Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It is made from a secret recipe based on more than twenty types of herbs and spices. Becherovka is often described as having a gingery or cinnamon flavor. [ 2 ] Its alcohol content is 38% ABV (76 proof), [ 1 ] and it is usually served chilled.
Vodka, gin, baijiu, shōchū, soju, tequila, rum, whisky, brandy, and singani are examples of distilled drinks. Beer, wine, cider, sake, and huangjiu are examples of fermented drinks. Hard liquor is used in North America, and India, to distinguish distilled drinks from undistilled ones, and to suggest that undistilled are implicitly weaker.
This is a list of vodka brands. Vodka is a distilled beverage composed primarily of water and ethanol, sometimes with traces of impurities and flavorings. Vodka is made by the distillation of fermented substances such as grains, potatoes, or sometimes fruits or sugar. The classic preparation is performed using grain or potatoes.
To help you narrow down your choices and make your next trip to the liquor store a bit easier, we chatted with drink experts to break down 9 of the most popular types of vodka based on their ...
Red Eye – beer, tomato juice (or clamato in Canada), with optional lemon or hot sauce [2] Sake bomb – Shot of sake poured or dropped into a glass of beer; Shandy or radler – Beer with lemonade, citrus soda, ginger beer, ginger ale, or fruit juice, e.g. grapefruit [3] [4] [5] Snakebite – Equal parts lager and cider; Somaek – Soju mixed ...
Koskenkorva Vodka is the same beverage (but with 40% or 60% alcohol instead of the traditional 38%) without the added sugar, intended for foreign markets, but sold in Finland also. [ 2 ] Besides the standard 38% near-unflavored there are several variants of Koskenkorva on the market, most notably the famous Salmiakki Koskenkorva , better known ...
A U-boot is a beer cocktail that is made by placing a shot of vodka into a glass of beer, typically a lager. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is popular in Germany , Poland , North Macedonia , and Flanders . In Germany, the liquor korn is sometimes used instead, while in Flanders and the Netherlands , jonge jenever is preferred.
Island Distillers in Honolulu makes 100-US-proof (50% Alcohol by volume) Hawaiian ʻŌkolehao, a re-creation of the original ʻōkolehao. [6] There have been several past and recent productions of an okolehao type liqueur which is made by blending extracts of ti plant root, or ground up and emulsified ti root, with sugar syrup, rum, neutral spirits, bourbon, and other artificial and natural ...