Amber DeCadence
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 122
- Location
- South Wales, UK
ooh I am such a fibber! I forgot to add my favourite summer tipple - Pimms! how on earth could I have forgotten
Chanfan said:Oh, and as for Cynar, well, I like artichokes rather a lot. But I agree, I'm not sure I'd have thought of basing a beverage on them.
My copy of the Aperitif Companion mentions that Cynar was selling over a million bottles per annum by 1951, after being introduced in 1949. At the time of publication (1998) they had sales of 12 million. It's supposed to be the 2nd best selling bitters in the world, after Campari.
It's named after cynarina, a substance extracted from artichoke leaves, but also contains many other herbs and spices. Apparently, in it's home country, it's drunk as a digestivo - after meals, but almost everywhere else, as an aperitivo.
Apparently ways to enjoy it include:
Straight.
On the rocks.
With soda, an orange slice, and ice.
50/50 with cola, perhaps with lemon or lime slices.
50/50 with tonic, again with lemon or lime.
Maj.Nick Danger said:Now if someone offers me a nice big frosty mug of Cynar, I will at least taste it to be polite.
dhermann1 said:I seem to remember from Victory Garden many moons ago that artichokes in Europe come from a plant that's a perennial. It's too tender to grow in the US, so we get artichokes from another variety that's an annual. Ours are fairly good tasting, but supposedly the fruit form the European variety is much tastier. So when we think "artichoke" we may not really be thinking of the same plant.
farnham54 said:Perhaps the artichoke liqueur could be mixed with one made from Spinach and we could have a very nice drink for some salty tortilla chips?
Cheers
Craig
FredDairy said:How about Old Smuggler?
Absinthe_1900 said:The only U.S. absinthe forums that matter, http://www.feeverte.net/ and http://wormwoodsociety.org/ (As well as the advanced collectors that hang out in Oxygenee's forum) pretty well roundly slam the cheap oil mixes, and other poorly made products.