I Made A Historic 1700's Absinth

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @StillIt
    @StillIt  2 года назад +443

    Hows it going, team? I screwed a few things up! Apologies for the 1kg = 1.1 lb blunder. Its fixed in the description I cant fix it in the video :(
    Alan has some constructive feedback also (his screen name is One Piece At A Time Distilling Institute).
    - Petite Wormwood is a majour colouring componant. But its very hard to find. It will give a darker color
    - Spinach would be dried and give better colour

    • @claudesilverio677
      @claudesilverio677 2 года назад +22

      Try nette leaves, high Chlorophyll content, and Chlorophyll is very soluble in a 50%-60% alcohol solution by heating to around 40 to 50°CELCIUS. Nettel gives a strong green colouring with a negligable Taste, so perfect for colouring Absinth.

    • @claudesilverio677
      @claudesilverio677 2 года назад +7

      PineNeedles give also a good color but they have a nice but strong Taste, for those who like a more medecinal taste

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад +4

      @@claudesilverio677 Makes me wonder whether rosemary would work as a colorant, or would it be too overwhelming in the aroma.

    • @claudesilverio677
      @claudesilverio677 2 года назад +3

      I havent tried it for colouring, just added some to the maceration. Love the taste, smell and its good for your circulationsystem.

    • @jeremyprunty5660
      @jeremyprunty5660 2 года назад +8

      His reaction at the end between the two. Amazing what near 300 years of refinement can do to a recipe, also kind of sad over what has been lost.

  • @stefanbachrodt7072
    @stefanbachrodt7072 2 года назад +396

    In Antibes, France there's a bar that's half underground and shaped as a dome made of chiseled rock, we simply called it Absinthe Bar since all they served was Absinthe. The variety was spectacular! Their concentrates were however so powerful and difficult to source that you would be limited to only 3 shots worth per sitting. I went 3 times and all 9 servings blew my mind. Their pickled onions and garlic was also some of the best I've ever had and made for an epic lil side dish. Good memories! If anyone reading this ever visits France, go find that place, you will not be disappointed!

    • @jamiecurran3544
      @jamiecurran3544 2 года назад +1

      Sounds good thanks!😁😜✌️

    • @philliplawson7853
      @philliplawson7853 2 года назад +12

      Real Absinthe is not an alcohol buzz at all .... I had like a nice LSD trip

    • @Batlord_Carcas
      @Batlord_Carcas 2 года назад +7

      @@philliplawson7853 an experience like that i found in Oregon Spirit, it's made by Oregon Distillery Co.

    • @loganleborgne420
      @loganleborgne420 Год назад +6

      @@philliplawson7853 I had the chance to drink some in the 90's...after I tried lsd...and I agree with you!

    • @loganleborgne420
      @loganleborgne420 Год назад +2

      I live near Antibes and Cannes...was it near the port?

  • @firbolg
    @firbolg 2 года назад +28

    Swiss bloke here... I can't drink alcohol anymore due to my current PTSD medication but that doesn't take anything from the pleasure of watching your experimentations. Thanks for that!

  • @Squeeeez
    @Squeeeez 2 года назад +917

    Your absinthe looks pretty similar to the rare traditional stuff that you can find when you know a farmer in the valley where it comes from, congratulations! :)

    • @nellynelson965
      @nellynelson965 2 года назад +61

      I was just about to say something similar. My mate moved to Chexbres and Jessie's looks like the local hooch his local farmer gave us. Although his was definitely not wormwoody but really aniseed and lemon.

    • @schlapcity2774
      @schlapcity2774 2 года назад +12

      Happy to hear that the lad did good, I hope some day I can get my hands on something like what you’ve tried 🙏

    • @richardprice5978
      @richardprice5978 2 года назад +12

      and of course the yanks have to bend tradition to their will 😑
      it's not something like rat-soup/bug soup that might kill/sick you just keep adding more sweetness why ? that's not how the french/OG like it and it's ok if it's not your thing but please don't ruin it for the curious people who want the real 1800's french recipe and pass off a modified modern 2022 USA imitation as 💯real and imported

    • @josephraskal3013
      @josephraskal3013 2 года назад +8

      Lol I love wormwood n thugone I make my in a pressure cooker n my recipe is extremely old

    • @arbleizbzh7672
      @arbleizbzh7672 2 года назад +37

      @@richardprice5978 I believe he says he is from New Zealand. He certainly doesn't have a USA accent.

  • @wookieecantina
    @wookieecantina Год назад +13

    The Green Fairy appreciates your hard work and dedication!

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard 2 года назад +285

    Absinth Rouge is a thing. Finish it with hibiscus for colouring (it does affect the flavour in a good way) and potentially some rose petals. I just use a touch of rose-water in addition to my mineral water when proofing it down off the still and then add-in the hibiscus for colour.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +57

      Ohhhhhhh thats a interesting direction to take things

    • @kalynlambert6889
      @kalynlambert6889 2 года назад +18

      Hibiscus. What a wonderful flavor.

    • @MeteorMark
      @MeteorMark 2 года назад +5

      That sounds like a strong Sorel, but with different botanicals and no Rum for the alcohol 😉

    • @TheBaconWizard
      @TheBaconWizard 2 года назад +1

      @@MeteorMark Yep!

    • @ASHA-jk2pf
      @ASHA-jk2pf 2 года назад +1

      Mmmm... Sounds SOooo GOooD!💚🌺🌹

  • @jodyrockhill7200
    @jodyrockhill7200 2 года назад +48

    Your on screen conversions to us Americans is both hilarious and appreciated

    • @furkanyldz5207
      @furkanyldz5207 Год назад +1

      When he says "Freedom Unit" got me 😂

    • @bobsmith613
      @bobsmith613 6 месяцев назад +1

      I seem to be missing something, because 1 kilogram is not 1.1 pound; it's 2.2 pounds.

  • @rogerphillips8060
    @rogerphillips8060 Год назад +8

    I just made a version of this recipe, the product was pretty good, i fouled up the order for wormwood so i ended up with 50gm not 95 as the recipe says, i halved all the ingredients, so i macerated for 12 hours then distilled through my air.
    still, all cuts except the tails where added there was no really bad tastes,
    i added half the tails as there was a earthy, woody, herby taste which added to the subtle back ground tastes
    Final product 79 abv, gonna leave it at that strength.
    I had a sample 10 ml just with 3 ice cubes, wow, it tasted like a strong pernod with the extra back ground licurice and botanical taste, the product leuched well, love it, nice one Jesse.
    For colour, i used some of the spirit and crushed up 3 large spinach leaves until the colour leached out and filtered through cotton wool back into the jar, got a lovely pale green looks fantastic.
    Hope this helps anyone havin a bash at this.

  • @hipgnosis2
    @hipgnosis2 2 года назад +123

    Great job Jesse, not a bad go at all for the first try! It has been awesome working with you!

  • @potzdonner
    @potzdonner Год назад +35

    Thank you! Great video, admirable work! As a dweller of the Swiss Alps, I should add a correction: Absinthe does not come from the Swiss Alps but the Swiss Jura mountains which are outside the Alps at the northeastern end of Switzerland. The Jurassians, as the Jura dwellers are called, are the proud makers of the (illegal until 2005) green fairy. I would not want to take that honor from them or make them angry. Otherwise they might curse the green fairy.
    I have tasted many kinds of original Absinthe moonshine. There are different colors from clear to yellowish-green to deep green. I prefer it whitout water but its richness in flavors comes out both ways. So I sip some pure then add water to enjoy the rest. I do agree with the Ouzo comparison.

    • @SubCapt
      @SubCapt 6 месяцев назад +1

      Hear Hear. One slight detail, though : the historical cradle of absinthe very specifically is Val-de-Travers, a small valley in Canton de Neuchâtel (back then the Principalty of Neuchâtel, and technically part of... Prussia) with the French city of Pontarlier just across the border at the far end. I.e. not the Jura Mountains as a whole, (and even less modern Canton du Jura).

  • @yannickalbert5762
    @yannickalbert5762 Год назад +20

    Very cool video !
    Maybe you can try this receipe next time :
    “Have a still that holds 24 bottles of good brandy. To these 24 bottles add a bucket of fountain water. Then put:
    Two pounds of green anise
    Two pounds of fennel
    Half a pound of big absinthe
    A pound of Gaula campana
    Distill over low heat without leaving the still. Before distillation, the substances can be left to infuse in the eau-de-vie for 24 hours.
    As the extract is distilled, two large, wide-mouthed glass jars are required; we put this liquor in it and then we share the following drugs which we infuse in it to give the green color:
    A quarter pound of lemon balm
    Half a pound of small absinthe
    Half a pound of hyssop
    It is left to infuse for four days in the heat of the sun, or on a stove if it is in winter. We then go through a felt hat; we squeeze the herbs tightly with both hands and put them back in the still for another cooking. »
    Translated directly from old french, hope you understant everything. This is the Doctor Ordinaire's original receipe.
    Have fun !
    PS: Absinthe come from Val de Travers, in Switzerland, but it's not in Swiss Alpes ( believe me, I'm writing from there actually ;-) )

  • @sydthegoat88
    @sydthegoat88 2 года назад +526

    I always thought the thujone in Absinthe would instantly turn me into an Avant-garde artiste and allow me to hang with the Bohemians, but all I got was bogans

    • @grumpyoldman-21
      @grumpyoldman-21 2 года назад +2

      drink ozo and save a few bucks

    • @OldManTomJulio
      @OldManTomJulio 2 года назад +66

      You're confusing thujone with a pack American Spirits and a worn copy of On the Road, but that's ok, we all make that mistake.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +63

      Bahahahaha. Yeah actually. I knew a few bogans and / or heavy metal dudes into absinthe. Is that a thing?

    • @JD-gn6du
      @JD-gn6du 2 года назад +6

      Too much thujone will lead to renal failure so I’m told

    • @sydthegoat88
      @sydthegoat88 2 года назад +2

      @@StillIt Ha !

  • @hipgnosis2
    @hipgnosis2 2 года назад +296

    In regards to color, Petite Wormwood is also a major coloring and aroma component, although it's very hard to find. I suspect if you used it you would likely get a much darker color. The spinach would likely darken as well if the spinach were dried. Lemon balm also gives great color!

    • @jakeevans7075
      @jakeevans7075 2 года назад +26

      Yes the petite wormwood is great for finishing. It has a stronger sweeter more wormwood aroma than the absinthium species. The petite is also less bitter and contributes alot of colour to the finish.
      Yes both species of wormwood are hard to find there are 3 species of wormwood grown the most common is the decorative one known as grand or tree wormwood which you'll find in people's gardens and in nurseries etc which does work for absinthe but doesn't smell or taste as nice as the petite or absinthium(also known as grande) species.
      I ended up going to the Adelaide botanical gardens and making friends with the botanist there so I could have cuttings of the petite and absinthium species plus hyssop and other herbs that were hard to find. I ended trading a bottle of my absinthe for the plants lol as the botanist there was super interested in what I was doing.

    • @hipgnosis2
      @hipgnosis2 2 года назад +14

      @@jakeevans7075 Petite gives a bit of a "fruity" nose as well. I finally have a small colony in my garden.

    • @jakeevans7075
      @jakeevans7075 2 года назад +6

      @@hipgnosis2 yeah like a fruity floral sweet smell it's a very unique smell and flavour

    • @ms.fravell7606
      @ms.fravell7606 2 года назад +4

      Love the aroma of lemon balm .

    • @EphemeralTao
      @EphemeralTao 2 года назад +1

      @@jakeevans7075 "Grand" or "grande" wormwood is the common name for the absinthium variety; I think you're thinking of Roman wormwood, Artemesia pontica, which is commonly used as a ground cover, and was often used for the colouring step in historic absinthes.

  • @ericenos1097
    @ericenos1097 2 года назад +10

    Absinth just bursts with flavor I can see why people loved it back in the day. Great video

  • @SamwiseOutdoors
    @SamwiseOutdoors 2 года назад +7

    My favorite spirit, made in a traditional way by my favorite distilling creator. What a happy Sunday.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +1

      Ah man, cheers!

  • @bobbyblair6862
    @bobbyblair6862 2 года назад +36

    I'm so freaking stoked I found this channel! I'm moving to the mountains and plan on building a still

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +9

      hahah cheers mate

    • @PoppaLongroach
      @PoppaLongroach 2 года назад +8

      Come to west virginia I'll help ya build a still

    • @chrishubbs8633
      @chrishubbs8633 2 года назад +3

      You know you don’t have to live in the mountains to build a still.

    • @PoppaLongroach
      @PoppaLongroach 2 года назад +3

      @@chrishubbs8633 no but it happens to be where I live. And I build stills too sooo....

    • @bobbyblair6862
      @bobbyblair6862 2 года назад

      @@chrishubbs8633 no shit man. I'm already there. Feel better?

  • @RealBelisariusCawl
    @RealBelisariusCawl 11 месяцев назад +1

    Not only is your channel fun to watch but listening to your voice makes me miss New Zealand.
    This is a fantastic channel.

  • @seanmiller6357
    @seanmiller6357 Год назад +10

    Man...I don't even drink any sort of alcohol, but this still was very enjoyable to watch. Excellent presentation of all of the details and historic tidbits.

  • @scinanisern9845
    @scinanisern9845 3 месяца назад

    Oh dude... I swear, you were so close. THAT was a good day. Thank your god and go forth to spread the cheer.

  • @Kyoziel
    @Kyoziel 2 года назад +9

    Jessie good day to you; i started distilling this year (Absinthe,Gin, Whisky and Rum).
    Your channel helped a lot with the basics and i am extremely grateful for all the insights that you give.
    Talking about Absinthe, i am Swiss and i tried my fair share of them, the recipe you have seems very solid but the problem with Absinthe is simple: it does not have a recipe, only guidelines.
    Every family had/has his own recipe and the few that "get out" are the ones easily accessible.
    For a thought experiment, imagine Absinthe as your quest to use a lot of useful herbs and distill them. I found many recipes with chamomile, hyssop, star anise, small absinthe (artemisia pontica), nettles etc.
    If you want we can have a chat about that, it would be my honor.
    Best regards

  • @jameshalloran9840
    @jameshalloran9840 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for the hook-up with Alan, Jesse, he hooked me up with some great resources for beginners. I'm fermenting juices now, but I hope to up my game to mashes and start distilling soon. Thanks for all of the encouragement and great content. GBY, Brother.

    • @jameshalloran9840
      @jameshalloran9840 2 года назад

      @@theworldisastage1984 Thanks for the heads up. Home Distiller it is.

    • @jameshalloran9840
      @jameshalloran9840 2 года назад

      @@theworldisastage1984 Rockin Rockies, got it, thanks!

    • @jameshalloran9840
      @jameshalloran9840 2 года назад

      @@theworldisastage1984 That's on the YT channel, or a discord or something...?

    • @jameshalloran9840
      @jameshalloran9840 2 года назад

      @@theworldisastage1984 Great, I'll hit you up!

    • @PoppaLongroach
      @PoppaLongroach 2 года назад +2

      Alan, Jesse and Cyrus at Still in the Clear will definitely guide you in right direction. I've got few videos too. Keep trying and be patient you'll get there

  • @claudesilverio677
    @claudesilverio677 2 года назад +35

    I use white portwine to make my basic alcohol for mazeration. I mazerate the herbs from my garden from spring to Summer as they come, in a jar. End of Summer All is one jar and i still IT in Winter. I dont color it but age IT with some tastet birchwood which gives a nice color. I dont use Anis or fennel so it s more a sage mint lemonbalm and elderflower with a worm wood Taste. I use two different wormwoods and sage to push the Level of thujon (alpha and betathujon) which makes It more narcotic. The strongest but the most bitter(very high thujon content) is Alchemilla millefolia

    • @worldtraveler930
      @worldtraveler930 2 года назад +6

      I like your thinking!! 🤠👍

    • @plasmarc9
      @plasmarc9 2 года назад +2

      @@worldtraveler930 It's Achillea millefolium

  • @Sugarsail1
    @Sugarsail1 2 года назад +8

    I made an absinth batch with homegrown / foraged herbs and culinary solvent (pure ethanol) for extraction....turned out pretty good. Needed a lot of herbs to get the essential oils for the louche.

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад +3

      The louche comes mainly from anethole and that in turn comes from aniseed...maybe make sure that your anise is not old and dried out, try grinding it with a manual coffee grinder and see if it puts up any "resistance" or is it easy to grind (in the latter case it would be bad).

    • @Sugarsail1
      @Sugarsail1 2 года назад +1

      @@WeightlessBallast that was exactly it, my first batch didn't louche but in the second I put more star anise, more fennel and ground the hell out of it with my mortar and pestle and that did the trick. Next time I will use the coffee grinder. I think the fennel seed puts out a huge amount of oils too as it's kinda like anise.

  • @d.e.christe2334
    @d.e.christe2334 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for taking up the task to recreate this green fairy.
    I count myself fortunate to have been born long ago to an old family (not wealthy, just knowledgeable) from parts of Europe. Many of the oldest ones had long memories of making and drinking Absinthe. I remember, as a child, having a taste of an Absinthe cocktail made the original way with carmelized sugar and spring water. They were a bunch of knowledgeable herbalists and farmers. They grew it, brewed it, distilled it, and had the old ways of preparing it for drinks.
    Looking at the modern instructions, I feel sad at the loss of knowledge, caused by a long stretch of ignorance brought on by prohibition.
    My grandmother stated that the best was made by starting with a fine spirit base of very potent potato vodka. Her family made that for hundreds of years.
    Another elder showed me how to mix the cocktail. He had the lacy patterned spoons, and decanters.
    The modern instructions are what you might tell a child to keep them from setting fire to your home out of inexperience. But this elder months before his death, showed me when I was a child. He wanted the history and knowledge kept.
    The complex flavor was exquisite.
    Absinthe was never as dangerous as the prohibitionist claimed. But imbibing too much of any mix of alcoholic beverages to excess can be an unhealthy, foolish act.

    • @ashleybarlow4951
      @ashleybarlow4951 2 года назад

      I just wanted to ask, why are you not teaching others about the "old school" way of doing this? I understand being careful, but share the wealth of knowledge and the experience and product could get respect and possibly catch back on to bring life to something that was treated so badly.

    • @d.e.christe2334
      @d.e.christe2334 2 года назад

      @@ashleybarlow4951years ago, when I tried to show a group of fellow bartenders the old way to prepare the cocktail, several complained I must be wrong, because the new "approved recipe" was "safer to make." Less chance of fire, they stated. I never heard of a capable bartender causing a fire. "The approved new version" eliminated a sugar cube, a flame, and tasted nothing like the classic.
      But several of the others wanted to see the old way. So we recreated it. We had some of the classic tools, but had to adapt to not having all of the old tools.
      Caramelization of a sugar cube in absinthe on the spoon before adding spring water was a major component in the taste. That is the original reason for the lacy spoons. It burned off a little of the alcohol, too. But not too much. The final coctail was a beautiful opal green color, and tasted deliciously unique. My favorite was made with one of my deceased relative's well hidden old bottles of absinthe that survived the prohibition of the liquer. Wish we had those original recipes.
      I remember one other odd note in the old man's information. The liquor was not made from grapes. That might have been a reaction to the original provincial ban coming from the vintners who didn't like the fashion change in that time to absinthe as a favorite. Sale of wine went down, apparently, due to the artsy folks preferring absinthe to wine.
      The few bartenders who were interested in this old knowledge also preferred the flavor and aroma. My pure luck to have such an old relative who had experienced making this cocktail long ago in Manhattan, serving it at a literary cafe. Writers, artists, poets, and their following preferred this absinthe coctail back then, to any other beverage. I agree, we should honor and keep our history.

    • @Coolnventions
      @Coolnventions Год назад

      can you type up the recipe

  • @pariahthistledowne3934
    @pariahthistledowne3934 9 месяцев назад +1

    I drank a bottle of Czech Absinthe my Buddy's GF smuggled in...and it was AWESOME!!! Imagine a field of wildflowers concentrated into a sweet liqueur...with plenty of Thujone! It was great served traditionally, or straight.

  • @vbkfivn
    @vbkfivn 2 года назад +68

    Absinthe is one of the "coolest" spirits around! The entire mystique around it gives it such a fun allure. Personally, I'm just a sucker for the liquorice flavor.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +7

      Couldn't agree more!

    • @dianapennepacker6854
      @dianapennepacker6854 2 года назад +4

      One bottle imported from Europe trashed 5 to 6 my friends father who was an alcoholic.
      Lemme tell you his mom was pissed. I , like a fool, took two shots like ah it's okay and passed out cold. I handled two shots of pure grain so thought I'd be fine.
      It just seemed to me like I was extra drunk for much longer than normal. Nothing fancy, and my friend said it was the highest concentrated brand. I think we were 18.
      Wonder how other people feel on it.

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад

      The big thing is that distillation takes away the bitterness of grande absinthe leaving only the aromas! Absinthe (real) is therefore never really bitter. If you see a bottle of "absinth" with a wormwood twig in it, don't buy it, it's fake.

    • @benanders4412
      @benanders4412 2 года назад +2

      Ya, that's why I would advise to drink it the traditional way. Use a fountain with ice cold water and the spoon with a sugar cube. Great activity to do when hosting a garden party on a hot summer day. You can spice it up even more by giving the whole party including the food a French flavor. It's something your friends will appreciate and remember.

    • @dissodatore
      @dissodatore 2 года назад +2

      if you like the Liquorice flavor with a cool twist, try Ouzo. it's a Greek liquor that is clear, but if you put it over ice or mix in water, it goes cloudy white.

  • @XDaddyBender
    @XDaddyBender 8 месяцев назад +1

    Myself and four friends drank an entire bottle of absinth in a short period of time and all had the same "hallucination" which I don't believe it was. Anyways it was 11:30 at night everyone is tipsy when I noticed a green light hovering over a tree behind my friends house that we were at. While I was looking at this light thinking I am just getting a mild trip from the absinth my friends girlfriend at the time yells excitedly "Do you all see that green light in the tree!!!???", everyone else looks and say they see the same thing. I never said that I had seen the light out loud so now I am a believer in whatever Absinth is allowing you to see, green fairy, swamp gas, whatever it is it was real.

  • @manatoa1
    @manatoa1 2 года назад +10

    So happy this day finally came. More herbaceous absinthe sounds great to me. Grande wormwood is a fairly common weed around where I live, and I love rubbing the plants and smelling them. Roman wormwood is unobtanium unfortunately.
    I'd recommend trying the Pontarlier recipe next, if you can get Roman wormwood. It should grow well in NZ. It's frequently used as an ornamental.

  • @realtyrocks1969
    @realtyrocks1969 Год назад +2

    I loved the 1700's. The parties were insane.

  • @davidhinderliter595
    @davidhinderliter595 2 года назад +7

    Soooo STOKED! It's been well worth the wait! Thanx for doing all the hard work and research so that we peasants may stumble less in our pursuit of the green fairy. Here's to the first of many absinthe adventures🤳🏻

  • @harvestblades
    @harvestblades Год назад +1

    First time seeing your channel & while I rarely drink I love the craft & history behind many beverages whether we are talking beer, mead, whisky, tequila or absinthe. I love your energy & information. Great beardless folk have no idea how hard it is to work with a long beard. I look forward to checking out your other content. This video sure makes me want some Absintge & even more finally getting into distillation as all I have done us fractaldistillation making apple jack.

  • @alucardonus
    @alucardonus 2 года назад +13

    If you wanna try some REALLY nice spirits i'd recommend you Žufánek destilery from Czech Republic. His main focus is on fruit spirits traditional for our region but he also makes Junipers, Gins and Absinths which are reaaaaly nice. His top of the class is Žufánek DUBIED 1798, 70% Absinth by original recepie.
    My top choice is Ořechovka (Wallnut spirit) made by macerating June harvested green wallnuts in 52 % Plum Spirit.
    Try it you are not gonna regret.

  • @bollybobthorton4021
    @bollybobthorton4021 2 года назад +11

    For the spilled product you could soak up the spilled product with a towel and wring back into a container to run through the still again!

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +3

      True I could have!

  • @windkonton2336
    @windkonton2336 2 года назад +5

    The angels have collected well that day.
    Thanks for the donations. 😇

  • @bullionbacked
    @bullionbacked 9 месяцев назад +1

    As for production of the the expected green liquor, next time press the mixture of the spinach and hyssop before removal, this will draw out more color and make it greener.

  • @genghisken0181
    @genghisken0181 11 месяцев назад +3

    Always remember the old saying: "Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder"

  • @josh678595
    @josh678595 2 года назад +4

    I made a compound absinthe from a kit I bought from the Renaissance Festival. It is amazing. Solid black/green in color, but the louche makes it milky white. Strong wormwood favor.
    The base spirit I used was a 100 proof corn moonshine

  • @jakeevans7075
    @jakeevans7075 2 года назад +13

    I am glad you made this video. I've played around with making absinthe quite a bit as I love the earthy Herby sweet note wormwood imparts into it making it alot more interesting to me than ouzo.
    I am originally got my recipe from mine from an old French winemaking book that had an absinthe recipe in the back (in french) I had to get my friend to translate it for me. It used alot of the same ingredients as yours plus lemon balm and orange peel.
    I found growing fresh wormwood is soooo much better than dried. The fresh is much more complex and sweeter. Also alot of the original recipes use 2 different species of wormwood. The absinthium for the original maceration and Distillation and then what's known as petit wormwood for the colouring maceration which is alot more sweet and Herby compared to the absinthium species.

  • @dbblues.9168
    @dbblues.9168 11 месяцев назад +1

    20+ years ago, while in the American Army, I knew a guy obsessed with absinthe. He traveled Europe buying bottles. While stationed in Germany he set out to find pure absinthe. He made me try dozens of absinthes. Its good, the drinking method was fun and full of pomp and circumstance but we never had any psychedelic effects. It was a very fun/clean drunk. Maybe thats where it gets It's cred. In those days the Army wore BDU greens, and I'd sometimes call him my "green fairy" as he served drink after drink trying to perfect his technique 😅

  • @RuthlessMojo
    @RuthlessMojo 2 года назад +4

    Love Abainthe. I used to prepare it traditionally, would read Keats and get my melancholy on with the green fairy. I’ve been wanting to make it for a long time. The recipe I saw was a Louisiana recipe using sugar spirit as a base, using the botanicals to distill and then adding them back in a very fine muslin sock to colour it. As a rule to be absinthe it should have the anise, wormwood, and sweet fennel. What else you put in can vary depending on the recipe. Usually it’s green herbs but you could always experiment.

  • @bigbasil1908
    @bigbasil1908 2 года назад +2

    All the herbal ingredients apart from anise are easy to get here where I live in the UK. Angelica grows wild here in hedgerows and fields. Mint is grown in a lot of peoples gardens and horse mint and water mint are easy to find growing locally. Wormwood grows abundantly over a park not too far away from me (I have about 3 or 3 kilos of dried wormwood leaves and flowers that I collected a couple of years ago), and fennel grows abundantly there too. Lemon balm grows in a lot of peoples gardens here, and is extremely easy to grow.

  • @GdThngUrPretty
    @GdThngUrPretty 2 года назад +8

    Back when I used to drink a lot more, I had an absinthe phase. I ended up getting a bunch of little samples, all different shades and colors. That's where I found Blue Absinthe, which I liked more than any of the greener ones (good, just not a drink I'd drink often). I remember it being a lot milder than the greens, not as pushy with the flavors. More subtle, which is more my style. (My DOC is gin but not the dry ones.)
    I never knew what it was, tho. Until now. I did try to look it up but it was towards the beginning of Google beginning to suck, so I never did find out. Thanks for doing this! Answered questions I forgot I had.

    • @wingedflyingforce5139
      @wingedflyingforce5139 2 года назад

      Why is it called "Blue Absinthe"? And did you find blue? It seems there is many flavors, do they determine a literal color? Or just metaphorical?

  • @johnhale5271
    @johnhale5271 9 месяцев назад

    Made Grappa for many years with the left over pressings when making wine, mostly Cab. I would add water and sugar to the grape skins adjusting the brix to around 26-28. After a week of fermenting and brix down to zero the skins would be repressed resulting in an Aqua vino. Then distilled it through a still made from a 7.5 gallon beer keg, 4 inch ABS with 3/8 inch copper tube coil condenser, teed off the gas line going to my pool heater to a side burner scavenged off a barbeque and used a bypass from the pool pump to cool the coil.
    Kept track of the temperature regulating it around 173 to 175. Removed the early run condensates. The difference in smell is quite easy to detect. Great spirits produced, 172 proof from the heart of the 2nd run.

  • @AndreiKucharavy
    @AndreiKucharavy 2 года назад +45

    1:43: "The region of Swiss Alps". Well, not exactly - it's the nearing slightly lower "Jura" mountains that border the Swiss plateau, and notably "Val-de-Travers" swiss region right at the border with France. That's why The first industrial factory for it was built right across the border, in Pontarlier, France (and still In Jura mountains). (yes, I live in Switzerland and come from France, how did you guess?) But the dedication is really impressive - thanks for making the video!

  • @douglasspaulding6434
    @douglasspaulding6434 8 месяцев назад

    You had a great way to quickly age by heating and cooling. I just bought an electric mason jar vacuum seal,works perfectly. You can actually see the colors change and bubbles come out of the wood😊

  • @tierynmcgregory5563
    @tierynmcgregory5563 2 года назад +5

    I hope you revisit this one on the future. Loved this episode and love some good absinthe. Hoping to get into the craft soon. Got a still just need the space to work it in

  • @Just_Pele
    @Just_Pele Год назад

    I make my own beer, ale, and non-distilled brandy, I have for a long time, and I did build a still and played around with making distilled brandy, bourbon, and gin, basically to understand and learn the process. But now there's an awesome artisan, small-batch, distillery less than a mile from my home, so I just buy theirs. They make an absinth like this every year, @100 proof, and it's a real howler. I've yet to see that "green fairy", but it is a delicious, and beautiful, green spirit.

  • @douglasgault5458
    @douglasgault5458 11 месяцев назад +4

    In the Philippines 1975 they had some fantastic absenthe. It was so powerful they had a limit of 2 drinks percustomer, only because it was spiked with opium. To date was the best ever

    • @raymiehershey1430
      @raymiehershey1430 4 месяца назад

      I can verify this. In the early 80's it was De Absenth with a licorice taste. OPIUM, you just drift off and stop talking.

    • @joemo1033
      @joemo1033 3 месяца назад

      Feel like you can put opium in anything and it will become "fantastic".

    • @MrStensnask
      @MrStensnask 3 месяца назад

      Wouldn't any drink with opium be the best ever..?? 😂

  • @Sinnistering
    @Sinnistering Год назад

    I've just gotten into your channel (you may have noticed me spamming your comments! Apologies if that's annoying, I'm just trying to help the inscrutable algorithm), and I gotta say, this is the one that made me a Patron. The confluence of history, distilling, and the chemistry that goes into it all-I love it so much. Thank you for sharing your experiences! And I hope my meager monthly contribution will help you continue producing content (and spirits!) for a long time.

  • @odarkCarey
    @odarkCarey Год назад +9

    In 1973 I was stationed in the Azores, I discovered Absintho De Abstracto. I was dark brown and very potent. Tasted like a hot branding iron.

  • @raymondwall8187
    @raymondwall8187 Год назад

    Thanks!

    • @raymondwall8187
      @raymondwall8187 Год назад

      You're my AirStill Guru. You the reason I bought an AirStill, and I love it! Thx!

  • @fixationist
    @fixationist 2 года назад +31

    Two things. 1, please do this again. Would definitely watch a whole new video of you making absinthe a second time. B, how much would you have to charge for that bottle to break even? 3, love your channel. Thanks for the content.

  • @devinefemininerepresent1111
    @devinefemininerepresent1111 Год назад +3

    A double infusion, along side the double distillation helps with the colour and flavor. Great vid. I love that you kept it as traditional as possible. Thank you :)

    • @devinefemininerepresent1111
      @devinefemininerepresent1111 Год назад +3

      If you want to save money on making Absinthe, consider growing an Herb Garden. The wormwood, lemonbalm etc can all be grown in your yard. This time of year is a great time to plan your Absinthe Garden!

  • @danielbera1539
    @danielbera1539 2 года назад +2

    My daughter is really into fermentation and will probably try this. I myself truly love absinthe. Thanks for such an informative and thoughtful presentation. You do a really great job.

  • @RevansMinion
    @RevansMinion 2 года назад +6

    Absinthe is by far my favorite alcohol. This looks fantastic.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +3

      Niiiice. I definitely think I am falling in love.

    • @rjlchristie
      @rjlchristie 6 месяцев назад

      Good ones are heaven in a glass, but many are emerald coloured sh(eye)te.

  • @chrish1585
    @chrish1585 2 года назад +7

    It's called a gin basket. It goes on the colom above the cap before the condenser. It works for both absenth and gin.

  • @Hin_Håle
    @Hin_Håle 2 года назад +7

    Distilling without a very closely controlled licence is strictly prohibited in Sweden. But if I could, I would be making something like this. I love diving into old recipies and trying to recreate them. It's the feeling that you're experiencing something that someone else who lived hundreds or even thousands of years ago also experienced. That almost breaks my brain - in the best way.

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад

      You have Grön Opal! Best modern absinthe ever made (alongside with La Faucille).

    • @andrewaustin6020
      @andrewaustin6020 2 года назад

      You don’t need no license🤫

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад +1

      @@andrewaustin6020 It's funny how distilling alcohol is such a taboo but drug growers kinda get a pat on the head. Lost tax money is the only explanation.

    • @raidermaxx2324
      @raidermaxx2324 2 года назад

      @@WeightlessBallast where do drug growers get a "pat on the head"? and which drug? and where?

    • @rangetpc
      @rangetpc Год назад

      It's historical research not distilling.
      You have no intent to distill but to research a simple recipe for historical value.

  • @VondaInWonderland
    @VondaInWonderland 2 года назад +7

    I've been looking around for the spirits to make Absinthe, I was stoked to see this. I found a seller that sells the herb mix. I can't wait to give it a try ♥

  • @sirwhiskers679
    @sirwhiskers679 Год назад +1

    i made absinth 4 years ago and I used the same recipe as you except I added orange peel, licorice root and let it macerate for about a week, cheers!! I also made mine 140 proof 🙂

  • @TreeCutterDoug
    @TreeCutterDoug 2 года назад +3

    Absinthe is a fantastic and unique buzz... Definitely not a hallucinogen (trust me, I've tried,) but instead: a very subtle and enjoyable stimulating affect. I'm a big fan, and due to the complexity of it's production, I've never considered making my own! Cheers to you!

    • @thrash208
      @thrash208 2 года назад +2

      The way i describe an absinthe buzz is that its like youre body is is drunk but your brain is sober

    • @raidermaxx2324
      @raidermaxx2324 2 года назад

      whats the deal with the hallucination thing and the drink?

  • @MrSchuits
    @MrSchuits 7 месяцев назад

    Dude that was awesome, I love absinthe and I love distilling random things. I only have an air distiller and I just play things by gut. Started fermenting pineapples as a kid, now I distilled plum wine and even did lemons. Making absinthe looks like something right up my alley. Oh I tried fermenting and distilling chilli once, what a balls up.

  • @sgt2025
    @sgt2025 2 года назад +18

    I feel in love with Absinthe when I was stationed in Germany. Sadly after returning to the USA I never found one that delivered the profile and character as I found in Europe. So here I sit, wishing I could have a drink with you.

    • @raidermaxx2324
      @raidermaxx2324 2 года назад

      well thank god for the internet and globalization!! Surely, you can have whatever you drank in deutschland delivered to your front door, even by drone if you wanted

    • @misterghee1
      @misterghee1 Год назад

      Call the absinth bar in antibes France ✌️😎

  • @keyscook
    @keyscook 9 месяцев назад

    The touted excellent absinthe that I was treated to absolutely juniper berry -> lemon balm-> light licorice -> very light mint profile - Nicely done. Cheers from Seattle!

  • @meb1233
    @meb1233 2 года назад +1

    I've never had absinthe or made alcohol. Thanks, you tube. Great video. What came to mind while watching, especially when you mentioned Swiss Alps was that it was most likely made as a medicinal and colored to show it hade herbs in it and wasn't just a happy drink. With those herbs and Brandy, I guarantee that stuff will knock out any cold or flu with one shot. Maybe two, just in case. I had a friend give me some grain alcohol and Maryjane mix he made. He called it green dragon [super green color]. Nasty taste, seriously the best cold and flu medicine ever!

  • @WeightlessBallast
    @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад +12

    Hello from an undisclosed location on the other side of the globe! Very well done! I have been drinking real absinthe for 20 years now, actually I rarely drink anything else alcoholic. I make absinthe in a copper pot still of 2,5 liters and nowadays I have to make my base alcohol myself, too. I cultivate my own absinthe and angelica (of which I use the root), buy anise (Turkish origin mostly), fennel (maybe central European) and lemon balm from the local supermarket. Hyssop, calamus, petite wormwood and some other experimental ingredients I have bought online. I make both blanche and verte, but the coloration step renders a not very persistent color: it turns brown quite soon but that does not affect the taste. I wouldn't use mint anywhere in the process because then it would be just a herbal mint spirit IMO. Mint schnaps in itself is quite nice, nevertheless. The coloration step is also a bit wasteful because the coloration herbs suck quite a many drops of the precious liquid in them. Licorice/liquorice root can also be used in the coloration step. J de Brevans or was it Duplais praises it in his book as something that cannot be overdone (I'll check the source later). To be continued...

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад +2

      It was neither but J. Fritsch, New treatise on the fabrication of liquors with the latest procedures, 1891. Source: The Absinthe Encyclopedia by David Nathan-Maister.

    • @Mr_Yod
      @Mr_Yod Год назад

      Artemisia absinthium itself (fresh leaves at least) can be use for coloring: it gives an almost unnatural emerald green color.
      But yeah: it degrades (I suspect due to light) to a yellow color after a few weeks.

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast Год назад

      @@Mr_Yod And traditionally no A. absinthium was added after distillation as it would make the distillate bitter again. Today I made a 55% verte coloured with lemon balm and A. pontica and it tastes OK. The colour is nice bright emerald: 50 ml of the clear distillate was put in a coffee pot with said herbs (total amount of distillate 300ml), heated to circa 40 degrees Celsius for 15 minutes, then poured through a sieve (no paper filtering as I do not mind the sediment) and after cooling down added back to the distillate. I'll report next weekend how it developed.

    • @Mr_Yod
      @Mr_Yod Год назад

      @@WeightlessBallast I always thought that original absinth WAS bitter, hence the tradition of the sugar cube melted with cold water

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast Год назад

      @@Mr_Yod Most likely because sugar would not dissolve very well in undiluted absinthe. And according to some, sugar or syrup was added to other alcoholic drinks as well in bistros, before the cocktail era. True, even real absinthe is bitter, in the same sense that tea is---bitter may be an incorrect word but I'm not native English speaker. Astringent?
      A side note. The "Czech absinth revival" in the 1990s was a marketing ploy that had no relevance in the history of absinthe. They basically made wormwood-infused strong liquor that had to be made somewhat more drinkable and cool-looking by burning sugar above the glass--not a way of preparation anywhere in historic times, just a modern invention. That is why absinthusiasts refer to Czech 'absinth' (German spelling) instead of 'absinthe'. Nowadays there are serious makers of absinthe in Czechia, Germany and other countries, unlike 20 years ago. My favorite is the Swedish Grön Opal.

  • @tommymayfield814
    @tommymayfield814 2 года назад +1

    I like your honesty. Alot of people would have just bought store absinthe to make up for the loss.

  • @gravelrhoads
    @gravelrhoads 2 года назад +6

    As an American, I just can't get my head around celsius for temps for some reason, but I much prefer metric for weights and measures. Just so much more precise.
    I love your outlook on everything and you present such a positive attitude to your craft that is appreciated!

    • @thrash208
      @thrash208 2 года назад +5

      The easiest way to think about it is
      0°C is freezing point of water
      100°C is boiling point for water

    • @tommymaddox6785
      @tommymaddox6785 2 года назад

      @@thrash208 in a practical sense the Celsius system works fantastic when you live in a place that has freezing temperatures, especially if this is a frequent occurrence. Or if you work with particularly high or low temperatures as part of your job
      I find F is nice when you live in an area that is primarily 60-100F range and the granularity is nice in assessing indoor/outdoor comfort.

  • @AcM.5233
    @AcM.5233 Год назад +1

    I'll have to add a caveat to that previous statement. I was fortunate to have a distiller make true absence for me once and the euphoric experience that it gave me was almost like me eating a mushroom. It opened my eyes to a world that was hidden behind a veil and really helped me find peace in my soul

  • @printz-of-peepz
    @printz-of-peepz 2 года назад +3

    I don't even drink these days, but this was a pretty cool YT recommendation. As a cannabis grower, I follow several cannabis growing content creators. It's interesting to me that YT hates those creators, yet not distillers. Cannabis is so much safer, in growing it and consuming it. It's legal to grow cannabis in quite a few states in the US now too. Yet, YT rarely allows these channels to monetize. Usually, once they show their plants, no more monetization. Cheers/💨happy stilling and growing all you creators of your preferred stress relief! Love when peeps get their head meds outside of corporate society!

  • @lawrenceiverson1924
    @lawrenceiverson1924 Год назад +1

    To put on bottom to stop burning you can just bend a couple coat hangers to fit and keep bag off bottom !!!

  • @1000186ful
    @1000186ful 2 года назад +4

    I dont have a still but I really enjoy learning how you do it

  • @nonchip
    @nonchip Год назад +1

    48 is a multiple of 12, which was used for essentially ever as an "everyday counting" base (because you have 12 finger segments you can point at with your thumb), so that measure might just been "some amount of dozens" originally and nobody bothered to round to 50%.

  • @Markus__B
    @Markus__B 2 года назад +51

    In the written recipe you have listed mint twice. the second 53g one should be lemon balm.

  • @richardturk7162
    @richardturk7162 3 месяца назад

    Here in the USA there was one old man in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky that produced some of the best moonshine I ever tasted and he was making absinthe as well.
    I did taste a sip of it with the traditional sugar cube and it was an intense experience.
    He also made a star anise and fennel moonshine which tasted incredible.
    Sadly he was in his 90s when I met him and that was 30 years ago.
    Moonshine making was all he knew because his family had been making it since the late 1700s

  • @pugster1969
    @pugster1969 2 года назад +8

    the sweetness you talk about from the commercial absinthe comes from star anise , ive made multiple different recipes for absinthe and the best one ive found is in dale pendells Pharmako/Poeia book (recipe can be easily found online )

  • @daniellord-vera6987
    @daniellord-vera6987 Год назад +1

    so for absinth there are 4 different colours cloudy, green hue, blue hue and clear which give off different flavours and % in alcohol blue is hard to do im not sure what other herb you need to add but its very good.

  • @rockm6772
    @rockm6772 2 года назад +9

    I never realized until I started buying some, that it wasn’t supposed to make you trip, but rather just make you feel groovy due to the herbs having relaxing properties.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +4

      Pretty much, no real basis to it making you trip. But there may be something to be said about it giving you a "lucid buz". More to explore later with Alan :)

    • @DGPHolyHandgrenade
      @DGPHolyHandgrenade 2 года назад +5

      Yeah, there's some mild hallucinogenic properties of the wormwood, however you need massive amounts. For absinthe to make you trip like the myths around it, you'd have to be pretty much on deaths bed requiring a stomach pump to save you from alcohol poisoning ;)

    • @yanasitta
      @yanasitta 2 года назад

      @@DGPHolyHandgrenade I went to a few Green Fairy parties and the it definitely felt like a pre ecstasy buzz.

    • @noodlelynoodle.
      @noodlelynoodle. 2 года назад

      @@DGPHolyHandgrenade the reason that there are stories of people tripping from it are from copper based compounds that were used in cheap absinthes to color them green back in the day that were literally poisoning the drinker. The thujone from the wormwood gives it a very slight stimulant property in comparison to a standard alcohol but not like a hallucinogenic experience

    • @DGPHolyHandgrenade
      @DGPHolyHandgrenade 2 года назад

      @@noodlelynoodle. copper poisoning doesnt tend to create the "absinthism" effects documented. What was discovered though is that because it was an ethanol extraction that it did compound the effects of severe alcoholism, which does induce hallucinogenic effects.
      From a relatively recent scientific paper "Thujones’ purported hallucinogenic and epileptogenic effects have been disproven except at extremely high concentrations, and “absinthism” has been largely proven to be a result of alcoholism."
      The point remains though....wanna trip, absinthe isnt the way to go.

  • @brucetidwell7715
    @brucetidwell7715 2 года назад +6

    Fascinating journey to go on! I'm not sure about the anise seed, but all of those other botanicals should grow well in the average temperate herb garden (as Switzerland is/was). That might be more affordable, though not as quick.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +1

      Definitly not as quick because its actually better dried, generally for 2-4 years. But yes DEFINITLY cheaper. Also much more satisfying I would guess!

    • @brucetidwell7715
      @brucetidwell7715 2 года назад +2

      @@StillIt two to for years? Really? For herbs? I don't know. I only use them for cooking but 24 hours in a dehydrator, our 3 or 4 days hanging in the pantry is enough for that.

  • @Mp-jw1qg
    @Mp-jw1qg 2 года назад

    I added wormwood to a 5 gallon cask of fresh blackberry and sweet blackcherry mead made with cactus and lemon tree honey. i aged it for 15 months with the wormwood and racked it and carbonated a bunch of cans and put the rest in a glass cask. Everyone loved it. Had a unique buzz to it for sure.

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard 2 года назад +72

    2 things will add to your louching effect. 1) Looks to me like you took a LOT of distillate at the beginning. Way more than 5ml. There's a lot of the louching stuffs up-front. 2) It gets stronger as you make more batches and re-insert your feints into the spirit-run and the tails into the actual macerate and oils build-up. Oh, also, more aniseed will give more louche, but you were going for something more historical so perhaps it louched less back then.

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +18

      Thanks a but load for the tips my dude!

  • @lonock1100
    @lonock1100 2 года назад +1

    I just bought a bottle of Absente. Then this video Pops up. Cheers!! And Thanks.

  • @woodzeedragon
    @woodzeedragon 2 года назад +9

    Sounds like you're really starting to "fall in love" with the whole botanical/herb mix and balance with all the possibilities it can create, part of the absinthe research hunt and discovery. It really seemed to light a fire under your clear to see passion for this adventure! Congratulations on your success and looking forward to seeing what you do with it next!
    But I also have a question that just might also be a suggestion to spark another hunt...in the same vein of botanical alchemy from history, have you ever heard of or tried Benedictine? An age old monk favorite?

  • @LockD
    @LockD Год назад

    20 years ago i made absinthe from a very old recipe from a valley some people said i came from. i did not have a destiller, so i more or less just bought some 90 percent alkohol and put all the ingredients into it and let it sit for some time. when it came out i had the same reaction as you had. it was very herbal in the taste, and i think it hit the back of my throath area with the taste. it did not taste as modern Absinthe does at all. i allways thought the reason for that, was that i didnt have a destiller. but it seems like it was not the reason. but what a trip down memory lane you just gave me. thanks !

  • @jameshaulenbeek5931
    @jameshaulenbeek5931 2 года назад +3

    While I can't (easily) distill legally where I live, I've considered making an extract version using high proof grain alcohol. I've only had absinthe once, but I enjoyed it tremendously. I have also had beers made with many of the same herbs to flavor and bitter them, which I also thoroughly enjoyed - a pleasant departure from hops.

    • @nojuanatall3281
      @nojuanatall3281 Год назад

      It only illegal if you get caught.

    • @jameshaulenbeek5931
      @jameshaulenbeek5931 Год назад

      @@nojuanatall3281 where I live, they're looking for it. We have a strong history of bootlegging in NC.

  • @jasonz1810
    @jasonz1810 2 года назад +1

    Wow seems like a quick turnaround for you distillers thesis from the time i heard the podcast to the time i saw this video. Not gonna lie after listening to the podcast i had to reach into the cabinet and have a go at our absinthe from a local distiller here in Detroit. After louching it down it was much more palatable, and yes the addition of root beer or Dr. Pepper was quite nice and complementary. Thank both you and Alan for that podcast.

    • @hipgnosis2
      @hipgnosis2 2 года назад

      Absolutely welcome!!!

  • @Invictus13666
    @Invictus13666 2 года назад +3

    Hard to tell with the goofy green light but I believe the louche on yours is much more pleasing to the eye. It looks like green abalone shell, all shimmery and pretty.

    • @WeightlessBallast
      @WeightlessBallast 2 года назад

      Better too little coloration than too much. Also I was about to ask whether the spinach was dried but it looked like fresh. What will the oxalic (sp?) acid in the leaves do, by the way, isn't t there some in spinach?

  • @Wagoo
    @Wagoo Год назад +1

    Grand Gruyere is my fave spirit from that region. It's very green, made with herbs, doesn't taste aniseedy at all.. but it's incredibly hard to get a bottle outside of going to the small town of Gruyere. On the plus side the H.R. Giger museum is there for something to do.. and in the cafe you get a shot of Grand Gruyere with your "alien coffee"

  • @Im_The_Dude
    @Im_The_Dude 2 года назад +5

    I was at a curiosity shop the other day, and they had an absinthe fountain that was gorgeous with a full pour kit and glasses.
    Very cool!

    • @MostlyInteresting
      @MostlyInteresting 2 года назад +1

      Be careful that those are not just re-pops being sold as old!!!

    • @Im_The_Dude
      @Im_The_Dude 2 года назад

      @@MostlyInteresting i have definitely seen those around! This one had glass that needed cleaning, tarnished silver accents and a very weathered box holding the four absinthe glasses, so I’m pretty sure it was an authentic set, the price tag accompanying it was certainly that of an antique!

    • @MostlyInteresting
      @MostlyInteresting 2 года назад +2

      @@Im_The_Dude Just be careful out there and don't get ripped off!

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +3

      I think I may actually need to keep an eye out for one now.

  • @lesliefranklin1870
    @lesliefranklin1870 11 месяцев назад +1

    As the old saying goes, "Absinth makes the heart grow fonder."

  • @nicg8878
    @nicg8878 2 года назад +3

    Thanks Jesse, a highly informative and genuinely interesting video! I feel like this caters to everyone, both professionals and home distillers :)

  • @coreyvisser7004
    @coreyvisser7004 Год назад

    A fellow New Zealander, Good day sir. Love me some absinthe. Usually go for the Green Tree but have also enjoyed a bit of Hapsburg although not often.

  • @lordsqueak
    @lordsqueak 2 года назад +5

    One route related to Absinthe, could be to try to make Malört snaps.
    Malört is the Swedish name for Wormwood. As I understand it, the flavors are different because snaps is usually made by steeping herbs in pure spirits, vodka or brännvin, and since the ABV is lower, different chemicals steep out of it. (I wonder if redistilling malört snaps would make it more absinthy ? )

    • @hipgnosis2
      @hipgnosis2 2 года назад +1

      That would be a fun "meme" spirits Jesse! Redistill Malort with other botanicals! Rabbit hole....and go!!!!!!

  • @moss1transcendant
    @moss1transcendant 2 года назад +1

    This video just inspired me to make up a Xmas rum brew. I can't wait till Xmas.

  • @BrotherHoodMovies331
    @BrotherHoodMovies331 2 года назад +13

    I think the reason for the 48/52 split comes from one of two places, either it has its roots in Sacred Geometry and Western European Christian Mystic Esotericism, OR its because if you do a 50/50 split on the colouring it becomes too green and doesnt look right, and to be honest in my opinion its probably a combination of the lot.
    Great video Jesse, really reminds me of somethings i found doing research into older Gin and Genièvre practices.

    • @stonehartfloydfan
      @stonehartfloydfan 2 года назад +1

      Very close and correct on the Christian mysticism, 48 is an Angelic number representing abundance and health etc.

  • @JAFO.
    @JAFO. 9 месяцев назад

    Next batch or into following batches a few pinches of fenugreek tend to intricate the flavour palette and produce a smoother mouth feel.

  • @redeye1978
    @redeye1978 2 года назад +6

    You will not fully know the quality of your absinthe until the Green Fairy tells you how good it is, so the question really is.. did she?🧚~ la fée verte ~🧚🇨🇭

  • @blahblahblahblech
    @blahblahblahblech Год назад

    I made Absinth by macerating all of the herbs in 151 and then cutting it with water. Then I distilled it in a very rudimentary pot still. colored it with mint. It turned out awesome. I believe that it got its reputation for having a hallucinogenic effects, because if you enjoy the absinth before magic mushrooms, it will definitely enhance the experience.

  • @vatablous
    @vatablous 2 года назад +3

    These videos always come at the right time! I was just thinking about making some.

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko Год назад +1

    12:57 - Several of the reasons Absinthe had such initial renown was because medicinal herbs and the elixirs crafted from them were considered a form of healthcare, and at that time only the wealthy could afford to casually be consuming healing drinks on a routine basis. In addition, considering you are going to be adding so much of these, what were in the day, expensive herbs into distilling the spirit the crafter would not skimp on either the source fruit or labor involved (its going to be high priced and cater to the wealthy, might as well really cater to the wealthy). So this resulted in good quality, high proof, crafted flavors bottled and served with some taste and flair.
    Over time this then created the air of prestige around the drink that persisted for a long time. It became cheaper to make and fell out of fashion for awhile. And then like all things that were niche and fall out of popular fashion.... the "hipsters" took over. In the Late 19th and early 20th century these crazy new fangled artists, writers, poets, and painters played on the old prestige around the drink and made it their secret little obsession. Of course as artists were keen to behaving strangely and telling vivid tales with strange new ideas the public decided that absinthe must be responsible for this wild behavior and strange art. The general population looked down upon these wild and crazy "bohemian" ways, and created cautionary tails about drinking absinthe. "It'll drive you mad", "You'll see strange hallucinations", "The herbs they put in those have mystic properties", etc. The artists reveled in the mystique and even played into it to some extent.
    And this old public perception is why several decades later it was banned again as potentially being dangerous, and then like most things turned out to be mostly fictional fear mongering that persisted over almost 2 centuries.

  • @beardedxj
    @beardedxj 2 года назад +4

    After seeing how you made the botanicals has me thinking.... what about adding doing a similar spirit where the botanical have sarspirilla root or even marshmallow roots to add some other flavors.....

    • @StillIt
      @StillIt  2 года назад +2

      Dude, get out of my head! I have been planning a rootbeer spirit haha

    • @beardedxj
      @beardedxj 2 года назад

      @@StillIt I used to collect sarsparilla root in the wild and chew on it. Has many medicinal properties and one of them being it kind of numbs your mouth. Do you think that could transfer into the spirits?
      Also try a batch with marshmallow as well, maybe you can get a root beer float.
      I can't wait to see what you do with the root beer!

    • @davidg4288
      @davidg4288 2 года назад

      @@StillIt Root beer in USA used to be made with sassafras root. But sassafras contains safrole which is carcinogenic so the food and drug administration prohibited it a long time ago. People drank root beer and sassafras tea all the time so I don't know how dangerous it actually was. My suspicion is they also wanted to control the safrole which is used to produce illegal substances.