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Absinthe

Absinthe (/ˈæbsɪnθ, -sæ̃θ/, French: [apsɛ̃t] ) is an anise-flavored spirit derived from several plants, including the flowers and leaves of Artemisia absinthium ("grand wormwood"), together with green anise, sweet fennel, and other medicinal and culinary herbs.[1] Historically described as a highly alcoholic spirit, it is 45–74% ABV or 90–148 proof US.[2][3][4][5] Absinthe traditionally has a natural green color but may also be colorless. It is commonly referred to in historical literature as la fée verte ("the green fairy"). It is sometimes mistakenly referred to as a liqueur, but is not traditionally bottled with added sugar, so is classified as a spirit.[6] Absinthe is traditionally bottled at a high level of alcohol by volume, but it is normally diluted with water before being consumed.

Absinthe
Reservoir glass with naturally coloured verte absinthe and an absinthe spoon
TypeSpirit
Country of origin Switzerland, France
Alcohol by volume 45–74%
Proof (US)90–148
ColourGreen
FlavourAnise
Ingredients

Absinthe originated in the canton of Neuchâtel in Switzerland in the late 18th century. It rose to great popularity as an alcoholic drink in late 19th- and early 20th-century France, particularly among Parisian artists and writers. The consumption of absinthe was opposed by social conservatives and prohibitionists, partly due to its association with bohemian culture. From Europe and the Americas, notable absinthe drinkers included Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Lewis Carroll, Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, Arthur Rimbaud, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Amedeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso, Vincent van Gogh, Oscar Wilde, Marcel Proust, Aleister Crowley, Erik Satie, Edgar Allan Poe, Lord Byron, and Alfred Jarry.[7][8]

Absinthe has often been portrayed as a dangerously addictive psychoactive drug and hallucinogen.[9] The chemical compound thujone, which is present in the spirit in trace amounts, was blamed for its alleged harmful effects. By 1915, absinthe had been banned in the United States and in much of Europe, including France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, and Austria-Hungary, yet it has not been demonstrated to be any more dangerous than ordinary spirits. Recent studies have shown that absinthe's psychoactive properties (apart from those attributable to alcohol) have been exaggerated.[9]

A revival of absinthe began in the 1990s, following the adoption of modern European Union food and beverage laws that removed long-standing barriers to its production and sale. By the early 21st century, nearly 200 brands of absinthe were being produced in a dozen countries, most notably in France, Switzerland, Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, and the Czech Republic.

Etymology Edit

 
Albert Maignan's Green Muse (1895): A poet succumbs to the Green Fairy

The French word absinthe can refer either to the alcoholic beverage, or less commonly, to the actual wormwood plant. Absinthe is derived from the Latin absinthium, which in turn comes from the Greek ἀψίνθιον apsínthion, "wormwood".[10] The use of Artemisia absinthium in a drink is attested in Lucretius' De Rerum Natura (936–950), where Lucretius indicates that a drink containing wormwood is given as medicine to children in a cup with honey on the brim to make it drinkable.[11] Some claim that the word means "undrinkable" in Greek, but it may instead be linked to the Persian root spand or aspand, or the variant esfand, which meant Peganum harmala, also called Syrian rue, although it is not actually a variety of rue, another famously bitter herb.[citation needed] That Artemisia absinthium was commonly burned as a protective offering may suggest that its origins lie in the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European language root *spend, meaning "to perform a ritual" or "make an offering". Whether the word was a borrowing from Persian into Greek, or from a common ancestor of both, is unclear.[12] Alternatively, the Greek word may originate in a pre-Greek substrate word, marked by the non-Indo-European consonant complex νθ (-nth). Alternative spellings for absinthe include absinth, absynthe, and absenta. Absinth (without the final e) is a spelling variant most commonly applied to absinthes produced in central and eastern Europe, and is specifically associated with Bohemian-style absinthes.[13]

History Edit

The precise origin of absinthe is unclear. The medical use of wormwood dates back to ancient Egypt and is mentioned in the Ebers Papyrus, around 1550 BC. Wormwood extracts and wine-soaked wormwood leaves were used as remedies by the ancient Greeks. Moreover, some evidence exists of a wormwood-flavoured wine in ancient Greece called absinthites oinos.[14]

The first evidence of absinthe, in the sense of a distilled spirit containing green anise and fennel, dates to the 18th century. According to popular legend, it began as an all-purpose patent remedy created by Dr. Pierre Ordinaire, a French doctor living in Couvet, Switzerland, around 1792 (the exact date varies by account). Ordinaire's recipe was passed on to the Henriod sisters of Couvet, who sold it as a medicinal elixir. By other accounts, the Henriod sisters may have been making the elixir before Ordinaire's arrival. In either case, a certain Major Dubied acquired the formula from the sisters in 1797 and opened the first absinthe distillery named Dubied Père et Fils in Couvet with his son Marcellin and son-in-law Henry-Louis Pernod. In 1805, they built a second distillery in Pontarlier, France, under the company name Maison Pernod Fils.[15] Pernod Fils remained one of the most popular brands of absinthe until the drink was banned in France in 1914.

Growth of consumption Edit

 
An absinthe frappé, a common way to serve absinthe with simple syrup, water, and crushed ice

Absinthe's popularity grew steadily through the 1840s, when it was given to French troops as a malaria preventive,[16] and the troops brought home their taste for it. Absinthe became so popular in bars, bistros, cafés, and cabarets by the 1860s that the hour of 5 pm was called l'heure verte ("the green hour").[17] It was favoured by all social classes, from the wealthy bourgeoisie to poor artists and ordinary working-class people. By the 1880s, mass production had caused the price to drop sharply, and the French were drinking 36 million litres per year by 1910, compared to their annual consumption of almost 5 billion litres of wine.[15][18]

Absinthe was exported widely from France and Switzerland and attained some degree of popularity in other countries, including Spain, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the Czech Republic. It was never banned in Spain or Portugal, and its production and consumption have never ceased. It gained a temporary spike in popularity there during the early 20th century, corresponding with the Art Nouveau and Modernism aesthetic movements.[19]

New Orleans has a cultural association with absinthe and is credited as the birthplace of the Sazerac, perhaps the earliest absinthe cocktail. The Old Absinthe House bar on Bourbon Street began selling absinthe in the first half of the 19th century. Its Catalan lease-holder, Cayetano Ferrer, named it the Absinthe Room in 1874 due to of the popularity of the drink, which was served in the Parisian style.[20] It was frequented by Mark Twain, Oscar Wilde, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Aleister Crowley, and Frank Sinatra.[20][21]

Bans Edit

Absinthe became associated with violent crimes and social disorder, and one modern writer claims that this trend was spurred by fabricated claims and smear campaigns, which he claims were orchestrated by the temperance movement and the wine industry.[22] One critic claimed:[23]

Absinthe makes you crazy and criminal, provokes epilepsy and tuberculosis, and has killed thousands of French people. It makes a ferocious beast of man, a martyr of woman, and a degenerate of the infant, it disorganizes and ruins the family and menaces the future of the country.

 
L'Absinthe, by Edgar Degas, 1876

Edgar Degas's 1876 painting L'Absinthe can be seen at the Musée d'Orsay epitomising the popular view of absinthe addicts as sodden and benumbed, and Émile Zola described its effects in his novel L'Assommoir.[24]

In 1905, Swiss farmer Jean Lanfray murdered his family and attempted to kill himself after drinking absinthe. Lanfray was an alcoholic who had drunk a lot of wine and brandy before the killings, but that was overlooked or ignored, and blame for the murders was placed solely on his consumption of two glasses of absinthe.[25][26] The Lanfray murders were the tipping point in this hotly debated topic, and a subsequent petition collected more than 82,000 signatures to ban it in Switzerland. A referendum was held on 5 July 1908.[27] It was approved by voters,[27] and the prohibition of absinthe was written into the Swiss constitution.

In 1906, Belgium and Brazil banned the sale and distribution of absinthe, although these were not the first countries to take such action. It had been banned as early as 1898 in the colony of the Congo Free State.[28] The Netherlands banned it in 1909, Switzerland in 1910,[29] the United States in 1912, and France in 1914.[29]

The prohibition of absinthe in France eventually led to the popularity of pastis, and to a lesser extent, ouzo, and other anise-flavoured spirits that do not contain wormwood. Following the conclusion of the First World War, production of the Pernod Fils brand was resumed at the Banus distillery in Catalonia, Spain (where absinthe was still legal),[30][31] but gradually declining sales saw the cessation of production in the 1960s.[32] In Switzerland, the ban served only to drive the production of absinthe underground. Clandestine home distillers produced colourless absinthe (la Bleue), which was easier to conceal from the authorities. Many countries never banned absinthe, notably the United Kingdom, where it had never been as popular as in continental Europe.

Modern revival Edit

 
An advertising poster for Absinthe Beucler

British importer BBH Spirits began to import Hill's Absinth from the Czech Republic in the 1990s, as the UK had never formally banned it, and this sparked a modern resurgence in its popularity. It began to reappear during a revival in the 1990s in countries where it was never banned. Forms of absinthe available during that time consisted almost exclusively of Czech, Spanish, and Portuguese brands that were of recent origin, typically consisting of Bohemian-style products. Connoisseurs considered these of inferior quality and not representative of the 19th-century spirit.[33][34][35][36] In 2000, La Fée Absinthe became the first commercial absinthe distilled and bottled in France since the 1914 ban,[37][38][39][40][41] but it is now one of dozens of brands that are produced and sold within France.

In the Netherlands, the restrictions were challenged by Amsterdam wineseller Menno Boorsma in July 2004, thus confirming the legality of absinthe once again. Similarly, Belgium lifted its long-standing ban on January 1, 2005, citing a conflict with the adopted food and beverage regulations of the single European Market. In Switzerland, the constitutional ban was repealed in 2000 during an overhaul of the national constitution, although the prohibition was written into ordinary law, instead. That law was later repealed, and it was made legal on March 1, 2005.[42]

The drink was never officially banned in Spain, although it began to fall out of favour in the 1940s and almost vanished into obscurity. Catalonia has seen significant resurgence since 2007, when one producer established operations there. Absinthe has never been illegal to import or manufacture in Australia,[43] although importation requires a permit under the Customs (Prohibited Imports) Regulation 1956 due to a restriction on importing any product containing "oil of wormwood".[44] In 2000, an amendment made all wormwood species prohibited herbs for food purposes under Food Standard 1.4.4. Prohibited and Restricted Plants and Fungi. However, this amendment was found inconsistent with other parts of the pre-existing Food Code,[45][46] and it was withdrawn in 2002 during the transition between the two codes, thereby continuing to allow absinthe manufacture and importation through the existing permit-based system. These events were erroneously reported by the media as it having been reclassified from a prohibited product to a restricted product.[47]

 
Absinthe distillation, circa 1904

In 2007, the French brand Lucid became the first genuine absinthe to receive a Certificate of Label Approval for import into the United States since 1912,[48][49] following independent efforts by representatives from Lucid and Kübler to overturn the long-standing U.S. ban.[50] In December 2007, St. George Absinthe Verte produced by St. George Spirits of Alameda, California became the first brand of American-made absinthe produced in the United States since the ban.[51][52] Since that time, other micro-distilleries have started producing small batches in the United States.

The 21st century has seen new types of absinthe, including various frozen preparations, which have become increasingly popular.[53][54][55] The French Absinthe Ban of 1915 was repealed in May 2011 following petitions by the Fédération Française des Spiritueux which represents French distillers.[56]

Production Edit

 
Green anise, one of three main herbs used in the production of absinthe

Most countries have no legal definition for absinthe, whereas the method of production and content of spirits such as whisky, brandy, and gin are globally defined and regulated. Therefore, producers are at liberty to label a product as "absinthe" or "absinth" without regard to any specific legal definition or quality standards.

Producers of legitimate absinthes employ one of two historically defined processes to create the finished spirit – distillation or cold mixing. In the sole country (Switzerland) that does possess a legal definition of absinthe, distillation is the only permitted method of production.[57]

Distilled absinthe Edit

Distilled absinthe employs a method of production similar to that of high-quality gin. Botanicals are initially macerated in distilled base alcohol before being redistilled to exclude bitter principles, and impart the desired complexity and texture to the spirit. The distillation of absinthe first yields a colourless distillate that leaves the alembic at around 72% ABV. The distillate may be reduced and bottled clear, to produce a Blanche or la Bleue absinthe, or it may be coloured to create a verte using natural or artificial colouring.

Traditional absinthes obtain their green color strictly from the chlorophyll of whole herbs, which is extracted from the plants during the secondary maceration. This step involves steeping plants such as petite wormwood, hyssop, and melissa (among other herbs) in the distillate. Chlorophyll from these herbs is extracted in the process, giving the drink its famous green color.[58]

This step also provides a herbal complexity that is typical of high-quality absinthe. The natural coloring process is considered critical for absinthe ageing, since the chlorophyll remains chemically active. The chlorophyll serves a similar role in absinthe that tannins do in wine or brown liquors.[unreliable source?][59]

After the coloring process, the resulting product is diluted with water to the desired percentage of alcohol. The flavor of absinthe is said to improve materially with storage, and many distilleries, before the ban, aged their absinthe in settling tanks before bottling.

Cold mixed absinthe Edit

Many modern absinthes are produced using a cold-mix process. This inexpensive method of production does not involve distillation, and is regarded as inferior for the same reasons that give cause for cheaply compounded gin to be legally differentiated from distilled gin.[60] The cold mixing process involves the simple blending of flavouring essences and artificial colouring in commercial alcohol, in similar fashion to most flavoured vodkas and inexpensive liqueurs and cordials. Some modern cold-mixed absinthes have been bottled at strengths approaching 90% ABV. Others are presented simply as a bottle of plain alcohol with a small amount of powdered herbs suspended within it.

The lack of a formal legal definition in most countries to regulate the production and quality of absinthe has enabled cheaply made products to be falsely presented as traditional in production and composition. In Switzerland, the only country with a formal legal definition of absinthe, any absinthe product not obtained by maceration and distillation or coloured artificially cannot be sold as absinthe.[61]

Ingredients Edit

Absinthe is traditionally prepared from a distillation of neutral alcohol, various herbs, spices, and water. Traditional absinthes were redistilled from a white grape spirit (or eau de vie), while lesser absinthes were more commonly made from alcohol from grains, beets, or potatoes.[62] The principal botanicals are grande wormwood, green anise, and florence fennel, which are often called "the holy trinity".[63] Many other herbs may be used as well, such as petite wormwood (Artemisia pontica or Roman wormwood), hyssop, melissa, star anise, angelica, peppermint, coriander, and veronica.[64]

One early recipe was included in 1864's The English and Australian Cookery Book. It directed the maker to "Take of the tops of wormwood, four pounds; root of angelica, calamus aromaticus, aniseed, leaves of dittany, of each one ounce; alcohol, four gallons. Macerate these substances during eight days, add a little water, and distil by a gentle fire, until two gallons are obtained. This is reduced to a proof spirit, and a few drops of the oil of aniseed added."[65]

Alternative colouring Edit

 
Anise seeds

Adding to absinthe's negative reputation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, unscrupulous makers of the drink omitted the traditional colouring phase of production in favour of adding toxic copper salts to artificially induce a green tint. This practice may be responsible for some of the alleged toxicity historically associated with this beverage. Many modern-day producers resort to other shortcuts, including the use of artificial food coloring to create the green color. Additionally, at least some cheap absinthes produced before the ban were reportedly adulterated with poisonous antimony trichloride, reputed to enhance the louching effect.[66]

Absinthe may also be naturally coloured pink or red using rose or hibiscus flowers.[67] This was referred to as a rose (pink) or rouge (red) absinthe. Only one historical brand of rose absinthe has been documented.[68]

Bottled strength Edit

 
Absinthe spoons are designed to perch a sugar cube atop the glass, over which ice-cold water is dripped to dilute the absinthe. The lip near the centre of the handle lets the spoon rest securely on the rim of the glass.

Absinthe was historically bottled at 45–74% ABV. Some modern Franco–Suisse absinthes are bottled at up to 83% ABV,[69][70] while some modern, cold-mixed bohemian-style absinthes are bottled at up to 89.9% ABV.[71]

Kits Edit

The modern-day interest in absinthe has spawned a rash of absinthe kits from companies that claim they produce homemade absinthe. Kits often call for soaking herbs in vodka or alcohol, or adding a liquid concentrate to vodka or alcohol to create an ersatz absinthe. Such practices usually yield a harsh substance that bears little resemblance to the genuine article, and are considered inauthentic by any practical standard.[72] Some concoctions may even be dangerous, especially if they call for supplementation with potentially poisonous herbs, oils and/or extracts. In at least one documented case, a person suffered acute kidney injury after drinking 10 ml of pure wormwood oil – a dose much higher than that found in absinthe.[73]

Alternatives Edit

In baking[74] and in preparing the classic New Orleans-style Sazerac cocktail,[75] anise-flavored liqueurs and pastis have often been used as a substitute if absinthe is unavailable.

Preparation Edit

 
Preparing absinthe using the traditional method (that does not involve burning)

The traditional French preparation involves placing a sugar cube on top of a specially designed slotted spoon, and placing the spoon on a glass filled with a measure of absinthe. Iced water is poured or dripped over the sugar cube to mix the water into the absinthe. The final preparation contains 1 part absinthe and 3–5 parts water. As water dilutes the spirit, those components with poor water solubility (mainly those from anise, fennel, and star anise) come out of solution and cloud the drink. The resulting milky opalescence is called the louche (Fr. opaque or shady, IPA [luʃ]). The release of these dissolved essences coincides with a perfuming of herbal aromas and flavours that "blossom" or "bloom," and brings out subtleties that are otherwise muted within the neat spirit. This reflects what is perhaps the oldest and purest method of preparation, and is often referred to as the French Method.

The Bohemian method is a recent invention that involves fire, and was not performed during absinthe's peak of popularity in the Belle Époque. Like the French method, a sugar cube is placed on a slotted spoon over a glass containing one shot of absinthe. The sugar is soaked in alcohol (usually more absinthe), then set ablaze. The flaming sugar cube is then dropped into the glass, thus igniting the absinthe. Finally, a shot glass of water is added to douse the flames. This method tends to produce a stronger drink than the French method. A variant of the Bohemian method involves allowing the fire to extinguish on its own. This variant is sometimes referred to as "cooking the absinthe" or "the flaming green fairy". The origin of this burning ritual may borrow from a coffee and brandy drink that was served at Café Brûlot, in which a sugar cube soaked in brandy was set aflame.[66] Most experienced absintheurs do not recommend the Bohemian Method and consider it a modern gimmick, as it can destroy the absinthe flavour and present a fire hazard due to the unusually high alcohol content present in absinthe.[76]

 
Slowly dripping ice water from an absinthe fountain

In 19th century Parisian cafés, upon receiving an order for an absinthe, a waiter would present the patron with a dose of absinthe in a suitable glass, sugar, absinthe spoon, and a carafe of iced water.[77] It was up to the patron to prepare the drink, as the inclusion or omission of sugar was strictly an individual preference, as was the amount of water used. As the popularity of the drink increased, additional accoutrements of preparation appeared, including the absinthe fountain, which was effectively a large jar of iced water with spigots, mounted on a lamp base. This let drinkers prepare a number of drinks at once – and with a hands-free drip, patrons could socialise while louching a glass.

Although many bars served absinthe in standard glassware, a number of glasses were specifically designed for the French absinthe preparation ritual. Absinthe glasses were typically fashioned with a dose line, bulge, or bubble in the lower portion denoting how much absinthe should be poured. One "dose" of absinthe ranged anywhere around 2–2.5 fluid ounces (60–75 ml).

In addition to being prepared with sugar and water, absinthe emerged as a popular cocktail ingredient in both the United Kingdom and the United States. By 1930, dozens of fancy cocktails that called for absinthe had been published in numerous credible bartender guides.[78] One of the most famous of these libations is Ernest Hemingway's "Death in the Afternoon" cocktail, a tongue-in-cheek concoction that contributed to a 1935 collection of celebrity recipes. The directions are: "Pour one jigger absinthe into a Champagne glass. Add iced Champagne until it attains the proper opalescent milkiness. Drink three to five of these slowly."[79]

Styles Edit

Most categorical alcoholic beverages have regulations governing their classification and labelling, while those governing absinthe have always been conspicuously lacking. According to popular treatises from the 19th century, absinthe could be loosely categorised into several grades (ordinaire, demi-fine, fine, and Suisse – the latter does not denote origin), in order of increasing alcoholic strength and quality. Many contemporary absinthe critics simply classify absinthe as distilled or mixed, according to its production method. And while the former is generally considered far superior in quality to the latter, an absinthe's simple claim of being 'distilled' makes no guarantee as to the quality of its base ingredients or the skill of its maker.

 
Modern Absinthes
Vertes at left, blanches at right, and a prepared glass of each
  • Blanche absinthe ("white" in French, also referred to as la Bleue in Switzerland) is bottled directly following distillation and reduction, and is uncoloured (clear). Blanches tend to have a clean, smooth flavour with strongly individuated tasting notes. The name la Bleue was originally a term used for Swiss bootleg absinthe, which was bottled colourless so as to be visually indistinct from other spirits during the era of absinthe prohibition, but has become a popular term for post-ban Swiss-style absinthe in general. Blanches are often lower in alcohol content than vertes, though this is not necessarily so; the only truly differentiating factor is that blanches are not put through a secondary maceration stage, and thus remain colourless like other distilled liquors.
  • Verte absinthe ("green" in French, sometimes called la fée verte) begins as a blanche, and is altered by a secondary maceration stage, in which a separate mixture of herbs is steeped into the clear distillate before bottling. This confers an intense, complex flavor as well as a peridot green hue.[80] Vertes represent the prevailing type of absinthe that was found in the 19th century. Vertes are typically more alcoholic than blanches, as the high amounts of botanical oils conferred during the secondary maceration only remain miscible at lower concentrations of water, thus vertes are usually bottled at closer to still strength. Artificially colored green absinthes may also be claimed to be verte, though they lack the characteristic herbal flavors that result from maceration in whole herbs.
  • Absenta ("absinthe" in Spanish) is sometimes associated with a regional style that often differed slightly from its French cousin. Traditional absentas may taste slightly different due to their use of Alicante anise,[unreliable source?][81] and often exhibit a characteristic citrus flavour.[unreliable source?][82]
  • Hausgemacht (German for home-made, often abbreviated as HG[citation needed]) refers to clandestine absinthe (not to be confused with the Swiss La Clandestine brand) that is home-distilled by hobbyists. It should not be confused with absinthe kits. Hausgemacht absinthe is produced in tiny quantities for personal use and not for the commercial market. Clandestine production increased after absinthe was banned, when small producers went underground, most notably in Switzerland. Although the ban has been lifted in Switzerland, some clandestine distillers have not legitimised their production. Authorities believe that high taxes on alcohol and the mystique of being underground are likely reasons.[83]
 
Burning sugar in a glass of Absinth Stromu, a Bohemian-style product. Note the strong artificial colouration.
  • Bohemian-style absinth is also referred to as Czech-style absinthe, anise-free absinthe, or just "absinth" (without the "e"), and is best described as a wormwood bitters. It is produced mainly in the Czech Republic,[84] from which it gets its designation as Bohemian or Czech, although not all absinthes from the Czech Republic are Bohemian-style. Bohemian-style absinth typically contains little or none of the anise, fennel, and other herbal flavours associated with traditional absinthe, and thus bears very little resemblance to the absinthes made popular in the 19th century. Typical Bohemian-style absinth has only two similarities with its authentic, traditional counterpart: it contains wormwood and has a high alcohol content. The Czechs are credited with inventing the fire ritual in the 1990s, possibly because Bohemian-style absinth does not louche, which renders the traditional French preparation method useless. As such, this type of absinthe and the fire ritual associated with it are entirely modern fabrications, and have little to no relationship with the historical absinthe tradition.[85]

Storage Edit

Absinthe that is artificially coloured or clear is aesthetically stable, and can be bottled in clear glass. If naturally colored absinthe is exposed to light or air for a prolonged period, the chlorophyll gradually becomes oxidized, which has the effect of gradually changing the color from green to yellow green, and eventually to brown. The colour of absinthe that has completed this transition was historically referred to as feuille morte ("dead leaf"). In the pre-ban era, this natural phenomenon was favourably viewed, for it confirmed the product in question was coloured naturally, and not artificially with potentially toxic chemicals. Predictably, vintage absinthes often emerge from sealed bottles as distinctly amber in tint due to decades of slow oxidation. Though this colour change presents no adverse impact to the flavour of absinthe, it is generally desired to preserve the original colour, which requires that naturally coloured absinthe be bottled in dark, light resistant bottles. Absinthe intended for decades of storage should be kept in a cool (room temperature), dry place, away from light and heat. Absinthe should not be stored in the refrigerator or freezer, as the anethole may polymerise inside the bottle, creating an irreversible precipitate, and adversely impacting the original flavour.

Health effects Edit

Absinthe has been frequently and improperly described in modern times as being hallucinogenic. No peer-reviewed scientific study has demonstrated absinthe to possess hallucinogenic properties.[86] The belief that absinthe induces hallucinogenic effects is rooted, at least partly, in the findings of 19th century French psychiatrist Valentin Magnan, who carried out ten years of experiments with wormwood oil. In the course of this research he studied 250 cases of alcoholism and concluded that those who abused absinthe were worse off than those who abused other alcoholic drinks, experiencing rapid-onset hallucinations.[87] Such accounts by opponents of absinthe (like Magnan) were cheerfully embraced by famous absinthe drinkers, many of whom were bohemian artists or writers.[88]

Two famous artists who helped popularise the notion that absinthe had powerful psychoactive properties were Toulouse-Lautrec and Vincent van Gogh. In one of the best-known written accounts of absinthe drinking, an inebriated Oscar Wilde described a phantom sensation of having tulips brush against his legs after leaving a bar at closing time.[89]

Notions of absinthe's alleged hallucinogenic properties were again fuelled in the 1970s, when a scientific paper suggested that thujone's structural similarity to tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active chemical in cannabis, presented the possibility of THC receptor affinity.[90][91] This theory was conclusively disproven in 1999.[92]

The debate over whether absinthe produces effects on the human mind in addition to those of alcohol has not been resolved conclusively. The effects of absinthe have been described by some as mind opening.[93] The most commonly reported experience is a "clear-headed" feeling of inebriation – a form of "lucid drunkenness". Chemist, historian and absinthe distiller Ted Breaux has claimed that the alleged secondary effects of absinthe may be because some of the herbal compounds in the drink act as stimulants, while others act as sedatives, creating an overall lucid effect of awakening.[94] The long-term effects of moderate absinthe consumption in humans remain unknown, although herbs traditionally used to produce absinthe are reported to have both painkilling[95] and antiparasitic[96] properties.

 
Henri Privat-Livemont's 1896 poster

Today it is known that absinthe does not cause hallucinations.[93] It is widely accepted that reports of hallucinogenic effects resulting from absinthe consumption were attributable to the poisonous adulterants being added to cheaper versions of the drink in the 19th century,[97] such as oil of wormwood, impure alcohol (contaminated possibly with methanol), and poisonous colouring matter – notably (among other green copper salts) cupric acetate and antimony trichloride (the last-named being used to fake the ouzo effect).[98][99]

Controversy Edit

It was once widely promoted that excessive absinthe drinking caused effects that were discernible from those associated with alcoholism, a belief that led to the coining of the term absinthism. One of the first vilifications of absinthe followed an 1864 experiment in which Magnan simultaneously exposed one guinea pig to large doses of pure wormwood vapour, and another to alcohol vapours. The guinea pig exposed to wormwood vapour experienced convulsive seizures, while the animal exposed to alcohol did not. Magnan would later blame the naturally occurring (in wormwood) chemical thujone for these effects.[100]

Thujone, once widely believed to be an active chemical in absinthe, is a GABA antagonist, and while it can produce muscle spasms in large doses, there is no direct evidence to suggest it causes hallucinations.[93] Past reports estimated thujone concentrations in absinthe as being up to 260 mg/kg.[101] More recently, published scientific analyses of samples of various original absinthes have disproved previous estimates, and demonstrated that only a trace of the thujone present in wormwood actually makes it into a properly distilled absinthe when historical methods and materials are employed to create the spirit. As such, most traditionally crafted absinthes, both vintage and modern, fall within the current EU standards.[102][103][104][105]

 
The Absinthe Drinker by Viktor Oliva (1861–1928)

Tests conducted on mice to study toxicity showed an oral LD50 of about 45 mg thujone per kg of body weight,[106] which represents far more absinthe than could be realistically consumed. The high percentage of alcohol in absinthe would result in mortality long before thujone could become a factor.[106] In documented cases of acute thujone poisoning as a result of oral ingestion,[107] the source of thujone was not commercial absinthe, but rather non-absinthe-related sources, such as common essential oils (which may contain as much as 50% thujone).[108]

One study published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol[109] concluded that high doses (0.28 mg/kg) of thujone in alcohol had negative effects on attention performance in a clinical setting. It delayed reaction time, and caused subjects to concentrate their attention into the central field of vision. Low doses (0.028 mg/kg) did not produce an effect noticeably different from the plain alcohol control. While the effects of the high dose samples were statistically significant in a double blind test, the test subjects themselves were unable to reliably identify which samples contained thujone. For the average 65 kg (143 lb) man, the high dose samples in the study would equate to 18.2 mg of thujone. The EU limit of 35 mg/L of thujone in absinthe means that given the highest permitted thujone content, that individual would need to consume approximately 0.5 litres of high proof (e.g. 50%+ ABV) spirit before the thujone could be metabolized in order to display effects detectable in a clinical setting, which would result in a potentially lethal BAC of >0.4%.[110]

Regulations Edit

Most countries (except Switzerland) at present do not possess a legal definition of absinthe (unlike Scotch whisky or cognac). Accordingly, producers are free to label a product "absinthe" or "absinth", whether or not it bears any resemblance to the traditional spirit.[citation needed]

Australia Edit

Absinthe is readily available in many bottle shops. Bitters may contain a maximum 35 mg/kg thujone, while other alcoholic beverages can contain a maximum 10 mg/kg.[111] The domestic production and sale of absinthe is regulated by state licensing laws.

 
Édouard Manet, The Absinthe Drinker, c. 1859

Until July 13, 2013, the import and sale of absinthe technically required a special permit, since "oil of wormwood, being an essential oil obtained from plants of the genus Artemisia, and preparations containing oil of wormwood" were listed as item 12A, Schedule 8, Regulation 5H of the Customs (Prohibited Imports) Regulations 1956 (Cth). These controls have now been repealed,[112] and permission is no longer required.[113]

Brazil Edit

Absinthe was prohibited in Brazil until 1999 and was brought by entrepreneur Lalo Zanini and legalised in the same year. Presently, absinthe sold in Brazil must abide by the national law that restricts all spirits to a maximum of 54% ABV.[114] While this regulation is enforced throughout channels of legal distribution, it may be possible to find absinthe containing alcohol in excess of the legal limit in some restaurants or food fairs.

Canada Edit

In Canada, liquor laws concerning the production, distribution, and sale of spirits are written and enforced by individual provincial government monopolies. Each product is subject to the approval of a respective individual provincial liquor board before it can be sold in that province. Importation is a federal matter, and is enforced by the Canada Border Services Agency. The importation of a nominal amount of liquor by individuals for personal use is permitted, provided that conditions for the individual's duration of stay outside the country are satisfied.

In 2007, Canada's first genuine absinthe (Taboo Absinthe) was created by Okanagan Spirits Craft Distillery in British Columbia.[116]

European Union Edit

The European Union permits a maximum thujone level of 35 mg/kg in alcoholic beverages where Artemisia species is a listed ingredient, and 10 mg/kg in other alcoholic beverages.[117] Member countries regulate absinthe production within this framework. The sale of absinthe is permitted in all EU countries unless they further regulate it.

Finland Edit

The sale and production of absinthe was prohibited in Finland from 1919 to 1932; no current prohibitions exist. The government-owned chain of liquor stores (Alko) is the only outlet that may sell alcoholic beverages containing over 5.5% ABV, although national law bans the sale of alcoholic beverages containing over 80% ABV.

France Edit

 
Pablo Picasso, 1901–02, Femme au café (Absinthe Drinker), oil on canvas, 73 cm × 54 cm (29 in × 21 in), Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Édouard Manet's first major painting The Absinthe Drinker was controversial, and was rejected by the Paris Salon in 1859. Despite adopting sweeping EU food and beverage regulations in 1988 that effectively re-legalised absinthe, a decree was passed that same year that preserved the prohibition on products explicitly labelled as "absinthe", while placing strict limits on fenchone (fennel) and pinocamphone (hyssop)[118] in an obvious, but failed, attempt to thwart a possible return of absinthe-like products. French producers circumvented this regulatory obstacle by labelling absinthe as spiritueux à base de plantes d'absinthe ('wormwood-based spirits'), with many either reducing or omitting fennel and hyssop altogether from their products. A legal challenge to the scientific basis of this decree resulted in its repeal (2009),[119] which opened the door for the official French re-legalisation of absinthe for the first time since 1915. The French Senate voted to repeal the prohibition in mid-April 2011.[120]

Georgia Edit

It is legal to produce and sell absinthe in Georgia, which has claimed to possess several producers of absinthe.

Germany Edit

A ban on absinthe was enacted in Germany on 27 March 1923. In addition to banning the production of and commercial trade in absinthe, the law went so far as to prohibit the distribution of printed matter that provided details of its production. The original ban was lifted in 1981, but the use of Artemisia absinthium as a flavouring agent remained prohibited. On 27 September 1991, Germany adopted the European Union's standards of 1988, which effectively re-legalised absinthe.[121]

Italy Edit

The Fascist regime in 1926 banned the production, import, transport and sale of any liquor named "Assenzio". The ban was reinforced in 1931 with harsher penalties for transgressors, and remained in force until 1992 when the Italian government amended its laws to comply with the EU directive 88/388/EEC.

New Zealand Edit

Although absinthe is not prohibited at national level, some local authorities have banned it. The latest is Mataura in Southland. The ban came in August 2008 after several issues of misuse drew public and police attention. One incident resulted in breathing difficulties and hospitalising of a 17-year-old for alcohol poisoning.[122] The particular brand of absinthe that caused these effects was bottled at 89% ABV.

Sweden and Norway Edit

The sale and production of absinthe has never been prohibited in Sweden or Norway. However, the only outlet that may sell alcoholic beverages containing more than 3.5% ABV in Sweden and 4.75% ABV in Norway, is the government-owned chain of liquor stores known as Systembolaget in Sweden and Vinmonopolet in Norway. Systembolaget and Vinmonopolet did not import or sell absinthe for many years after the ban in France;[123] however, today several absinthes are available for purchase in Systembolaget stores, including Swedish made distilled absinthe. In Norway, on the other hand, one is less likely to find many absinthes since Norwegian alcohol law prohibits the sale and importation of alcoholic beverages above 60% ABV, which eliminates most absinthes.

Switzerland Edit

In Switzerland, the sale and production of absinthe was prohibited from 1910 to March 1, 2005. This was based on a vote in 1908.[124] To be legally made or sold in Switzerland, absinthe must be distilled,[125] must not contain certain additives, and must be either naturally coloured or left uncoloured.[126]

In 2014, the Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland invalidated a governmental decision of 2010 which allowed only absinthe made in the Val-de-Travers region to be labelled as absinthe in Switzerland. The court found that absinthe was a label for a product and was not tied to a geographic origin.[127]

United States Edit

 
The Drinkers by Jean Béraud (1908)

In 2007, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) effectively lifted the long-standing absinthe ban, and it has since approved many brands for sale in the US market. This was made possible partly through the TTB's clarification of the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) thujone content regulations, which specify that finished food and beverages that contain Artemisia species must be thujone-free.[128] In this context, the TTB considers a product thujone-free if the thujone content is less than 10 ppm (equal to 10 mg/kg).[129][130] This is verified through the use of gas chromatography–mass spectrometry.[131] The brands Kübler and Lucid and their lawyers did most of the work to get absinthe legalized in the U.S., over the 2004–2007 time period.[132] In the U.S., March 5 sometimes is referred to as "National Absinthe Day", as it was the day the 95-year ban on absinthe was finally lifted.[133]

The import, distribution, and sale of absinthe are permitted subject to the following restrictions:

  • The product must be thujone-free as per TTB guidelines,
  • The word "absinthe" can neither be the brand name nor stand alone on the label, and
  • The packaging cannot "project images of hallucinogenic, psychotropic, or mind-altering effects."

Absinthe imported in violation of these regulations is subject to seizure at the discretion of U.S. Customs and Border Protection.[134][135]

Beginning in 2000,[136] a product called Absente was sold legally in the United States under the marketing tagline "Absinthe Refined," but as the product contained sugar, and was made with southernwood (Artemisia abrotanum) and not grande wormwood (Artemisia absinthium) (before 2009),[137] the TTB classified it as a liqueur.

Vanuatu Edit

The Absinthe (Prohibition) Act 1915, passed in the New Hebrides, has never been repealed, is included in the 2006 Vanuatu consolidated legislation, and contains the following all-encompassing restriction: "The manufacture, importation, circulation and sale wholesale or by retail of absinthe or similar liquors in Vanuatu shall be prohibited."[138]

 
La fin de la fée verte ("The End of the Green Fairy"): Swiss poster criticizing the country's prohibition of absinthe in 1910

Cultural influence Edit

Numerous artists and writers living in France in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were noted absinthe drinkers and featured absinthe in their work. Some of these included Édouard Manet,[139] Guy de Maupassant, Paul Verlaine,[140] Amedeo Modigliani, Edgar Degas,[141] Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec,[142] Vincent van Gogh, Oscar Wilde,[17] Arthur Rimbaud, and Émile Zola.[143] Many other renowned artists and writers similarly drew from this cultural well, including Aleister Crowley, Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso, August Strindberg, and Erik Satie.

The aura of illicitness and mystery surrounding absinthe has played into literature, movies, music, and television, where it is often portrayed as a mysterious, addictive, and mind-altering drink. Marie Corelli's Wormwood: A Drama of Paris (1890) was a popular novel about a Frenchman driven to murder and ruin after being introduced to absinthe. Intended as a morality tale on the dangers of the drink, it was speculated to have contributed to subsequent bans of absinthe in Europe[144] and the United States.[145] Some of the earliest film references include The Hasher's Delirium (1910) by Émile Cohl,[146] an early pioneer in the art of animation, as well as two different silent films, each entitled Absinthe, from 1913 and 1914 respectively.[147][148]

See also Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • Adams, Jad (2004) Hideous absinthe: a history of the devil in a bottle, London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 1860649203
  • Arnold, Wilfred Niels (June 1989). "Absinthe". Scientific American. 260 (6): 112–117. Bibcode:1989SciAm.260f.112A. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0689-112. PMID 2658044. S2CID 215053033. Retrieved September 18, 2010.
  • Blumer, D. (2002). "The Illness of Vincent van Gogh". American Journal of Psychiatry. 159 (4): 519–526. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.159.4.519. PMID 11925286. S2CID 43106568.
  • Conrad, Barnaby (1996). Absinthe: History in a Bottle. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0811816502.
  • Crowley, Aleister (1918). (PDF). The International. XII (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-09-18. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
  • Eadie, MJ (2009). "Absinthe, epileptic seizures and Valentin Magnan". The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. 39 (1): 73–78. PMID 19831287.
  • Guthrie, R. Winston (2010). . New York: Clarkson Potter. p. 176. ISBN 978-0307587534. Archived from the original on 2019-02-28. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
  • Huisman, M.; Brug, J.; MacKenbach, J. (2007). "Absinthe is its history relevant for current public health?". International Journal of Epidemiology. 36 (4): 738–744. doi:10.1093/ije/dym068. PMID 17982755.
  • Lachenmeier, Dirk W.; Nathan-Maister, David; Breaux, Theodore A.; Sohnius, Eva-Maria; Schoeberl, Kerstin; Kuballa, Thomas (2008). "Chemical Composition of Vintage Preban Absinthe with Special Reference to Thujone, Fenchone, Pinocamphone, Methanol, Copper, and Antimony Concentrations". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. 56 (9): 3073–3081. doi:10.1021/jf703568f. PMID 18419128.
  • Lachenmeier, Dirk W.; Walch, Stephan G.; Padosch, Stephan A.; Kröner, Lars U. (2006). "Absinthe – A Review". Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition. 46 (5): 365–377. doi:10.1080/10408690590957322. PMID 16891209. S2CID 43251156.

External links Edit

  • "Absinthe's second coming" 2008-12-03 at the Wayback Machine – An April 2001 article in Cigar Aficionado about the first absinthe commercially produced in France since the 1915 ban.
  • "Swiss face sobering future after legalizing absinthe" 2016-12-02 at the Wayback Machine – A March 2005 Reuters article about the legalising of absinthe in Switzerland.
  • "The Mystery of the Green Menace" – A November 2005 Wired magazine article about a New Orleans man who has researched the chemical content of absinthe and now distills it in France
  • "The Return of the Green Faerie" – A wine and spirit journal article about the history, ritual, and artistic cult of absinthe
  • The Wormwood Society 2006-04-24 at the Wayback Machine – An independent organisation supporting changes to the US laws and regulations concerning absinthe. Provides articles, a forum and legal information.
  • "What Is Absinthe" – Article discussing absinthe and its effect over mind and body.
  • Absinthe in the online Culinary Heritage of Switzerland database.


absinthe, other, uses, disambiguation, french, apsɛ, anise, flavored, spirit, derived, from, several, plants, including, flowers, leaves, artemisia, absinthium, grand, wormwood, together, with, green, anise, sweet, fennel, other, medicinal, culinary, herbs, hi. For other uses see Absinthe disambiguation Absinthe ˈ ae b s ɪ n 8 s ae 8 French apsɛ t is an anise flavored spirit derived from several plants including the flowers and leaves of Artemisia absinthium grand wormwood together with green anise sweet fennel and other medicinal and culinary herbs 1 Historically described as a highly alcoholic spirit it is 45 74 ABV or 90 148 proof US 2 3 4 5 Absinthe traditionally has a natural green color but may also be colorless It is commonly referred to in historical literature as la fee verte the green fairy It is sometimes mistakenly referred to as a liqueur but is not traditionally bottled with added sugar so is classified as a spirit 6 Absinthe is traditionally bottled at a high level of alcohol by volume but it is normally diluted with water before being consumed AbsintheReservoir glass with naturally coloured verte absinthe and an absinthe spoonTypeSpiritCountry of origin Switzerland FranceAlcohol by volume 45 74 Proof US 90 148ColourGreenFlavourAniseIngredientsWormwood Anise FennelAbsinthe originated in the canton of Neuchatel in Switzerland in the late 18th century It rose to great popularity as an alcoholic drink in late 19th and early 20th century France particularly among Parisian artists and writers The consumption of absinthe was opposed by social conservatives and prohibitionists partly due to its association with bohemian culture From Europe and the Americas notable absinthe drinkers included Ernest Hemingway James Joyce Lewis Carroll Charles Baudelaire Paul Verlaine Arthur Rimbaud Henri de Toulouse Lautrec Amedeo Modigliani Pablo Picasso Vincent van Gogh Oscar Wilde Marcel Proust Aleister Crowley Erik Satie Edgar Allan Poe Lord Byron and Alfred Jarry 7 8 Absinthe has often been portrayed as a dangerously addictive psychoactive drug and hallucinogen 9 The chemical compound thujone which is present in the spirit in trace amounts was blamed for its alleged harmful effects By 1915 absinthe had been banned in the United States and in much of Europe including France the Netherlands Belgium Switzerland and Austria Hungary yet it has not been demonstrated to be any more dangerous than ordinary spirits Recent studies have shown that absinthe s psychoactive properties apart from those attributable to alcohol have been exaggerated 9 A revival of absinthe began in the 1990s following the adoption of modern European Union food and beverage laws that removed long standing barriers to its production and sale By the early 21st century nearly 200 brands of absinthe were being produced in a dozen countries most notably in France Switzerland Austria Germany the Netherlands Spain and the Czech Republic Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Growth of consumption 2 2 Bans 2 3 Modern revival 3 Production 3 1 Distilled absinthe 3 2 Cold mixed absinthe 3 3 Ingredients 3 4 Alternative colouring 3 5 Bottled strength 3 6 Kits 3 7 Alternatives 4 Preparation 5 Styles 6 Storage 7 Health effects 7 1 Controversy 8 Regulations 8 1 Australia 8 2 Brazil 8 3 Canada 8 4 European Union 8 5 Finland 8 6 France 8 7 Georgia 8 8 Germany 8 9 Italy 8 10 New Zealand 8 11 Sweden and Norway 8 12 Switzerland 8 13 United States 8 14 Vanuatu 9 Cultural influence 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology Edit nbsp Albert Maignan s Green Muse 1895 A poet succumbs to the Green FairyThe French word absinthe can refer either to the alcoholic beverage or less commonly to the actual wormwood plant Absinthe is derived from the Latin absinthium which in turn comes from the Greek ἀpsin8ion apsinthion wormwood 10 The use of Artemisia absinthium in a drink is attested in Lucretius De Rerum Natura 936 950 where Lucretius indicates that a drink containing wormwood is given as medicine to children in a cup with honey on the brim to make it drinkable 11 Some claim that the word means undrinkable in Greek but it may instead be linked to the Persian root spand or aspand or the variant esfand which meant Peganum harmala also called Syrian rue although it is not actually a variety of rue another famously bitter herb citation needed That Artemisia absinthium was commonly burned as a protective offering may suggest that its origins lie in the reconstructed Proto Indo European language root spend meaning to perform a ritual or make an offering Whether the word was a borrowing from Persian into Greek or from a common ancestor of both is unclear 12 Alternatively the Greek word may originate in a pre Greek substrate word marked by the non Indo European consonant complex n8 nth Alternative spellings for absinthe include absinth absynthe and absenta Absinth without the final e is a spelling variant most commonly applied to absinthes produced in central and eastern Europe and is specifically associated with Bohemian style absinthes 13 History EditThe precise origin of absinthe is unclear The medical use of wormwood dates back to ancient Egypt and is mentioned in the Ebers Papyrus around 1550 BC Wormwood extracts and wine soaked wormwood leaves were used as remedies by the ancient Greeks Moreover some evidence exists of a wormwood flavoured wine in ancient Greece called absinthites oinos 14 The first evidence of absinthe in the sense of a distilled spirit containing green anise and fennel dates to the 18th century According to popular legend it began as an all purpose patent remedy created by Dr Pierre Ordinaire a French doctor living in Couvet Switzerland around 1792 the exact date varies by account Ordinaire s recipe was passed on to the Henriod sisters of Couvet who sold it as a medicinal elixir By other accounts the Henriod sisters may have been making the elixir before Ordinaire s arrival In either case a certain Major Dubied acquired the formula from the sisters in 1797 and opened the first absinthe distillery named Dubied Pere et Fils in Couvet with his son Marcellin and son in law Henry Louis Pernod In 1805 they built a second distillery in Pontarlier France under the company name Maison Pernod Fils 15 Pernod Fils remained one of the most popular brands of absinthe until the drink was banned in France in 1914 Growth of consumption Edit nbsp An absinthe frappe a common way to serve absinthe with simple syrup water and crushed iceAbsinthe s popularity grew steadily through the 1840s when it was given to French troops as a malaria preventive 16 and the troops brought home their taste for it Absinthe became so popular in bars bistros cafes and cabarets by the 1860s that the hour of 5 pm was called l heure verte the green hour 17 It was favoured by all social classes from the wealthy bourgeoisie to poor artists and ordinary working class people By the 1880s mass production had caused the price to drop sharply and the French were drinking 36 million litres per year by 1910 compared to their annual consumption of almost 5 billion litres of wine 15 18 Absinthe was exported widely from France and Switzerland and attained some degree of popularity in other countries including Spain the United Kingdom the United States and the Czech Republic It was never banned in Spain or Portugal and its production and consumption have never ceased It gained a temporary spike in popularity there during the early 20th century corresponding with the Art Nouveau and Modernism aesthetic movements 19 New Orleans has a cultural association with absinthe and is credited as the birthplace of the Sazerac perhaps the earliest absinthe cocktail The Old Absinthe House bar on Bourbon Street began selling absinthe in the first half of the 19th century Its Catalan lease holder Cayetano Ferrer named it the Absinthe Room in 1874 due to of the popularity of the drink which was served in the Parisian style 20 It was frequented by Mark Twain Oscar Wilde Franklin Delano Roosevelt Aleister Crowley and Frank Sinatra 20 21 Bans Edit Absinthe became associated with violent crimes and social disorder and one modern writer claims that this trend was spurred by fabricated claims and smear campaigns which he claims were orchestrated by the temperance movement and the wine industry 22 One critic claimed 23 Absinthe makes you crazy and criminal provokes epilepsy and tuberculosis and has killed thousands of French people It makes a ferocious beast of man a martyr of woman and a degenerate of the infant it disorganizes and ruins the family and menaces the future of the country nbsp L Absinthe by Edgar Degas 1876Edgar Degas s 1876 painting L Absinthe can be seen at the Musee d Orsay epitomising the popular view of absinthe addicts as sodden and benumbed and Emile Zola described its effects in his novel L Assommoir 24 In 1905 Swiss farmer Jean Lanfray murdered his family and attempted to kill himself after drinking absinthe Lanfray was an alcoholic who had drunk a lot of wine and brandy before the killings but that was overlooked or ignored and blame for the murders was placed solely on his consumption of two glasses of absinthe 25 26 The Lanfray murders were the tipping point in this hotly debated topic and a subsequent petition collected more than 82 000 signatures to ban it in Switzerland A referendum was held on 5 July 1908 27 It was approved by voters 27 and the prohibition of absinthe was written into the Swiss constitution In 1906 Belgium and Brazil banned the sale and distribution of absinthe although these were not the first countries to take such action It had been banned as early as 1898 in the colony of the Congo Free State 28 The Netherlands banned it in 1909 Switzerland in 1910 29 the United States in 1912 and France in 1914 29 The prohibition of absinthe in France eventually led to the popularity of pastis and to a lesser extent ouzo and other anise flavoured spirits that do not contain wormwood Following the conclusion of the First World War production of the Pernod Fils brand was resumed at the Banus distillery in Catalonia Spain where absinthe was still legal 30 31 but gradually declining sales saw the cessation of production in the 1960s 32 In Switzerland the ban served only to drive the production of absinthe underground Clandestine home distillers produced colourless absinthe la Bleue which was easier to conceal from the authorities Many countries never banned absinthe notably the United Kingdom where it had never been as popular as in continental Europe Modern revival Edit nbsp An advertising poster for Absinthe BeuclerBritish importer BBH Spirits began to import Hill s Absinth from the Czech Republic in the 1990s as the UK had never formally banned it and this sparked a modern resurgence in its popularity It began to reappear during a revival in the 1990s in countries where it was never banned Forms of absinthe available during that time consisted almost exclusively of Czech Spanish and Portuguese brands that were of recent origin typically consisting of Bohemian style products Connoisseurs considered these of inferior quality and not representative of the 19th century spirit 33 34 35 36 In 2000 La Fee Absinthe became the first commercial absinthe distilled and bottled in France since the 1914 ban 37 38 39 40 41 but it is now one of dozens of brands that are produced and sold within France In the Netherlands the restrictions were challenged by Amsterdam wineseller Menno Boorsma in July 2004 thus confirming the legality of absinthe once again Similarly Belgium lifted its long standing ban on January 1 2005 citing a conflict with the adopted food and beverage regulations of the single European Market In Switzerland the constitutional ban was repealed in 2000 during an overhaul of the national constitution although the prohibition was written into ordinary law instead That law was later repealed and it was made legal on March 1 2005 42 The drink was never officially banned in Spain although it began to fall out of favour in the 1940s and almost vanished into obscurity Catalonia has seen significant resurgence since 2007 when one producer established operations there Absinthe has never been illegal to import or manufacture in Australia 43 although importation requires a permit under the Customs Prohibited Imports Regulation 1956 due to a restriction on importing any product containing oil of wormwood 44 In 2000 an amendment made all wormwood species prohibited herbs for food purposes under Food Standard 1 4 4 Prohibited and Restricted Plants and Fungi However this amendment was found inconsistent with other parts of the pre existing Food Code 45 46 and it was withdrawn in 2002 during the transition between the two codes thereby continuing to allow absinthe manufacture and importation through the existing permit based system These events were erroneously reported by the media as it having been reclassified from a prohibited product to a restricted product 47 nbsp Absinthe distillation circa 1904In 2007 the French brand Lucid became the first genuine absinthe to receive a Certificate of Label Approval for import into the United States since 1912 48 49 following independent efforts by representatives from Lucid and Kubler to overturn the long standing U S ban 50 In December 2007 St George Absinthe Verte produced by St George Spirits of Alameda California became the first brand of American made absinthe produced in the United States since the ban 51 52 Since that time other micro distilleries have started producing small batches in the United States The 21st century has seen new types of absinthe including various frozen preparations which have become increasingly popular 53 54 55 The French Absinthe Ban of 1915 was repealed in May 2011 following petitions by the Federation Francaise des Spiritueux which represents French distillers 56 Production Edit nbsp Green anise one of three main herbs used in the production of absinthe nbsp Grande wormwood nbsp Sweet fennel Most countries have no legal definition for absinthe whereas the method of production and content of spirits such as whisky brandy and gin are globally defined and regulated Therefore producers are at liberty to label a product as absinthe or absinth without regard to any specific legal definition or quality standards Producers of legitimate absinthes employ one of two historically defined processes to create the finished spirit distillation or cold mixing In the sole country Switzerland that does possess a legal definition of absinthe distillation is the only permitted method of production 57 Distilled absinthe Edit Distilled absinthe employs a method of production similar to that of high quality gin Botanicals are initially macerated in distilled base alcohol before being redistilled to exclude bitter principles and impart the desired complexity and texture to the spirit The distillation of absinthe first yields a colourless distillate that leaves the alembic at around 72 ABV The distillate may be reduced and bottled clear to produce a Blanche or la Bleue absinthe or it may be coloured to create a verte using natural or artificial colouring Traditional absinthes obtain their green color strictly from the chlorophyll of whole herbs which is extracted from the plants during the secondary maceration This step involves steeping plants such as petite wormwood hyssop and melissa among other herbs in the distillate Chlorophyll from these herbs is extracted in the process giving the drink its famous green color 58 This step also provides a herbal complexity that is typical of high quality absinthe The natural coloring process is considered critical for absinthe ageing since the chlorophyll remains chemically active The chlorophyll serves a similar role in absinthe that tannins do in wine or brown liquors unreliable source 59 After the coloring process the resulting product is diluted with water to the desired percentage of alcohol The flavor of absinthe is said to improve materially with storage and many distilleries before the ban aged their absinthe in settling tanks before bottling Cold mixed absinthe Edit Many modern absinthes are produced using a cold mix process This inexpensive method of production does not involve distillation and is regarded as inferior for the same reasons that give cause for cheaply compounded gin to be legally differentiated from distilled gin 60 The cold mixing process involves the simple blending of flavouring essences and artificial colouring in commercial alcohol in similar fashion to most flavoured vodkas and inexpensive liqueurs and cordials Some modern cold mixed absinthes have been bottled at strengths approaching 90 ABV Others are presented simply as a bottle of plain alcohol with a small amount of powdered herbs suspended within it The lack of a formal legal definition in most countries to regulate the production and quality of absinthe has enabled cheaply made products to be falsely presented as traditional in production and composition In Switzerland the only country with a formal legal definition of absinthe any absinthe product not obtained by maceration and distillation or coloured artificially cannot be sold as absinthe 61 Ingredients Edit Absinthe is traditionally prepared from a distillation of neutral alcohol various herbs spices and water Traditional absinthes were redistilled from a white grape spirit or eau de vie while lesser absinthes were more commonly made from alcohol from grains beets or potatoes 62 The principal botanicals are grande wormwood green anise and florence fennel which are often called the holy trinity 63 Many other herbs may be used as well such as petite wormwood Artemisia pontica or Roman wormwood hyssop melissa star anise angelica peppermint coriander and veronica 64 One early recipe was included in 1864 s The English and Australian Cookery Book It directed the maker to Take of the tops of wormwood four pounds root of angelica calamus aromaticus aniseed leaves of dittany of each one ounce alcohol four gallons Macerate these substances during eight days add a little water and distil by a gentle fire until two gallons are obtained This is reduced to a proof spirit and a few drops of the oil of aniseed added 65 Alternative colouring Edit nbsp Anise seedsAdding to absinthe s negative reputation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries unscrupulous makers of the drink omitted the traditional colouring phase of production in favour of adding toxic copper salts to artificially induce a green tint This practice may be responsible for some of the alleged toxicity historically associated with this beverage Many modern day producers resort to other shortcuts including the use of artificial food coloring to create the green color Additionally at least some cheap absinthes produced before the ban were reportedly adulterated with poisonous antimony trichloride reputed to enhance the louching effect 66 Absinthe may also be naturally coloured pink or red using rose or hibiscus flowers 67 This was referred to as a rose pink or rouge red absinthe Only one historical brand of rose absinthe has been documented 68 Bottled strength Edit nbsp Absinthe spoons are designed to perch a sugar cube atop the glass over which ice cold water is dripped to dilute the absinthe The lip near the centre of the handle lets the spoon rest securely on the rim of the glass Absinthe was historically bottled at 45 74 ABV Some modern Franco Suisse absinthes are bottled at up to 83 ABV 69 70 while some modern cold mixed bohemian style absinthes are bottled at up to 89 9 ABV 71 Kits Edit The modern day interest in absinthe has spawned a rash of absinthe kits from companies that claim they produce homemade absinthe Kits often call for soaking herbs in vodka or alcohol or adding a liquid concentrate to vodka or alcohol to create an ersatz absinthe Such practices usually yield a harsh substance that bears little resemblance to the genuine article and are considered inauthentic by any practical standard 72 Some concoctions may even be dangerous especially if they call for supplementation with potentially poisonous herbs oils and or extracts In at least one documented case a person suffered acute kidney injury after drinking 10 ml of pure wormwood oil a dose much higher than that found in absinthe 73 Alternatives Edit In baking 74 and in preparing the classic New Orleans style Sazerac cocktail 75 anise flavored liqueurs and pastis have often been used as a substitute if absinthe is unavailable Preparation EditMain article Absinthiana See also Ouzo effect nbsp Preparing absinthe using the traditional method that does not involve burning The traditional French preparation involves placing a sugar cube on top of a specially designed slotted spoon and placing the spoon on a glass filled with a measure of absinthe Iced water is poured or dripped over the sugar cube to mix the water into the absinthe The final preparation contains 1 part absinthe and 3 5 parts water As water dilutes the spirit those components with poor water solubility mainly those from anise fennel and star anise come out of solution and cloud the drink The resulting milky opalescence is called the louche Fr opaque or shady IPA luʃ The release of these dissolved essences coincides with a perfuming of herbal aromas and flavours that blossom or bloom and brings out subtleties that are otherwise muted within the neat spirit This reflects what is perhaps the oldest and purest method of preparation and is often referred to as the French Method The Bohemian method is a recent invention that involves fire and was not performed during absinthe s peak of popularity in the Belle Epoque Like the French method a sugar cube is placed on a slotted spoon over a glass containing one shot of absinthe The sugar is soaked in alcohol usually more absinthe then set ablaze The flaming sugar cube is then dropped into the glass thus igniting the absinthe Finally a shot glass of water is added to douse the flames This method tends to produce a stronger drink than the French method A variant of the Bohemian method involves allowing the fire to extinguish on its own This variant is sometimes referred to as cooking the absinthe or the flaming green fairy The origin of this burning ritual may borrow from a coffee and brandy drink that was served at Cafe Brulot in which a sugar cube soaked in brandy was set aflame 66 Most experienced absintheurs do not recommend the Bohemian Method and consider it a modern gimmick as it can destroy the absinthe flavour and present a fire hazard due to the unusually high alcohol content present in absinthe 76 nbsp Slowly dripping ice water from an absinthe fountainIn 19th century Parisian cafes upon receiving an order for an absinthe a waiter would present the patron with a dose of absinthe in a suitable glass sugar absinthe spoon and a carafe of iced water 77 It was up to the patron to prepare the drink as the inclusion or omission of sugar was strictly an individual preference as was the amount of water used As the popularity of the drink increased additional accoutrements of preparation appeared including the absinthe fountain which was effectively a large jar of iced water with spigots mounted on a lamp base This let drinkers prepare a number of drinks at once and with a hands free drip patrons could socialise while louching a glass Although many bars served absinthe in standard glassware a number of glasses were specifically designed for the French absinthe preparation ritual Absinthe glasses were typically fashioned with a dose line bulge or bubble in the lower portion denoting how much absinthe should be poured One dose of absinthe ranged anywhere around 2 2 5 fluid ounces 60 75 ml In addition to being prepared with sugar and water absinthe emerged as a popular cocktail ingredient in both the United Kingdom and the United States By 1930 dozens of fancy cocktails that called for absinthe had been published in numerous credible bartender guides 78 One of the most famous of these libations is Ernest Hemingway s Death in the Afternoon cocktail a tongue in cheek concoction that contributed to a 1935 collection of celebrity recipes The directions are Pour one jigger absinthe into a Champagne glass Add iced Champagne until it attains the proper opalescent milkiness Drink three to five of these slowly 79 Styles EditMost categorical alcoholic beverages have regulations governing their classification and labelling while those governing absinthe have always been conspicuously lacking According to popular treatises from the 19th century absinthe could be loosely categorised into several grades ordinaire demi fine fine and Suisse the latter does not denote origin in order of increasing alcoholic strength and quality Many contemporary absinthe critics simply classify absinthe as distilled or mixed according to its production method And while the former is generally considered far superior in quality to the latter an absinthe s simple claim of being distilled makes no guarantee as to the quality of its base ingredients or the skill of its maker nbsp Modern AbsinthesVertes at left blanches at right and a prepared glass of eachBlanche absinthe white in French also referred to as la Bleue in Switzerland is bottled directly following distillation and reduction and is uncoloured clear Blanches tend to have a clean smooth flavour with strongly individuated tasting notes The name la Bleue was originally a term used for Swiss bootleg absinthe which was bottled colourless so as to be visually indistinct from other spirits during the era of absinthe prohibition but has become a popular term for post ban Swiss style absinthe in general Blanches are often lower in alcohol content than vertes though this is not necessarily so the only truly differentiating factor is that blanches are not put through a secondary maceration stage and thus remain colourless like other distilled liquors Verte absinthe green in French sometimes called la fee verte begins as a blanche and is altered by a secondary maceration stage in which a separate mixture of herbs is steeped into the clear distillate before bottling This confers an intense complex flavor as well as a peridot green hue 80 Vertes represent the prevailing type of absinthe that was found in the 19th century Vertes are typically more alcoholic than blanches as the high amounts of botanical oils conferred during the secondary maceration only remain miscible at lower concentrations of water thus vertes are usually bottled at closer to still strength Artificially colored green absinthes may also be claimed to be verte though they lack the characteristic herbal flavors that result from maceration in whole herbs Absenta absinthe in Spanish is sometimes associated with a regional style that often differed slightly from its French cousin Traditional absentas may taste slightly different due to their use of Alicante anise unreliable source 81 and often exhibit a characteristic citrus flavour unreliable source 82 Hausgemacht German for home made often abbreviated as HG citation needed refers to clandestine absinthe not to be confused with the Swiss La Clandestine brand that is home distilled by hobbyists It should not be confused with absinthe kits Hausgemacht absinthe is produced in tiny quantities for personal use and not for the commercial market Clandestine production increased after absinthe was banned when small producers went underground most notably in Switzerland Although the ban has been lifted in Switzerland some clandestine distillers have not legitimised their production Authorities believe that high taxes on alcohol and the mystique of being underground are likely reasons 83 nbsp Burning sugar in a glass of Absinth Stromu a Bohemian style product Note the strong artificial colouration Bohemian style absinth is also referred to as Czech style absinthe anise free absinthe or just absinth without the e and is best described as a wormwood bitters It is produced mainly in the Czech Republic 84 from which it gets its designation as Bohemian or Czech although not all absinthes from the Czech Republic are Bohemian style Bohemian style absinth typically contains little or none of the anise fennel and other herbal flavours associated with traditional absinthe and thus bears very little resemblance to the absinthes made popular in the 19th century Typical Bohemian style absinth has only two similarities with its authentic traditional counterpart it contains wormwood and has a high alcohol content The Czechs are credited with inventing the fire ritual in the 1990s possibly because Bohemian style absinth does not louche which renders the traditional French preparation method useless As such this type of absinthe and the fire ritual associated with it are entirely modern fabrications and have little to no relationship with the historical absinthe tradition 85 Storage EditAbsinthe that is artificially coloured or clear is aesthetically stable and can be bottled in clear glass If naturally colored absinthe is exposed to light or air for a prolonged period the chlorophyll gradually becomes oxidized which has the effect of gradually changing the color from green to yellow green and eventually to brown The colour of absinthe that has completed this transition was historically referred to as feuille morte dead leaf In the pre ban era this natural phenomenon was favourably viewed for it confirmed the product in question was coloured naturally and not artificially with potentially toxic chemicals Predictably vintage absinthes often emerge from sealed bottles as distinctly amber in tint due to decades of slow oxidation Though this colour change presents no adverse impact to the flavour of absinthe it is generally desired to preserve the original colour which requires that naturally coloured absinthe be bottled in dark light resistant bottles Absinthe intended for decades of storage should be kept in a cool room temperature dry place away from light and heat Absinthe should not be stored in the refrigerator or freezer as the anethole may polymerise inside the bottle creating an irreversible precipitate and adversely impacting the original flavour Health effects EditAbsinthe has been frequently and improperly described in modern times as being hallucinogenic No peer reviewed scientific study has demonstrated absinthe to possess hallucinogenic properties 86 The belief that absinthe induces hallucinogenic effects is rooted at least partly in the findings of 19th century French psychiatrist Valentin Magnan who carried out ten years of experiments with wormwood oil In the course of this research he studied 250 cases of alcoholism and concluded that those who abused absinthe were worse off than those who abused other alcoholic drinks experiencing rapid onset hallucinations 87 Such accounts by opponents of absinthe like Magnan were cheerfully embraced by famous absinthe drinkers many of whom were bohemian artists or writers 88 Two famous artists who helped popularise the notion that absinthe had powerful psychoactive properties were Toulouse Lautrec and Vincent van Gogh In one of the best known written accounts of absinthe drinking an inebriated Oscar Wilde described a phantom sensation of having tulips brush against his legs after leaving a bar at closing time 89 Notions of absinthe s alleged hallucinogenic properties were again fuelled in the 1970s when a scientific paper suggested that thujone s structural similarity to tetrahydrocannabinol THC the active chemical in cannabis presented the possibility of THC receptor affinity 90 91 This theory was conclusively disproven in 1999 92 The debate over whether absinthe produces effects on the human mind in addition to those of alcohol has not been resolved conclusively The effects of absinthe have been described by some as mind opening 93 The most commonly reported experience is a clear headed feeling of inebriation a form of lucid drunkenness Chemist historian and absinthe distiller Ted Breaux has claimed that the alleged secondary effects of absinthe may be because some of the herbal compounds in the drink act as stimulants while others act as sedatives creating an overall lucid effect of awakening 94 The long term effects of moderate absinthe consumption in humans remain unknown although herbs traditionally used to produce absinthe are reported to have both painkilling 95 and antiparasitic 96 properties nbsp Henri Privat Livemont s 1896 posterToday it is known that absinthe does not cause hallucinations 93 It is widely accepted that reports of hallucinogenic effects resulting from absinthe consumption were attributable to the poisonous adulterants being added to cheaper versions of the drink in the 19th century 97 such as oil of wormwood impure alcohol contaminated possibly with methanol and poisonous colouring matter notably among other green copper salts cupric acetate and antimony trichloride the last named being used to fake the ouzo effect 98 99 Controversy Edit It was once widely promoted that excessive absinthe drinking caused effects that were discernible from those associated with alcoholism a belief that led to the coining of the term absinthism One of the first vilifications of absinthe followed an 1864 experiment in which Magnan simultaneously exposed one guinea pig to large doses of pure wormwood vapour and another to alcohol vapours The guinea pig exposed to wormwood vapour experienced convulsive seizures while the animal exposed to alcohol did not Magnan would later blame the naturally occurring in wormwood chemical thujone for these effects 100 Thujone once widely believed to be an active chemical in absinthe is a GABA antagonist and while it can produce muscle spasms in large doses there is no direct evidence to suggest it causes hallucinations 93 Past reports estimated thujone concentrations in absinthe as being up to 260 mg kg 101 More recently published scientific analyses of samples of various original absinthes have disproved previous estimates and demonstrated that only a trace of the thujone present in wormwood actually makes it into a properly distilled absinthe when historical methods and materials are employed to create the spirit As such most traditionally crafted absinthes both vintage and modern fall within the current EU standards 102 103 104 105 nbsp The Absinthe Drinker by Viktor Oliva 1861 1928 Tests conducted on mice to study toxicity showed an oral LD50 of about 45 mg thujone per kg of body weight 106 which represents far more absinthe than could be realistically consumed The high percentage of alcohol in absinthe would result in mortality long before thujone could become a factor 106 In documented cases of acute thujone poisoning as a result of oral ingestion 107 the source of thujone was not commercial absinthe but rather non absinthe related sources such as common essential oils which may contain as much as 50 thujone 108 One study published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol 109 concluded that high doses 0 28 mg kg of thujone in alcohol had negative effects on attention performance in a clinical setting It delayed reaction time and caused subjects to concentrate their attention into the central field of vision Low doses 0 028 mg kg did not produce an effect noticeably different from the plain alcohol control While the effects of the high dose samples were statistically significant in a double blind test the test subjects themselves were unable to reliably identify which samples contained thujone For the average 65 kg 143 lb man the high dose samples in the study would equate to 18 2 mg of thujone The EU limit of 35 mg L of thujone in absinthe means that given the highest permitted thujone content that individual would need to consume approximately 0 5 litres of high proof e g 50 ABV spirit before the thujone could be metabolized in order to display effects detectable in a clinical setting which would result in a potentially lethal BAC of gt 0 4 110 Regulations EditMost countries except Switzerland at present do not possess a legal definition of absinthe unlike Scotch whisky or cognac Accordingly producers are free to label a product absinthe or absinth whether or not it bears any resemblance to the traditional spirit citation needed Australia Edit Absinthe is readily available in many bottle shops Bitters may contain a maximum 35 mg kg thujone while other alcoholic beverages can contain a maximum 10 mg kg 111 The domestic production and sale of absinthe is regulated by state licensing laws nbsp Edouard Manet The Absinthe Drinker c 1859Until July 13 2013 the import and sale of absinthe technically required a special permit since oil of wormwood being an essential oil obtained from plants of the genus Artemisia and preparations containing oil of wormwood were listed as item 12A Schedule 8 Regulation 5H of the Customs Prohibited Imports Regulations 1956 Cth These controls have now been repealed 112 and permission is no longer required 113 Brazil Edit Absinthe was prohibited in Brazil until 1999 and was brought by entrepreneur Lalo Zanini and legalised in the same year Presently absinthe sold in Brazil must abide by the national law that restricts all spirits to a maximum of 54 ABV 114 While this regulation is enforced throughout channels of legal distribution it may be possible to find absinthe containing alcohol in excess of the legal limit in some restaurants or food fairs Canada Edit In Canada liquor laws concerning the production distribution and sale of spirits are written and enforced by individual provincial government monopolies Each product is subject to the approval of a respective individual provincial liquor board before it can be sold in that province Importation is a federal matter and is enforced by the Canada Border Services Agency The importation of a nominal amount of liquor by individuals for personal use is permitted provided that conditions for the individual s duration of stay outside the country are satisfied British Columbia New Brunswick no established limits on thujone content Alberta Ontario 10 mg kg Manitoba 6 8 mg Quebec 15 mg kg Newfoundland and Labrador absinthe sold in provincial liquor store outlets Nova Scotia absinthe sold in provincial liquor store outlets Prince Edward Island absinthe is not sold in provincial liquor store outlets but one brand Deep Roots produced on the island 115 can be procured locally Saskatchewan Only one brand listed in provincial liquor stores although an individual is permitted to import one case usually twelve 750 ml bottles or eight one litre bottles of any liquor Ontario 3 brands of absinthe are listed for sale on the web site of the Liquor Control Board of OntarioIn 2007 Canada s first genuine absinthe Taboo Absinthe was created by Okanagan Spirits Craft Distillery in British Columbia 116 European Union Edit The European Union permits a maximum thujone level of 35 mg kg in alcoholic beverages where Artemisia species is a listed ingredient and 10 mg kg in other alcoholic beverages 117 Member countries regulate absinthe production within this framework The sale of absinthe is permitted in all EU countries unless they further regulate it Finland Edit The sale and production of absinthe was prohibited in Finland from 1919 to 1932 no current prohibitions exist The government owned chain of liquor stores Alko is the only outlet that may sell alcoholic beverages containing over 5 5 ABV although national law bans the sale of alcoholic beverages containing over 80 ABV France Edit nbsp Pablo Picasso 1901 02 Femme au cafe Absinthe Drinker oil on canvas 73 cm 54 cm 29 in 21 in Hermitage Museum Saint Petersburg RussiaEdouard Manet s first major painting The Absinthe Drinker was controversial and was rejected by the Paris Salon in 1859 Despite adopting sweeping EU food and beverage regulations in 1988 that effectively re legalised absinthe a decree was passed that same year that preserved the prohibition on products explicitly labelled as absinthe while placing strict limits on fenchone fennel and pinocamphone hyssop 118 in an obvious but failed attempt to thwart a possible return of absinthe like products French producers circumvented this regulatory obstacle by labelling absinthe as spiritueux a base de plantes d absinthe wormwood based spirits with many either reducing or omitting fennel and hyssop altogether from their products A legal challenge to the scientific basis of this decree resulted in its repeal 2009 119 which opened the door for the official French re legalisation of absinthe for the first time since 1915 The French Senate voted to repeal the prohibition in mid April 2011 120 Georgia Edit It is legal to produce and sell absinthe in Georgia which has claimed to possess several producers of absinthe Germany Edit A ban on absinthe was enacted in Germany on 27 March 1923 In addition to banning the production of and commercial trade in absinthe the law went so far as to prohibit the distribution of printed matter that provided details of its production The original ban was lifted in 1981 but the use of Artemisia absinthium as a flavouring agent remained prohibited On 27 September 1991 Germany adopted the European Union s standards of 1988 which effectively re legalised absinthe 121 Italy Edit The Fascist regime in 1926 banned the production import transport and sale of any liquor named Assenzio The ban was reinforced in 1931 with harsher penalties for transgressors and remained in force until 1992 when the Italian government amended its laws to comply with the EU directive 88 388 EEC New Zealand Edit Although absinthe is not prohibited at national level some local authorities have banned it The latest is Mataura in Southland The ban came in August 2008 after several issues of misuse drew public and police attention One incident resulted in breathing difficulties and hospitalising of a 17 year old for alcohol poisoning 122 The particular brand of absinthe that caused these effects was bottled at 89 ABV Sweden and Norway Edit The sale and production of absinthe has never been prohibited in Sweden or Norway However the only outlet that may sell alcoholic beverages containing more than 3 5 ABV in Sweden and 4 75 ABV in Norway is the government owned chain of liquor stores known as Systembolaget in Sweden and Vinmonopolet in Norway Systembolaget and Vinmonopolet did not import or sell absinthe for many years after the ban in France 123 however today several absinthes are available for purchase in Systembolaget stores including Swedish made distilled absinthe In Norway on the other hand one is less likely to find many absinthes since Norwegian alcohol law prohibits the sale and importation of alcoholic beverages above 60 ABV which eliminates most absinthes Switzerland Edit In Switzerland the sale and production of absinthe was prohibited from 1910 to March 1 2005 This was based on a vote in 1908 124 To be legally made or sold in Switzerland absinthe must be distilled 125 must not contain certain additives and must be either naturally coloured or left uncoloured 126 In 2014 the Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland invalidated a governmental decision of 2010 which allowed only absinthe made in the Val de Travers region to be labelled as absinthe in Switzerland The court found that absinthe was a label for a product and was not tied to a geographic origin 127 United States Edit nbsp The Drinkers by Jean Beraud 1908 In 2007 the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau TTB effectively lifted the long standing absinthe ban and it has since approved many brands for sale in the US market This was made possible partly through the TTB s clarification of the Food and Drug Administration s FDA thujone content regulations which specify that finished food and beverages that contain Artemisia species must be thujone free 128 In this context the TTB considers a product thujone free if the thujone content is less than 10 ppm equal to 10 mg kg 129 130 This is verified through the use of gas chromatography mass spectrometry 131 The brands Kubler and Lucid and their lawyers did most of the work to get absinthe legalized in the U S over the 2004 2007 time period 132 In the U S March 5 sometimes is referred to as National Absinthe Day as it was the day the 95 year ban on absinthe was finally lifted 133 The import distribution and sale of absinthe are permitted subject to the following restrictions The product must be thujone free as per TTB guidelines The word absinthe can neither be the brand name nor stand alone on the label and The packaging cannot project images of hallucinogenic psychotropic or mind altering effects Absinthe imported in violation of these regulations is subject to seizure at the discretion of U S Customs and Border Protection 134 135 Beginning in 2000 136 a product called Absente was sold legally in the United States under the marketing tagline Absinthe Refined but as the product contained sugar and was made with southernwood Artemisia abrotanum and not grande wormwood Artemisia absinthium before 2009 137 the TTB classified it as a liqueur Vanuatu Edit The Absinthe Prohibition Act 1915 passed in the New Hebrides has never been repealed is included in the 2006 Vanuatu consolidated legislation and contains the following all encompassing restriction The manufacture importation circulation and sale wholesale or by retail of absinthe or similar liquors in Vanuatu shall be prohibited 138 nbsp La fin de la fee verte The End of the Green Fairy Swiss poster criticizing the country s prohibition of absinthe in 1910Cultural influence EditMain article Cultural references to absinthe Numerous artists and writers living in France in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were noted absinthe drinkers and featured absinthe in their work Some of these included Edouard Manet 139 Guy de Maupassant Paul Verlaine 140 Amedeo Modigliani Edgar Degas 141 Henri de Toulouse Lautrec 142 Vincent van Gogh Oscar Wilde 17 Arthur Rimbaud and Emile Zola 143 Many other renowned artists and writers similarly drew from this cultural well including Aleister Crowley Ernest Hemingway Pablo Picasso August Strindberg and Erik Satie The aura of illicitness and mystery surrounding absinthe has played into literature movies music and television where it is often portrayed as a mysterious addictive and mind altering drink Marie Corelli s Wormwood A Drama of Paris 1890 was a popular novel about a Frenchman driven to murder and ruin after being introduced to absinthe Intended as a morality tale on the dangers of the drink it was speculated to have contributed to subsequent bans of absinthe in Europe 144 and the United States 145 Some of the earliest film references include The Hasher s Delirium 1910 by Emile Cohl 146 an early pioneer in the art of animation as well as two different silent films each entitled Absinthe from 1913 and 1914 respectively 147 148 See also Edit nbsp Liquor portalList of alcoholic drinksReferences Edit Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Absinthe Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 75 Traite de la Fabrication de Liqueurs et de la Distillation des Alcools P Duplais 1882 3rd ed pp 375 3781 Nouveau Traite de la Fabrication des Liqueurs J Fritsch 1926 pp 385 401 La Fabrication des Liqueurs J De Brevans 1908 pp 251 262 Nouveau Manuel Complet du Distillateur Liquoriste Lebead de Fontenelle amp Malepeyre 1888 pp 221 224 Traite de la Fabrication de Liqueurs et de la Distillation des Alcools Duplais 1882 3rd ed p 249 The Appeal of The Green Fairy Archived from the original on 2016 01 20 Retrieved 2022 02 03 Sarasota Herald Tribune September 18 2008 Arnold Wilfred Niels 1988 Vincent van Gogh and the Thujone Connection JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 260 20 3042 3044 doi 10 1001 jama 1988 03410200098033 PMID 3054185 SAMA Network November 25 1988 a b Padosch Stephan A Lachenmeier Dirk W Kroner Lars U 2006 Absinthism a fictitious 19th century syndrome with present impact Substance Abuse Treatment Prevention and Policy 1 14 doi 10 1186 1747 597X 1 14 PMC 1475830 PMID 16722551 ἀpsin8ion in Liddell and Scott Lucretius Titi lvcreti cari de rervm natvra liber qvartvs Archived from the original on 20 August 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 17 Absinthe etymology Gernot Katzer s Spice Pages Retrieved 2012 02 12 Absinth Short explanation of the adoption of the absinth spelling by Bohemian producers La Fee Verte Absinthe Archived from the original on 17 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 17 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott 1940 ἀpsin8iths A Greek English Lexicon Retrieved 2013 03 09 a b Absinthe FAQ III Archived 2014 08 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Aug 20 2014 Lemons Stephen 2005 04 07 Behind the green door Phoenix New Times Archived from the original on 2012 10 20 Retrieved 2008 09 18 a b St Clair Kassia 2016 The Secret Lives of Colour London John Murray p 217 ISBN 978 1473630819 OCLC 936144129 High Price of Wines due to Short Crops PDF The New York Times 1911 11 05 Retrieved 2008 10 20 1910 was no less than 1 089 millions of gallons 162 bottles per head Verte Peter The Fine Spirits Corner Absinthe Buyers Guide Archived from the original on 5 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 04 11 a b The Virtual Absinthe Museum Absinthe in America New Orleans Oxygenee Ltd Archived from the original on 8 September 2012 Retrieved 1 December 2016 History Old Absinthe House Archived from the original on 25 December 2016 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Wittels Betina J Breaux T A 2017 Absinthe The Exquisite Elixir Fulcrum Publishing p 45 ISBN 978 1682750018 Barnaby Conrad III 1988 Absinthe History in a Bottle Chronicle Books p 116 ISBN 978 0811816502 1970 Penguin Classics English edition p 411 Conrad III Barnaby 1988 Absinthe History in a Bottle Chronicle books ISBN 0811816508 pp 1 4 St Clair 2016 pp 218 219 a b Nohlen D amp Stover P 2010 Elections in Europe A Data Dandbook p 1906 ISBN 978 3832956097 Carvajal Doreen 2004 11 27 Fans of absinthe party like it s 1899 International Herald Tribune Archived from the original on 2006 02 28 Retrieved 2008 09 18 a b Association United States Brewers 1916 The Year Book of the United States Brewers Association The Association The Absinthe Buyer s Guide Archived 2007 09 14 at the Wayback Machine La Fee Verte Vintage Absinthe Pernod Tarragona Alandia Retrieved 1 September 2023 Verte Peter The Fine Spirits Corner Absinthe Buyer s Guide Archived from the original on 24 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Modern Revival of Absinthe Absinthe se Retrieved 2012 02 12 Absinthe History and FAQ VI Thujone info Archived from the original on 2012 02 26 Retrieved 2012 02 12 Unmasking the green fairy Praguepost com Retrieved 2012 02 12 The search for real absinthe like Tinkerbell the Green Fairy lives only if we believe in her Reason org 1 August 2005 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Strong stuff London Telegraph 2001 07 27 Archived from the original on 2022 01 11 Retrieved 2012 07 24 Anna Pursglove 4 August 2000 What s your poison London Evening Standard Retrieved 1 December 2016 Cellar Trends Cellar Trends Archived from the original on 2011 06 23 Retrieved 2012 07 24 The Dedalus Book of Absinthe Baker Phil 2001 p 165 ISBN 1873982941 Absinthe Tale Difford Simmon Class Magazine May June 2009 pp 88 93 Lachenmeier D W Emmert J Sartor G 2005 Authentification of Absinthe The Bitter Truth over a Myth Deutsch Lebensmittel Rundschau 100 104 Absinthe Laws Retrieved 11 March 2013 Customs Prohibited Imports Regulations 1956 retrieved 2022 12 31 Australian Food Standards PDF PDF Australia New Zealand Food Authority Retrieved 1 December 2016 Standard 1 4 4 Prohibited and Restricted Plant and Fungi PDF Food Standards Australia New Zealand Archived from the original PDF on 10 January 2006 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Just add water The Sydney Morning Herald 2003 10 22 Retrieved 2022 12 31 TTB Online COLAs Online Application Detail Retrieved 2009 02 24 Brand Name LUCID Approval Date 03 05 2007 TTB Online COLAs Online Application Detail Retrieved 2009 02 24 Brand Name KUBLER Approval Date 05 17 2007 Cindy Skrzycki 16 October 2007 A Notorious Spirit Finds Its Way Back to Bars PDF The Washington Post Archived PDF from the original on 5 March 2009 Retrieved 2009 02 24 Finz Stacy 2007 12 05 Alameda distiller helps make absinthe legitimate again SFGATE Retrieved 2022 12 31 Wells Pete 2007 12 05 A Liquor of Legend Makes a Comeback The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 12 31 Contact Brent Rose 2012 06 08 Absinthe Pops The Frozen Treat That Will Melt Your Face Gizmodo com Retrieved 2012 06 12 Ice lolly made from holy water and absinthe goes on sale Weird News Digital Spy 2012 05 31 Retrieved 2012 06 12 Campion Vikki 2012 06 08 Sydney s small bar revolution is teaching people a new way to drink thetelegraph com au DailyTelegraph com au Retrieved 2012 06 12 Official FFS Press Release confirming the repeal of the 1915 French Absinthe Ban Article 175 point 20 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 Aide Memoire production d absinthe PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 02 Retrieved 2016 12 02 How to make Absinthe Alandia Absinthe Blog Retrieved 1 September 2023 unreliable source Kallisti Historical Recipes Feeverte net Archived from the original on 2010 09 20 Retrieved 2010 08 14 Regulation EU 2019 787 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 April 2019 on the definition description presentation and labelling of spirit drinks the use of the names of spirit drinks in the presentation and labelling of other foodstuffs the protection of geographical indications for spirit drinks the use of ethyl alcohol and distillates of agricultural origin in alcoholic beverages and repealing Regulation EC No 110 2008 EUR Lex Retrieved 1 June 2022 Ordonnance du DFI sur les boissons Fedlex Swiss Confederation Retrieved 1 June 2022 La Maison Pernod Fils a Pontarlier E Dentu 1896 p 10 Chu Louisa 2008 03 12 Crazy for absinthe Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on 2008 03 14 Duplais MM A Treatise on the Manufacture and Distillation of Alcoholic Liquors PDF Distiller s Manual The Wormwood Society Archived from the original PDF on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 9 October 2012 Abbott Edward 1864 The English and Australian Cookery Book a b Class Mag May June 2009 La Fee Lafeeabsinthe com Archived from the original on 2 December 2016 Retrieved 2 December 2016 Absinthe the Green or pink or red Fairy Distillique Archived from the original on August 3 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Rosinette Absinthe Rose Oxygenee Musee Virtuel de l Absinthe Oxygenee France Ltd Archived from the original on 6 November 2021 Retrieved 25 July 2016 Absinth Guide de Archived from the original on May 9 2015 Retrieved February 8 2009 Absinthes com Archived from the original on 2018 10 21 Retrieved 2018 10 20 Absinthe with 89 9 ABV Alandia Retrieved 1 September 2023 About absinthe kits wormwoodsociety Archived from the original on 2008 04 19 Retrieved 2008 09 17 Evolution in action www gumbopages com Retrieved 2022 12 31 Laura Halpin Rinsky Glenn Rinsky 2009 The Pastry Chef s Companion A Comprehensive Resource Guide for the Baking and Pastry Professional Chichester John Wiley amp Sons p 1 ISBN 978 0470009550 OCLC 173182689 Simon Kate 2010 Absinthe Cocktails 50 Ways to Mix with the Green Fairy Chronicle Books p 33 ISBN 978 1452100302 How to buy and drink good quality absinthe Wormwoodsociety org Archived from the original on 2012 05 06 Retrieved 2012 07 14 Professors of Absinthe Historic account of preparation at a bar Oxygenee Ltd Archived from the original on 5 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Dorelli Peter 1999 Savoy Cocktail Book Anova Books ISBN 978 1862052963 page needed McGee Harold 2008 01 03 Trying to Clear Absinthe s Reputation The New York Times Retrieved 2008 09 17 Shenton Will 2016 02 24 Everything You Need to Know About Absinthe Bevvy Retrieved 2016 10 24 unreliable source Verte Peter Fine Spirits Corner absinthe buyers guide Archived from the original on 24 September 2008 Retrieved 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Anderson M Rubottom G M 1975 Letters to Nature Marijuana absinthe and the central nervous system Nature 253 5490 365 366 doi 10 1038 253365a0 PMID 1110781 S2CID 4245058 Conrad III Barnaby 1988 Absinthe History in a Bottle Chronicle Books ISBN 0811816508 p 152 Meschler JP Howlett AC March 1999 Thujone exhibits low affinity for cannabinoid receptors but fails to evoke cannabimimetic responses Pharmacol Biochem Behav 62 3 473 480 doi 10 1016 S0091 3057 98 00195 6 PMID 10080239 S2CID 30865036 a b c The Appeal of The Green Fairy Archived 2016 01 20 at the Wayback Machine Sarasota Herald Tribune September 18 2008 Citing Absinthe History in a Bottle Biomed Central The Book of Absinthe and Thujone info The Mystery of the Green Menace Wired Magazine see p 3 of article Wired vig wired com 2009 01 04 Archived from the original on 2010 08 23 Retrieved 2010 08 14 K C Rice and R S Wilson 1976 J Med Chem 19 1054 1057 Cited by Patocka Jiri Plucar Bohumil 2003 Pharmacology and toxicology of absinthe Journal of Applied Biomedicine 1 4 199 205 doi 10 32725 jab 2003 036 A study of plants in central Italy reported some veterinary use of wormwood as an anthelmintic for cows Guarrera P M 1999 Traditional antihelmintic antiparasitic and repellent uses of plants in central Italy J Ethnopharmacol 68 1 3 183 192 doi 10 1016 s0378 8741 99 00089 6 PMID 10624877 404 Page Not Found www absintheonline com Retrieved 2022 12 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help The Effects of Absinthe Emma S Walker M D Medical Record 1906 the alcohol employed in this liquor is frequently very impure the bitter principle of absinthium absinthin from oil of wormwood is a narcotic poison not infrequently copper salts have been used in order to produce the green color The Mixicologist C F Lawler 1895 The distillers of Bensacon Pontarlier and Couvet hit on the idea of distilling the Absinthe herb wormwood adding annis sic fennel and coriander seeds etc ad lib these making an agreeable beverage Absinthe so made soon had considerable success which had the usual effect of bringing out the injurious trash made from oils essences etc Conrad III Barnaby 1988 Absinthe History in a Bottle Chronicle Books ISBN 0811816508 p 101 Ian Hutton p 62 quoted by Arnold Arnold WN 1989 Absinthe Scientific American 260 6 112 117 Ian Hutton pp 62 63 Joachim Emmert Gunter Sartor Frank Sporer Joachim Gummersbach 2004 Determination of a b Thujone and Related Terpenes in Absinthe using Solid Phase Extraction and Gas Chromatography PDF Deutsche Lebensmittel Rundschau Germany Gabriele Lauser Ingrid Steiner 9 100 352 356 Archived from the original PDF on 27 November 2007 Retrieved 2007 11 26 Tab 1 Concentrations of thujone and anethole in different absinthe samples Determination of a b Thujone and Related Terpenes in Absinthe using Solid Phase Extraction and Gas Chromatography Archived 2007 11 27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 5 March 2006 Lachenmeier Dirk W Nathan Maister David Breaux Theodore A Sohnius Eva Maria Schoeberl Kerstin Kuballa Thomas 2008 Chemical Composition of Vintage Preban Absinthe with Special Reference to Thujone Fenchone Pinocamphone Methanol Copper and Antimony Concentrations Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 56 9 3073 3081 doi 10 1021 jf703568f PMID 18419128 a b Hold K M 2000 alpha Thujone the active component of absinthe gamma Aminobutyric acid type A receptor modulation and metabolic detoxification Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97 8 3826 3831 Bibcode 2000PNAS 97 3826H doi 10 1073 pnas 070042397 PMC 18101 PMID 10725394 Weisbord S D Soule J B Kimmel P L 1997 Poison on Line Acute Renal Failure Caused by Oil of Wormwood Purchased through the Internet N Engl J Med 337 12 825 827 doi 10 1056 nejm199709183371205 PMID 9297113 Essential oils from Dalmatian Sage J Agric Food Chem 29 April 1999 Retrieved 12 May 2006 Dettling A Grass H Schuff A Skopp G Strohbeck Kuehner P Haffner H Th 2015 01 04 Absinthe attention performance and mood under the influence of thujone Journal of Studies on Alcohol 65 5 573 581 doi 10 15288 jsa 2004 65 573 PMID 15536765 Calculate Your Blood Alcohol Content BAC clevelandclinic org Cleveland Clinic Archived from the original on 25 July 2017 Retrieved 14 July 2017 Schedule 19 Maximum levels of contaminants and natural toxicants Food Standards Australia New Zealand Retrieved 1 December 2016 Australian Customs Notice No 2013 28 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 07 Retrieved 2016 12 02 Prohibited Restricted Goods Frequently asked questions Australian Customs and Border Protection Service Archived from the original on 2 February 2015 Retrieved 2 December 2016 Brazilian Absinthe Camargo Alandia Retrieved 1 September 2023 Absinthe now available at P E I distillery for adventurous drinkers CBC News Retrieved 1 November 2017 McDowell Adam 2010 11 19 Happy Hour s Guide to Absinthe What can I buy in Canada National Post Retrieved 2 December 2016 Regulation EC No 1334 2008 of the European Parliament and Council of 16 December 2008 European Commission www legifrance gouv fr https www legifrance gouv fr texteconsolide ADHJA htm Retrieved 2022 12 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Aggelos 2010 11 05 French decree on fenchone and pinocamphone repealed Gazetteabsinthe com Retrieved 2012 07 24 Absinthe in France Legalising the green fairy BBC News 2011 05 04 European Union PDF document PDF see thujon in table on page 11 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Gerken Sonia 2008 08 30 Liquor ban after teen s near death The Southland Times Archived from the original on 2009 01 16 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Absint Den grona feen in Swedish Systembolaget Archived from the original on 2011 03 24 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Schaffner Margaret A 1908 Absinthe Prohibition in Switzerland American Political Science Review 2 4 562 doi 10 2307 1944480 ISSN 1537 5943 JSTOR 1944480 S2CID 147087718 Ordonnance du DFI sur les boissons alcooliques Art 80 Absinth Confederation Suisse 2008 04 01 Archived from the original on 2009 02 23 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Download from Confederation Suisse Website see pp 3 4 PDF Confederation Suisse 2005 02 07 Archived PDF from the original on 10 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Bosley Catherine 13 August 2014 Absinthe Loses Battle for Swiss Brand Protection Like Emmentaler Bloomberg Retrieved 13 August 2014 Code of Federal Regulations Title 21 Chapter I Part 172 Section 172 510 Food Additives Permitted for Direct Addition to Food for Human Consumption US Food and Drug Administration Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 17 Alcohol Tax and Trade Bureau Industry Circular Number 2007 5 Archived from the original on 2014 02 09 Retrieved 2008 09 17 Rediscovering Absinthe Removing The Green Fairy From The Banned List Retrieved 17 September 2008 Alcohol Tax and Trade Bureau Screening of Distilled Spirits for Thujone by Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau Archived from the original on 17 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 17 The Virtual Absinthe Museum US Legalization in 2007 after 95 years of prohibition Retrieved 1 December 2016 Navarro Vincent 2018 03 05 It s National Absinthe Day laspeakeasy Retrieved 2022 12 31 Know Before You Go PDF U S Customs and Border Protection Archived from the original PDF on 2009 05 27 Retrieved 2009 10 13 Prohibited and Restricted Items US Customs and Border Protection Retrieved 1 December 2016 TTB Online Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Absente FAQ Archived from the original on 25 January 2010 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Absinthe Prohibition Act 4 Laws of the Republic of Vanuatu Revised Edition 1988 Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 17 Fried Michael 1996 Manet s Modernism Or The Face of Painting in the 1860s University of Chicago Press p 34 ISBN 978 0226262178 Phillips Rod 2014 10 13 Alcohol A History UNC Press Books p 180 ISBN 978 1469617619 Siegel Ronald K 2005 Intoxication The Universal Drive for Mind Altering Substances Inner Traditions Bear amp Co ISBN 978 1594770692 Wittels Betina Hermesch Robert 2008 Absinthe Sip of Seduction A Contemporary Guide Fulcrum Publishing ISBN 978 1933108216 Ciabattari Jane Absinthe How the Green Fairy became literature s drink www bbc com Retrieved 2019 10 10 Masters Brian 1978 Now Barabbas Was a Rotter the Extraordinary Life of Marie Corelli London H Hamilton At the Antlers The Independent Record 21 July 1915 p 5 The Hasher s Delirium 1910 Archive org Retrieved 20 February 2016 Absinthe 1913 A silent film Progressive Silent Film List Retrieved 20 February 2016 Absinthe 1914 A silent film Progressive Silent Film List Retrieved 20 February 2016 Further reading EditAdams Jad 2004 Hideous absinthe a history of the devil in a bottle London I B Tauris ISBN 1860649203 Arnold Wilfred Niels June 1989 Absinthe Scientific American 260 6 112 117 Bibcode 1989SciAm 260f 112A doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0689 112 PMID 2658044 S2CID 215053033 Retrieved September 18 2010 Blumer D 2002 The Illness of Vincent van Gogh American Journal of Psychiatry 159 4 519 526 doi 10 1176 appi ajp 159 4 519 PMID 11925286 S2CID 43106568 Conrad Barnaby 1996 Absinthe History in a Bottle San Francisco Chronicle Books ISBN 978 0811816502 Crowley Aleister 1918 Absinthe The Green Goddess PDF The International XII 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 09 18 Retrieved 2016 03 05 Eadie MJ 2009 Absinthe epileptic seizures and Valentin Magnan The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 39 1 73 78 PMID 19831287 Guthrie R Winston 2010 A Taste for Absinthe New York Clarkson Potter p 176 ISBN 978 0307587534 Archived from the original on 2019 02 28 Retrieved 2012 09 26 Huisman M Brug J MacKenbach J 2007 Absinthe is its history relevant for current public health International Journal of Epidemiology 36 4 738 744 doi 10 1093 ije dym068 PMID 17982755 Lachenmeier Dirk W Nathan Maister David Breaux Theodore A Sohnius Eva Maria Schoeberl Kerstin Kuballa Thomas 2008 Chemical Composition of Vintage Preban Absinthe with Special Reference to Thujone Fenchone Pinocamphone Methanol Copper and Antimony Concentrations Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 56 9 3073 3081 doi 10 1021 jf703568f PMID 18419128 Lachenmeier Dirk W Walch Stephan G Padosch Stephan A Kroner Lars U 2006 Absinthe A Review Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 46 5 365 377 doi 10 1080 10408690590957322 PMID 16891209 S2CID 43251156 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Absinthe nbsp Look up absinthe in Wiktionary the free dictionary Absinthe s second coming Archived 2008 12 03 at the Wayback Machine An April 2001 article in Cigar Aficionado about the first absinthe commercially produced in France since the 1915 ban Swiss face sobering future after legalizing absinthe Archived 2016 12 02 at the Wayback Machine A March 2005 Reuters article about the legalising of absinthe in Switzerland The Mystery of the Green Menace A November 2005 Wired magazine article about a New Orleans man who has researched the chemical content of absinthe and now distills it in France The Return of the Green Faerie A wine and spirit journal article about the history ritual and artistic cult of absinthe The Wormwood Society Archived 2006 04 24 at the Wayback Machine An independent organisation supporting changes to the US laws and regulations concerning absinthe Provides articles a forum and legal information What Is Absinthe Article discussing absinthe and its effect over mind and body Absinthe in the online Culinary Heritage of Switzerland database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Absinthe amp oldid 1178518766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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