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Grog

Grog is a term used for a variety of alcoholic beverages.

Nondistinct Grog

Origin and history edit

Background edit

During the early modern period (1500–1800), sailors required significant quantities of fresh water on extended voyages. Since desalinating sea water was not practical, fresh water was taken aboard in casks, but quickly developed algae and became slimy. Stagnant water was sweetened with beer or wine to make it palatable, which involved more casks and was subject to spoilage. As longer voyages became more common, the storage of the sailors' substantial daily ration of water plus beer or wine became a problem.

Popularization of rum and invention of grog edit

Following England's conquest of Jamaica in 1655, one-half of an imperial pint (2 gills; 284 millilitres) of rum gradually replaced beer and brandy as the drink of choice. Given to the sailor straight, this caused additional problems, as some sailors saved the rum rations for several days to drink all at once. To minimise the subsequent illness and disciplinary problems, the rum was mixed with water, which both diluted its effects and accelerated its spoilage, preventing hoarding of the allowance. In 1740, British Vice-Admiral Edward Vernon ordered that the daily rum issue of one-half imperial pint (284 ml) of rum be mixed with one imperial quart (1,100 ml) of water, a water-to-rum ratio of 4:1, with half issued before noon and the remainder after the end of the working day; this procedure became part of the official regulations of the Royal Navy in 1756 and continued until 1970.

Some writers have said that Vernon also added citrus juice to prevent spoilage and that it was found to prevent scurvy. This is not the case and is based on a misreading of Vernon's order in which, having instructed his captains to dilute the sailors' daily allowance of rum with water, he says that those members of the crew "which ... are good husbandmen may from the saving of their salt provisions and bread, purchase sugar and limes to make it more palatable to them."[1] Lime juice was not needed to combat scurvy, which was a disease of long ocean voyages – not of squadrons operating among islands where there was an abundance of fruits and fresh foodstuffs – and was thought by the medical establishment at the time to be due to poor digestion and internal putrefaction.[2] Standard medical remedies focussed on "gingering up" the system by imbibing a variety of (ineffective) fizzy or fermenting drinks.[3] Until an official daily issue of lemon juice was introduced into the Royal Navy in 1795, scurvy continued to be a debilitating disease which destroyed men and disabled ships and whole fleets. Seamen and surgeons knew from practical experience that citrus juice cured scurvy, but were unaware of the reason: vitamin C was only discovered in 1912. In 1795, in defiance of medical opinion, the Admiralty introduced lemon juice and sugar as a regular part of the naval diet.[4] When a few years later Spain allied itself with France and lemons became unobtainable, West Indian limes were substituted. It was from this time that the British obtained the nickname limeys.

 
Royal Navy grog ration

Etymology edit

The word originally referred to rum diluted with water (and later on long sea voyages, also added the juice of limes or lemons)[contradictory], which Edward Vernon introduced into the British naval squadron he commanded in the West Indies on 21 August 1740. Vernon wore a coat of grogram cloth and was nicknamed Old Grogram or Old Grog. The Merriam–Webster Collegiate Dictionary, which agrees with this story of the word's origin, states that the word grog was first used in this sense in 1770, though other sources cite 1749. A biographer of Daniel Defoe has suggested that the derivation from "Old Grog" is wrong because Defoe used the term in 1718,[5] but this is based on an erroneous citation of Defoe's work, which actually used the word "ginger".[6]

In the 19th century, coopers who crafted barrels on ships were often called groggers (or jolly jack tars), as when a barrel of rum had been emptied, they would fill it up with boiling water and roll it around, creating a drink which was called grog.[7]

Modern usage edit

In modern times, the term grog has had a variety of meanings in a number of different cultures, but is commonly used in Australia where it is a slang word for alcohol, as in sly-grog shop.[8]

In Northern Germany, grog is a "classic winter drink from East Frisia" made of rum, sugar and water and heated to boiling point.[9]

In Swedish, a "grogg" means a highball.[citation needed]

Serving practices edit

British ships edit

Until the grog ration was discontinued in 1970, Royal Navy rum was 95.5 proof (54.6% ABV);[10] the usual ration was one-eighth of an imperial pint (71 ml), diluted 2:1 with water (3:1 until World War II).[contradictory] Extra rum rations were provided for special celebrations, like Trafalgar Day, and sailors might share their ration with the cook or with a messmate celebrating a birthday. Until the early 20th century, weaker "six water grog" (rum diluted with water at a 6:1 ratio) was sometimes issued as a punishment to sailors found guilty of drunkenness or neglect.

Over time the distribution of the rum ration acquired a fixed form. At 11:00 am, the boatswain's mate piped "Up spirits", the signal for the petty officer of the day to climb to the quarterdeck and collect the keys to the spirit room from an officer, the ship's cooper, and a detachment of Royal Marines. In procession, they unlocked the door of the spirit room, and witnessed the pumping into a keg of one-eighth pint of rum for every rating and petty officer on the ship aged 20 or more and not under punishment. Two marines lifted the keg to the deck, standing guard while a file of cooks from the petty officers' messes held out their jugs. The sergeant of marines poured the ration under direction of the chief steward, who announced the number of drinking men present in each petty officer's mess. The rest of the rum was mixed in a tub with two parts water, becoming the grog provided to the ratings.

At noon, the boatswain's mate piped "Muster for Rum", and the cooks from each mess presented with tin buckets. The sergeant of marines ladled out the authorised number of tots (eighth-pints) supervised by the petty officer of the day. The few tots of grog remaining in the tub ("plushers"), if any, were poured into the drains (scuppers), visibly running into the sea.

The petty officers were served first, and entitled to take their rum undiluted. The ratings often drank their grog in one long gulp when they finished their work around noon.

American ships edit

The practice of serving grog twice a day carried over into the Continental Navy and the U.S. Navy. Robert Smith, then Secretary of the Navy, experimented with substituting native rye whiskey for the rum. Finding the American sailors preferred it, he made the change permanent. It is said his sailors followed the practice of their British antecedents and took to calling it "Bob Smith" instead of grog.[citation needed]

 
Royal Navy grog tub, found on HMS Cavalier

Unlike their Navy counterparts, American merchant seamen were not encouraged to partake of grog. In his 1848 testimony before a parliamentary committee, Robert Minturn of Grinnell, Minturn & Co "stated that teetotalism not only was encouraged by American ship-owners, but actually earned a bonus from underwriters, who offered a return of ten percent of the insurance premium upon voyages performed without the consumption of spirits ... The sailors were allowed plenty of hot coffee, night or day, in heavy weather, but grog was unknown on board American merchant ships."[11]

End of naval rum rationing edit

The American Navy ended the rum ration on 1 September 1862. The temperance movements of the late 19th century began to change the attitude toward drink in Britain, and the days of grog slowly came to an end. In 1850 the size of the tot was halved to one-eighth of an imperial pint (71 ml) per day. The issue of grog to officers ended in 1881, and to warrant officers in 1918. On 28 January 1970, the "Great Rum Debate" took place in the House of Commons, and on 31 July 1970, later called "Black Tot Day", the practice finally ended, although all ratings received an allowance of an extra can of beer each day as compensation.

In the early stages of British settlement in Australia, the word grog entered common usage, to describe diluted, adulterated, and sub-standard rum, obtainable from sly-grog shops. In the early decades of the Australian colonies such beverages were often the only alcohol available to the working class. Eventually in Australia and New Zealand the word grog came to be used as a slang collective term for alcohol, such as going to the "grog shop" to buy grog.

Honoring the 18th century British Army regimental mess and grog's historical significance in the military, the United States Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Air Force, and U.S. Army carry on a tradition at its formal dining in ceremonies whereby those in attendance who are observed to violate formal etiquette are "punished" by being sent to "the grog" and publicly drink from it in front of the attendees. The grog usually consists of various alcoholic beverages mixed together, unappealing to the taste, and contained in a toilet bowl. A non-alcoholic variety of the grog is also typically available for those in attendance who do not consume alcohol, and can contain anything from hot sauce to mayonnaise intended to make it unappealing as well.

Similar practice continued in the Royal Navy until "Black Tot Day", on 31 July 1970,[12] when concerns over crew members operating machinery under the influence led to the rum ration being abolished.[13]

Various recipes edit

While many claim to make a traditional navy grog recipe, there are several accepted forms. The Royal Navy's grog recipe includes water, dark rum, lemon juice, and cinnamon. A commonly found recipe in the Caribbean includes water, light rum, grapefruit juice, orange juice, pineapple juice, cinnamon, and honey.

Modern usage edit

Modern versions of the drink are often made with hot or boiling water, and sometimes include lemon juice, lime juice, cinnamon, or sugar to add flavor. Additionally in the United States, apple cider is sometimes substituted for water.[citation needed] Rum with water, sugar, and nutmeg was known as bumbo and was more popular with pirates and merchantmen. In Cape Verde, grogue is a distilled spirit made of sugarcane, similar to rum. In Australia and New Zealand, the word has come to mean any alcoholic drink; in Australian Aboriginal English in particular, the term "grog" is extremely commonly used, to the point of appearing outside of casual use, such as in surveys and official documents.[14]

In Sweden and some subcultures within the English-speaking world, grogg is a common description of drinks not made to a recipe, but by mixing various kinds of alcoholic and soft drinks, fruit juice or similar ingredients. In Sweden, the mixture is usually between 5:1 and 1:1 of soft drink/cordial and spirit. The difference between Swedish grog and long drinks, mixed drinks, or punches is the number of ingredients. The number of ingredients in drinks may vary, but grog typically has just one kind of liquor (most commonly vodka or brännvin, but others like rum, whisky, cognac, or eau de vie are also used), and one kind of a non-alcoholic beverage. While there are no standard recipes, some varieties are commonly known:

  • Grosshandlargrogg ("wholesaler grog") refers to a mix of eau de vie and Sockerdricka.
  • Musöppnare is mixed by adding orange juice to brännvin until the taste of alcohol disappears.
  • Vargtass ("Wolf's paw") is a mix of brännvin and lingon cordial.

In other parts of Europe, notably the Netherlands, Belgium, and France, grog is used for a hot drink, usually made of black tea, lemon juice, honey, and a splash of rum[citation needed]. It is a popular winter drink, said to be a remedy for the common cold in Belgium and France[15] or for the flu in the Netherlands.[16]

In Canada, W. T. Lynch Foods Ltd. sells a powdered hot beverage mix marketed in English as "Hot Apple Olde Style Cider Mix" and in Canadian French as "Grog aux pommes mélange à l'ancienne". It is non-alcoholic and marketed as an alternative to other non-alcoholic hot drinks.[17][18]

Grog has also been used as a metaphoric term for a person's vices, as in the old Irish song "All For Me Grog". The beverage has also lent its name to the word groggy.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ranft., B. L. (1958). The Vernon Papers. London: Navy Records Society. pp. 417–9.
  2. ^ Vale, Brian (2008). "The Conquest of Scurvy in the Royal Navy 1793–1800: a Challenge to Current Orthodoxy". The Mariner's Mirror. 94 (2): 160–175. doi:10.1080/00253359.2008.10657052. S2CID 162207993.
  3. ^ Vale, Brian (2008). "The Conquest of Scurvy in the Royal Navy 1793-1800: a Challenge to Current Orthodoxy". The Mariner's Mirror. 94 (2): 160–175. doi:10.1080/00253359.2008.10657052. S2CID 162207993.
  4. ^ Vale and Edwards (2011). Physician to the Fleet; the Life and Times of Thomas Trotter 1760–1832. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. pp. 29–33. ISBN 978-1-84383-604-9.
  5. ^ Richard West, The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Daniel Defoe 227 (1998).
  6. ^ Defoe, Daniel (1766). The Family Instructor: In Two Parts. I. Relating to Family Breaches, and Their Obstructing Religious Duties. II. To the Great Mistake of Mixing the Passions in the Managing and Correcting of Children. ... Vol.II. H. Woodfall, W. Strahan, G. Keith, W. Johnston, L. Hawes, W. Clarke and B. Collins, and T. Longman. p. 291.
  7. ^ Finney, Words Clare (7 April 2015). "The Last Master Cooper". Port Magazine. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  8. ^ Burke, Isabelle (14 June 2022). "Going goon, and getting on the grog". Monash Lens. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Grog". Chefkoch.de (in German).
  10. ^ "Navy Rum Strength isn't 57%". Cocktail Wonk. 17 August 2021. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  11. ^ Clark, Arthur H. (1910). The Clipper Ship Era: An Epitome of Famous American and British Clipper Ships, Their Owners, Builders, Commanders, and Crews, 1843–1869. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, The Knickerbocker Press. p. 109.
  12. ^ . Royal Navy. 11 July 2005. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 5 November 2006.
  13. ^ Dan van der Vat (20 May 2004). "Obituary: Admiral of the Fleet Lord Hill-Norton". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 November 2006.
  14. ^ Isa, Nadia (18 July 2019). "New app a 'game changer' to gauge realistic drinking habits". ABC News. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  15. ^ "Hoe maak ik de perfecte grog?".
  16. ^ "Helpt kippensoep of grog écht als je griep hebt?". 17 February 2016.
  17. ^ "Coupon de 1$ sur les Grog aux Pommes Lynch 230g". Québec Gratuit. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  18. ^ "Lynch Original Hot Apple Olde Style Cider Mix Reviews". Chick Advisor. Retrieved 25 December 2022.

Sources edit

  • Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase & Fable, Millennium Edition, revised by Adrian Room, 2001
  • Constance Lathrop, "Grog", U. S. Naval Institute Proceedings, March 1935, pp. 377–380; letter, Robert Smith to Keith Spence, 11 November 1808, RG 45 (M209, Vol. 9), NARA
  • Tyrone G. Martin, "Bob Smith", Encyclopedia of the War of 1812, New York: Garland Publishing Co., 1998
  • James Pack, Nelson's Blood: The Story of Naval Rum, Naval Institute Press, 1982
  • Christopher McKee, Sober Men and True: Sailor Lives in the Royal Navy 1900–45, Harvard, 2003.
  • Computer games: The Secret of Monkey Island, Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge and The Curse of Monkey Island by LucasArts.

grog, this, article, about, alcoholic, beverages, kava, beverage, kava, grog, other, uses, disambiguation, term, used, variety, alcoholic, beverages, nondistinct, contents, origin, history, background, popularization, invention, grog, etymology, modern, usage,. This article is about alcoholic beverages For the kava beverage see kava grog For other uses see Grog disambiguation Grog is a term used for a variety of alcoholic beverages Nondistinct Grog Contents 1 Origin and history 1 1 Background 1 2 Popularization of rum and invention of grog 1 3 Etymology 1 4 Modern usage 1 5 Serving practices 1 5 1 British ships 1 5 2 American ships 1 6 End of naval rum rationing 1 7 Various recipes 2 Modern usage 3 See also 4 References 4 1 SourcesOrigin and history editBackground edit See also History of alcoholic drinks Early modern period During the early modern period 1500 1800 sailors required significant quantities of fresh water on extended voyages Since desalinating sea water was not practical fresh water was taken aboard in casks but quickly developed algae and became slimy Stagnant water was sweetened with beer or wine to make it palatable which involved more casks and was subject to spoilage As longer voyages became more common the storage of the sailors substantial daily ration of water plus beer or wine became a problem Popularization of rum and invention of grog edit Following England s conquest of Jamaica in 1655 one half of an imperial pint 2 gills 284 millilitres of rum gradually replaced beer and brandy as the drink of choice Given to the sailor straight this caused additional problems as some sailors saved the rum rations for several days to drink all at once To minimise the subsequent illness and disciplinary problems the rum was mixed with water which both diluted its effects and accelerated its spoilage preventing hoarding of the allowance In 1740 British Vice Admiral Edward Vernon ordered that the daily rum issue of one half imperial pint 284 ml of rum be mixed with one imperial quart 1 100 ml of water a water to rum ratio of 4 1 with half issued before noon and the remainder after the end of the working day this procedure became part of the official regulations of the Royal Navy in 1756 and continued until 1970 Some writers have said that Vernon also added citrus juice to prevent spoilage and that it was found to prevent scurvy This is not the case and is based on a misreading of Vernon s order in which having instructed his captains to dilute the sailors daily allowance of rum with water he says that those members of the crew which are good husbandmen may from the saving of their salt provisions and bread purchase sugar and limes to make it more palatable to them 1 Lime juice was not needed to combat scurvy which was a disease of long ocean voyages not of squadrons operating among islands where there was an abundance of fruits and fresh foodstuffs and was thought by the medical establishment at the time to be due to poor digestion and internal putrefaction 2 Standard medical remedies focussed on gingering up the system by imbibing a variety of ineffective fizzy or fermenting drinks 3 Until an official daily issue of lemon juice was introduced into the Royal Navy in 1795 scurvy continued to be a debilitating disease which destroyed men and disabled ships and whole fleets Seamen and surgeons knew from practical experience that citrus juice cured scurvy but were unaware of the reason vitamin C was only discovered in 1912 In 1795 in defiance of medical opinion the Admiralty introduced lemon juice and sugar as a regular part of the naval diet 4 When a few years later Spain allied itself with France and lemons became unobtainable West Indian limes were substituted It was from this time that the British obtained the nickname limeys nbsp Royal Navy grog rationEtymology edit The word originally referred to rum diluted with water and later on long sea voyages also added the juice of limes or lemons contradictory which Edward Vernon introduced into the British naval squadron he commanded in the West Indies on 21 August 1740 Vernon wore a coat of grogram cloth and was nicknamed Old Grogram or Old Grog The Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary which agrees with this story of the word s origin states that the word grog was first used in this sense in 1770 though other sources cite 1749 A biographer of Daniel Defoe has suggested that the derivation from Old Grog is wrong because Defoe used the term in 1718 5 but this is based on an erroneous citation of Defoe s work which actually used the word ginger 6 In the 19th century coopers who crafted barrels on ships were often called groggers or jolly jack tars as when a barrel of rum had been emptied they would fill it up with boiling water and roll it around creating a drink which was called grog 7 Modern usage edit In modern times the term grog has had a variety of meanings in a number of different cultures but is commonly used in Australia where it is a slang word for alcohol as in sly grog shop 8 In Northern Germany grog is a classic winter drink from East Frisia made of rum sugar and water and heated to boiling point 9 In Swedish a grogg means a highball citation needed Serving practices edit British ships edit Until the grog ration was discontinued in 1970 Royal Navy rum was 95 5 proof 54 6 ABV 10 the usual ration was one eighth of an imperial pint 71 ml diluted 2 1 with water 3 1 until World War II contradictory Extra rum rations were provided for special celebrations like Trafalgar Day and sailors might share their ration with the cook or with a messmate celebrating a birthday Until the early 20th century weaker six water grog rum diluted with water at a 6 1 ratio was sometimes issued as a punishment to sailors found guilty of drunkenness or neglect Over time the distribution of the rum ration acquired a fixed form At 11 00 am the boatswain s mate piped Up spirits the signal for the petty officer of the day to climb to the quarterdeck and collect the keys to the spirit room from an officer the ship s cooper and a detachment of Royal Marines In procession they unlocked the door of the spirit room and witnessed the pumping into a keg of one eighth pint of rum for every rating and petty officer on the ship aged 20 or more and not under punishment Two marines lifted the keg to the deck standing guard while a file of cooks from the petty officers messes held out their jugs The sergeant of marines poured the ration under direction of the chief steward who announced the number of drinking men present in each petty officer s mess The rest of the rum was mixed in a tub with two parts water becoming the grog provided to the ratings At noon the boatswain s mate piped Muster for Rum and the cooks from each mess presented with tin buckets The sergeant of marines ladled out the authorised number of tots eighth pints supervised by the petty officer of the day The few tots of grog remaining in the tub plushers if any were poured into the drains scuppers visibly running into the sea The petty officers were served first and entitled to take their rum undiluted The ratings often drank their grog in one long gulp when they finished their work around noon American ships editThe practice of serving grog twice a day carried over into the Continental Navy and the U S Navy Robert Smith then Secretary of the Navy experimented with substituting native rye whiskey for the rum Finding the American sailors preferred it he made the change permanent It is said his sailors followed the practice of their British antecedents and took to calling it Bob Smith instead of grog citation needed nbsp Royal Navy grog tub found on HMS CavalierUnlike their Navy counterparts American merchant seamen were not encouraged to partake of grog In his 1848 testimony before a parliamentary committee Robert Minturn of Grinnell Minturn amp Co stated that teetotalism not only was encouraged by American ship owners but actually earned a bonus from underwriters who offered a return of ten percent of the insurance premium upon voyages performed without the consumption of spirits The sailors were allowed plenty of hot coffee night or day in heavy weather but grog was unknown on board American merchant ships 11 End of naval rum rationing edit The American Navy ended the rum ration on 1 September 1862 The temperance movements of the late 19th century began to change the attitude toward drink in Britain and the days of grog slowly came to an end In 1850 the size of the tot was halved to one eighth of an imperial pint 71 ml per day The issue of grog to officers ended in 1881 and to warrant officers in 1918 On 28 January 1970 the Great Rum Debate took place in the House of Commons and on 31 July 1970 later called Black Tot Day the practice finally ended although all ratings received an allowance of an extra can of beer each day as compensation In the early stages of British settlement in Australia the word grog entered common usage to describe diluted adulterated and sub standard rum obtainable from sly grog shops In the early decades of the Australian colonies such beverages were often the only alcohol available to the working class Eventually in Australia and New Zealand the word grog came to be used as a slang collective term for alcohol such as going to the grog shop to buy grog Honoring the 18th century British Army regimental mess and grog s historical significance in the military the United States Navy U S Marine Corps U S Air Force and U S Army carry on a tradition at its formal dining in ceremonies whereby those in attendance who are observed to violate formal etiquette are punished by being sent to the grog and publicly drink from it in front of the attendees The grog usually consists of various alcoholic beverages mixed together unappealing to the taste and contained in a toilet bowl A non alcoholic variety of the grog is also typically available for those in attendance who do not consume alcohol and can contain anything from hot sauce to mayonnaise intended to make it unappealing as well Similar practice continued in the Royal Navy until Black Tot Day on 31 July 1970 12 when concerns over crew members operating machinery under the influence led to the rum ration being abolished 13 Various recipes edit While many claim to make a traditional navy grog recipe there are several accepted forms The Royal Navy s grog recipe includes water dark rum lemon juice and cinnamon A commonly found recipe in the Caribbean includes water light rum grapefruit juice orange juice pineapple juice cinnamon and honey Modern usage editModern versions of the drink are often made with hot or boiling water and sometimes include lemon juice lime juice cinnamon or sugar to add flavor Additionally in the United States apple cider is sometimes substituted for water citation needed Rum with water sugar and nutmeg was known as bumbo and was more popular with pirates and merchantmen In Cape Verde grogue is a distilled spirit made of sugarcane similar to rum In Australia and New Zealand the word has come to mean any alcoholic drink in Australian Aboriginal English in particular the term grog is extremely commonly used to the point of appearing outside of casual use such as in surveys and official documents 14 In Sweden and some subcultures within the English speaking world grogg is a common description of drinks not made to a recipe but by mixing various kinds of alcoholic and soft drinks fruit juice or similar ingredients In Sweden the mixture is usually between 5 1 and 1 1 of soft drink cordial and spirit The difference between Swedish grog and long drinks mixed drinks or punches is the number of ingredients The number of ingredients in drinks may vary but grog typically has just one kind of liquor most commonly vodka or brannvin but others like rum whisky cognac or eau de vie are also used and one kind of a non alcoholic beverage While there are no standard recipes some varieties are commonly known Grosshandlargrogg wholesaler grog refers to a mix of eau de vie and Sockerdricka Musoppnare is mixed by adding orange juice to brannvin until the taste of alcohol disappears Vargtass Wolf s paw is a mix of brannvin and lingon cordial In other parts of Europe notably the Netherlands Belgium and France grog is used for a hot drink usually made of black tea lemon juice honey and a splash of rum citation needed It is a popular winter drink said to be a remedy for the common cold in Belgium and France 15 or for the flu in the Netherlands 16 In Canada W T Lynch Foods Ltd sells a powdered hot beverage mix marketed in English as Hot Apple Olde Style Cider Mix and in Canadian French as Grog aux pommes melange a l ancienne It is non alcoholic and marketed as an alternative to other non alcoholic hot drinks 17 18 Grog has also been used as a metaphoric term for a person s vices as in the old Irish song All For Me Grog The beverage has also lent its name to the word groggy See also edit nbsp Drink portalGlogg List of hot beverages List of rum producers Pusser s Splice the mainbraceReferences editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ranft B L 1958 The Vernon Papers London Navy Records Society pp 417 9 Vale Brian 2008 The Conquest of Scurvy in the Royal Navy 1793 1800 a Challenge to Current Orthodoxy The Mariner s Mirror 94 2 160 175 doi 10 1080 00253359 2008 10657052 S2CID 162207993 Vale Brian 2008 The Conquest of Scurvy in the Royal Navy 1793 1800 a Challenge to Current Orthodoxy The Mariner s Mirror 94 2 160 175 doi 10 1080 00253359 2008 10657052 S2CID 162207993 Vale and Edwards 2011 Physician to the Fleet the Life and Times of Thomas Trotter 1760 1832 Woodbridge The Boydell Press pp 29 33 ISBN 978 1 84383 604 9 Richard West The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Daniel Defoe 227 1998 Defoe Daniel 1766 The Family Instructor In Two Parts I Relating to Family Breaches and Their Obstructing Religious Duties II To the Great Mistake of Mixing the Passions in the Managing and Correcting of Children Vol II H Woodfall W Strahan G Keith W Johnston L Hawes W Clarke and B Collins and T Longman p 291 Finney Words Clare 7 April 2015 The Last Master Cooper Port Magazine Retrieved 13 January 2024 Burke Isabelle 14 June 2022 Going goon and getting on the grog Monash Lens Retrieved 13 January 2024 Grog Chefkoch de in German Navy Rum Strength isn t 57 Cocktail Wonk 17 August 2021 Retrieved 15 January 2024 Clark Arthur H 1910 The Clipper Ship Era An Epitome of Famous American and British Clipper Ships Their Owners Builders Commanders and Crews 1843 1869 New York G P Putnam s Sons The Knickerbocker Press p 109 Splicing the Mainbrace Royal Navy 11 July 2005 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 5 November 2006 Dan van der Vat 20 May 2004 Obituary Admiral of the Fleet Lord Hill Norton The Guardian Retrieved 1 November 2006 Isa Nadia 18 July 2019 New app a game changer to gauge realistic drinking habits ABC News Retrieved 15 March 2023 Hoe maak ik de perfecte grog Helpt kippensoep of grog echt als je griep hebt 17 February 2016 Coupon de 1 sur les Grog aux Pommes Lynch 230g Quebec Gratuit Retrieved 25 December 2022 Lynch Original Hot Apple Olde Style Cider Mix Reviews Chick Advisor Retrieved 25 December 2022 Sources edit Brewer s Dictionary of Phrase amp Fable Millennium Edition revised by Adrian Room 2001 Constance Lathrop Grog U S Naval Institute Proceedings March 1935 pp 377 380 letter Robert Smith to Keith Spence 11 November 1808 RG 45 M209 Vol 9 NARA Tyrone G Martin Bob Smith Encyclopedia of the War of 1812 New York Garland Publishing Co 1998 James Pack Nelson s Blood The Story of Naval Rum Naval Institute Press 1982 Christopher McKee Sober Men and True Sailor Lives in the Royal Navy 1900 45 Harvard 2003 Computer games The Secret of Monkey Island Monkey Island 2 LeChuck s Revenge and The Curse of Monkey Island by LucasArts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grog amp oldid 1206979019, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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