary, Moscow Mule, Vodka Martini
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Lots of soft subtle flavors enhance this nearly blank canvas allowing you to paint an elegant cocktail.

The Producer

MVP Vodka

The Producer
8 Oasis
Odessa, TX 79765
USA
1 214-538-2088

Their Portfolio

92 MVP Vodka 40% (USA) $19.00.
87 MVP 2022 Lemon Berry Vodka 30% (USA) $19.00.

Unflavored Vodka

Spirits Glass Shot Clear.jpg
Serve in a Shot Glass
Unflavored vodka is defined in the US as a "neutral" spirit devoid of color, aroma, and taste, however, the finest unflavored vodkas are served neat and do have a subtle taste, sometimes of the base grain or ingredient, citrus or even anise. But most vodkas are used for cocktails, often mixed with fruit juice (cranberry juice for Cosmopolitans or orange juice for Screwdrivers.), tonic, or soda for the ubiquitous bar-hopper favorite Vodka & Soda. To which craft bartenders these days like to say, "vodka pays the bills."

Unflavored vodka is made by fermenting and then distilling the simple sugars from a mash of pale grain or vegetal matter. Vodka is produced from grain, potatoes, molasses, beets, and a variety of other plants. Rye and wheat are the classic grains for Vodka, with most of the best Russian Vodkas being made from wheat while in Poland they are mostly made from a rye mash. Swedish and Baltic distillers are partial to wheat mashes. Potatoes are looked down on by Russian distillers, but are held in high esteem by some of their Polish counterparts. Molasses, a sticky, sweet residue from sugar production, is widely used for inexpensive, mass-produced brands of Vodka. American distillers use the full range of base ingredients, but most are made from the abundant supply of corn from the US heartland.