trixie-pea wrote:One of the bartenders at the Green Mill told me that Malört, in addition to being delicious, is also a miracle hangover cure.
MLS wrote:... The wormwood is an added bonus, although totally illusionary, like the hallucinatory effects of meszcal or nutmeg.
MLS wrote:Any hallucinogenic effect of Malort is illusionary, not real.
Alchemist wrote: We had a bitter off between Malort and Unicum the other night after dinner. We decided they were both wonderful, but so different we couldn't compare them.
nicinchic wrote:I had my first, last and only shot of Malort at Rite Liquors.
Yelper wrote:From its exterior one would assume a hooch emporium of staggering proportions, long-forgotten bottles of slowly fermenting elixirs lining the dusty shelves like forgotten tomes in an Alexandrian library.
What you actually get is more like a sketchy 7-11-ish booze depot with 48 foot ceilings.
The 'top shelf' liquors don't go much above what they would in any off-brand old man tap room and the beer selection is ...
shabby, I guess. Rather shabby.
Fighting your way through six panhandlers, two chicks dressed like Hooters waitresses, a shank-wielding addict and two pretty bored looking hipster girls to get in the door is kind of fun, but if you were expecting anything better than Blue Moon (not that there's anything wrong with Blue Moon. It's delicious) then you're going to have to fight your way back out, only this time it'll be through the sad, downtrodden middle-aged folks playing the Lotto.
nicinchic wrote:And thanks Aschie30 for having the decorum to not ask what the heck I was doing in that place.
I know from visiting family in France that they treat Campari and similar bitters as well as anisettes as pre-meal aperitifs, with cognac, whiskeys and fortified wines as digestifs.
MLS wrote:I know from visiting family in France that they treat Campari and similar bitters as well as anisettes as pre-meal aperitifs, with cognac, whiskeys and fortified wines as digestifs.
Matt, your family in France will disown you! No self-respecting Frenchman would ever have anisette as a pre-meal aperitif. You are probably confusing pastis, the beloved anise flavored libation (which is not sweet) from southern France usually sold by Pernod and Ricard with the sweet anisette more often had in Italy with espresso. You are lucky you are not Greek-you might have a contract on you if you called ouzo anisette!
LAZ wrote:I've been thinking that I'd like to try Malort as a cooking ingredient, but I haven't hit on the right food yet.
Alchemist wrote:...We had a bitter off between Malort and Unicum the other night after dinner. We decided they were both wonderful, but so different we couldn't compare them.
I agree that it could be great in a cocktail, and if ever there was a liquid made for an eyedropper, this is it. I will talk to my guys and get a couple of bottles in to mess around with. I can see a Chicago Negroni thing coming to fruition, NOT in equal parts!!!....
Toby
Binko wrote:Man, I just got fooled today....instead of saying Unicum on it, it simply says "Zwack." Now, Zwack is a Hungarian liquor producer, of which Unicum is one of its products, and Hungarian bottles feature both the names Unicum and Zwack on them, and look like this. The rebranded Unicum Next (or whatever it is exactly), which is sold as "Zwack" here in the States, looks like this.
Beware the ersatz Unicum!
Khaopaat wrote:The best we could come up with after the fact is that Zwack sorta tastes like a blend of Jägermeister and ouzo with a squeeze of lemon.
Binko wrote:Khaopaat wrote:The best we could come up with after the fact is that Zwack sorta tastes like a blend of Jägermeister and ouzo with a squeeze of lemon.
I'm trying to find a source in Chicago for real Unicum, not this overly sweet and citrussy Zwack stuff. If anyone has seen it, please let me know. I used to be able to find it at a local liquor store years ago, but now my only source is Hungary and my mom's liquor cabinet (I always bring back several bottles from my trips to Budapest and keep them at the folks' for safe-keeping.) This past Christmas Eve, we did a side-by-side comparison at my folk's place, and we all agreed that the Zwack liquor was vastly inferior. That said, Unicum is a very acquired taste, and would probably be a much more difficult sell in the American market. I believe Zwack liquor was introduced into the American market around 2004, and Unicum Next (which is what Zwack is modeled after, probably just rebranded) came out in the early 2000s in Hungary. It was aimed at a younger demographic, for whom Unicum was too bitter and medicine-y.