Mr. Vagabond and I have been spying a bottle of legal Absinthe in a local liquor store for a couple of weeks. This past weekend, we forked over $70 and bought it. And so begins the tale...
We were completely giddy with the idea of it all. After our purchase, we hopped into the truck and started plotting our wonderful evening-to-come. While sitting at the very swank Sonic having burgers for dinner, I pulled the Absinthe out of the bag. Two neon green eyes were the only decoration on the glossy, black bottle and they looked as though they had secrets to tell. Secrets that we would only learn while sipping that glorious concoction.
We grinned and talked about how exotic it would be, pouring the liquor over that little lump of sugar and watching it dissolve into something just this side of heaven. We even joked that we would probably end up having to make an Absinthe allowance in our budget in the future.
We stopped off to get a bag of ice, since the refrigerator is acting more like a cooler these days, so that we could have the perfect, icy cold water to add to our glasses. Although we don't own any delicate crystal and there's nary a slotted spoon to be found in our house, we figured it would still work ok using iced tea glasses and a fork. Hey - forks have slots! Well, kinda.
We arrived at home and Mr. Vagabond harnessed up the doggie for her evening potty break. We wanted to make sure nothing interrupted the Absinthe experience once it began, so getting the potty break out of the way was critical to that evening's success.
And finally, it was time. Hubby put ice in the blender with Smart Water - not any old water would do - and whirred it up until it was perfect. Shoving a couple of dirty glasses out of the way, I cleared a spot on the sink counter for the two clean glasses. I read the bottle again and learned that I had it backward. 1.5 ounces of Absinthe added to the glass, sugar cube on top of the slotted spoon (ok, it was a fork) and 2 - 3 ounces of ice cold water dripped slooooooowly over the sugar cube. The bottle explained how the potent aroma of herbs would quickly fill the room as the water mixed with the Absinthe. Also, we were to watch for the "loush", which is apparently the technical term for that magical, opalescent reaction when the two liquids mix. "Loushing", they call it.
I filled a pink measuring cup with 1.5 ounces of Absinthe for each of our glasses, poured it in, carefully rested a fork on the rim of one glass and placed a sugar cube on the fork. Another pink measuring cup held the ice water and unfortunately that proved to be a very messy way to pour. Why can't my measuring cups also have spouts? Oh well.
As the water trickled over the sugar and into the glass, it did swirl around beautifully as the Absinthe became cloudy. Suddenly, the room was completely filled with the strong scent of Anise. Not one of my favorites, I might add. My entire kitchen smelled like the original "Green Death Nyquil" tastes. Trying very hard to not recall memories of my last bout with the flu, we prepared the second glass.
We grinned like fools at each other with very obvious ideas running through our heads about how elegant we were, standing in the kitchen with the painted plywood floor and no real kitchen cabinets to speak of. We went into the living room and hesitated for just a moment before that first sip.
Raising the glasses to our anxious mouths, we looked at each other as we took our first sips. Oh my GOD. The look on his face couldn't have been as bad as mine, but it was probably close. This was the most indescribably disgusting stuff either of us had ever tasted. And we were doing it on purpose! This was way worse than lima beans at Aunt Ann's house when I was a kid. I had to eat those in order to get a piece of chocolate cake after dinner! We both instantly set the glasses on the table and just stared at them as if they were wicked creatures. Mr. Vagabond said something to the effect of, "Holy cow - you know, they talk about that green fairy. I think she pooped in my glass!" That's it! We were drinking fairy poo. Fairy poo that had been out in the sun on a soggy leaf for about a week!
I find it very difficult to describe the actual taste of this Absinthe. From the smell of my kitchen and the smell of the cork, one would think that it would taste strongly of anise. Not so. First, it was extremely watery and very earthy, but not in a good way. Almost like someone made a weak, alcoholic tea out of my compost pile in the backyard, but there was no alcohol taste at all.
Ohhhhhh but wait a minute. You see, we did deliberately keep drinking the stuff. And then we noticed something. Something akin to being intoxicated with alcohol, but not quite. Something was a little different. "I'm feeling it - I think", said hubby, and I replied, "Me too". So what did we do? We drank every drop, wrenched our faces into many contorted positions and then we fixed another round!
Ordinarily, even if a drink is bad, once you get the first one down the second isn't so awful. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case here. If anything, the second was worse than the first because our stomachs were beginning to revolt. But we are smart, my hubby and me. We carefully sipped between bouts with nausea, determined to get at least two glasses down the hatch.
And then it was over. We sat there watching a little reality TV and my head became heavy as a boulder. Hubby was sinking down in his chair little by little until he was almost horizontal. I told him, "I don't feel drunk - I feel high". He agreed, not that either of us know what that feels like. *ahem*
I waited and wondered when that green fairy would arrive. I wanted to be filled with inspiration. I wanted to paint, hubby wanted to play his guitar, we wanted to create something that would last for generations. But she never did visit us. At least not in the living room. My best guess is that she was busy pooping into that lovely black bottle with the mysterious green eyes. Dirty little fairy.
We were completely giddy with the idea of it all. After our purchase, we hopped into the truck and started plotting our wonderful evening-to-come. While sitting at the very swank Sonic having burgers for dinner, I pulled the Absinthe out of the bag. Two neon green eyes were the only decoration on the glossy, black bottle and they looked as though they had secrets to tell. Secrets that we would only learn while sipping that glorious concoction.
We grinned and talked about how exotic it would be, pouring the liquor over that little lump of sugar and watching it dissolve into something just this side of heaven. We even joked that we would probably end up having to make an Absinthe allowance in our budget in the future.
We stopped off to get a bag of ice, since the refrigerator is acting more like a cooler these days, so that we could have the perfect, icy cold water to add to our glasses. Although we don't own any delicate crystal and there's nary a slotted spoon to be found in our house, we figured it would still work ok using iced tea glasses and a fork. Hey - forks have slots! Well, kinda.
We arrived at home and Mr. Vagabond harnessed up the doggie for her evening potty break. We wanted to make sure nothing interrupted the Absinthe experience once it began, so getting the potty break out of the way was critical to that evening's success.
And finally, it was time. Hubby put ice in the blender with Smart Water - not any old water would do - and whirred it up until it was perfect. Shoving a couple of dirty glasses out of the way, I cleared a spot on the sink counter for the two clean glasses. I read the bottle again and learned that I had it backward. 1.5 ounces of Absinthe added to the glass, sugar cube on top of the slotted spoon (ok, it was a fork) and 2 - 3 ounces of ice cold water dripped slooooooowly over the sugar cube. The bottle explained how the potent aroma of herbs would quickly fill the room as the water mixed with the Absinthe. Also, we were to watch for the "loush", which is apparently the technical term for that magical, opalescent reaction when the two liquids mix. "Loushing", they call it.
I filled a pink measuring cup with 1.5 ounces of Absinthe for each of our glasses, poured it in, carefully rested a fork on the rim of one glass and placed a sugar cube on the fork. Another pink measuring cup held the ice water and unfortunately that proved to be a very messy way to pour. Why can't my measuring cups also have spouts? Oh well.
As the water trickled over the sugar and into the glass, it did swirl around beautifully as the Absinthe became cloudy. Suddenly, the room was completely filled with the strong scent of Anise. Not one of my favorites, I might add. My entire kitchen smelled like the original "Green Death Nyquil" tastes. Trying very hard to not recall memories of my last bout with the flu, we prepared the second glass.
We grinned like fools at each other with very obvious ideas running through our heads about how elegant we were, standing in the kitchen with the painted plywood floor and no real kitchen cabinets to speak of. We went into the living room and hesitated for just a moment before that first sip.
Raising the glasses to our anxious mouths, we looked at each other as we took our first sips. Oh my GOD. The look on his face couldn't have been as bad as mine, but it was probably close. This was the most indescribably disgusting stuff either of us had ever tasted. And we were doing it on purpose! This was way worse than lima beans at Aunt Ann's house when I was a kid. I had to eat those in order to get a piece of chocolate cake after dinner! We both instantly set the glasses on the table and just stared at them as if they were wicked creatures. Mr. Vagabond said something to the effect of, "Holy cow - you know, they talk about that green fairy. I think she pooped in my glass!" That's it! We were drinking fairy poo. Fairy poo that had been out in the sun on a soggy leaf for about a week!
I find it very difficult to describe the actual taste of this Absinthe. From the smell of my kitchen and the smell of the cork, one would think that it would taste strongly of anise. Not so. First, it was extremely watery and very earthy, but not in a good way. Almost like someone made a weak, alcoholic tea out of my compost pile in the backyard, but there was no alcohol taste at all.
Ohhhhhh but wait a minute. You see, we did deliberately keep drinking the stuff. And then we noticed something. Something akin to being intoxicated with alcohol, but not quite. Something was a little different. "I'm feeling it - I think", said hubby, and I replied, "Me too". So what did we do? We drank every drop, wrenched our faces into many contorted positions and then we fixed another round!
Ordinarily, even if a drink is bad, once you get the first one down the second isn't so awful. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case here. If anything, the second was worse than the first because our stomachs were beginning to revolt. But we are smart, my hubby and me. We carefully sipped between bouts with nausea, determined to get at least two glasses down the hatch.
And then it was over. We sat there watching a little reality TV and my head became heavy as a boulder. Hubby was sinking down in his chair little by little until he was almost horizontal. I told him, "I don't feel drunk - I feel high". He agreed, not that either of us know what that feels like. *ahem*
I waited and wondered when that green fairy would arrive. I wanted to be filled with inspiration. I wanted to paint, hubby wanted to play his guitar, we wanted to create something that would last for generations. But she never did visit us. At least not in the living room. My best guess is that she was busy pooping into that lovely black bottle with the mysterious green eyes. Dirty little fairy.
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