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Wikipedia

Vodka

Vodka (Polish: wódka [ˈvutka]; Russian: водка [ˈvotkə]; Swedish: vodka [vɔdkɑː]) is a clear distilled alcoholic beverage. Different varieties originated in Poland, Russia, and Sweden.[1][2] Vodka is composed mainly of water and ethanol but sometimes with traces of impurities and flavourings.[3] Traditionally, it is made by distilling liquid from fermented cereal grains, and potatoes since introduced in Europe in the 1700s. Some modern brands use corn, sugar cane, fruits, honey, and maple sap as the base.

Vodka
Smirnoff Red Label vodka
Typedistilled alcoholic beverage
Country of origin Poland, Russia, Sweden[1][2]
Region of originCentral, Northern and Eastern Europe
Alcohol by volume 35–40%
Proof (US)70–80°
Colorclear
IngredientsWater, grains
Related productsFlavored vodka, nalewka

Since the 1890s, standard vodkas have been 40% alcohol by volume (ABV) (80 U.S. proof).[4] The European Union has established a minimum alcohol content of 37.5% for vodka.[5][6] Vodka in the United States must have a minimum alcohol content of 40%.[7]

Vodka is traditionally drunk "neat" (not mixed with water, ice, or other mixers), and it is often served freezer chilled in the vodka belt of Belarus, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Russia, Sweden, and Ukraine.[3] It is also used in cocktails and mixed drinks, such as the vodka martini, Cosmopolitan, vodka tonic, screwdriver, greyhound, Black or White Russian, Moscow mule, Bloody Mary, and Caesar.

Etymology

The name vodka is a diminutive form of the Slavic word voda (water), interpreted as "waterkin": root vod- [water] + -k- (diminutive suffix, among other functions) + -a (ending of feminine gender).[8][9][10]

In English literature, the word vodka appeared in around the late 18th century. In a book of travels published in English in 1780 (presumably, a translation from German), Johann Gottlieb Georgi correctly explained that "kabak in the Russian language signifies a public house for the common people to drink vodka (a sort of brandy) in".[11] William Tooke in 1799 glossed vodka as "rectified corn-spirits",[12] using the traditional English sense of the word "corn" to refer to any grain, not just maize. In French, Théophile Gautier in 1800 glossed it as a "grain liquor" served with meals in Poland (eau-de-vie de grain).[13]

Another possible connection of vodka with "water" is the name of the medieval alcoholic beverage aqua vitae (Latin, literally, "water of life"), which is reflected in Polish okowita, Ukrainian оковита, Belarusian акавіта, and Scandinavian akvavit. Whiskey has a similar etymology, from the Irish and Scottish Gaelic uisce beatha/uisge-beatha.

People in the area of vodka's probable origin have names for vodka with roots meaning "to burn": Polish: gorzała; Ukrainian: горілка, romanizedhorílka; Belarusian: гарэлка, romanizedharelka; Lithuanian: degtinė; Samogitian: degtėnė is also in use, colloquially and in proverbs;[14] Latvian: degvīns; Finnish: paloviina. In Russian during the 17th and 18th centuries, горящѣе вино or горячее вино (goryashchee vino, "burning wine" or "hot wine") was widely used. Others languages include the German Branntwein, Danish brændevin, Dutch: brandewijn, Swedish: brännvin, and Norwegian: brennevin (although the latter terms refer to any strong alcoholic beverage).

History

 
The "vodka belt" countries of Northern, Central, and Eastern Europe are the historic home of vodka. These countries have the highest vodka consumption in the world.

Scholars debate the beginnings of vodka[15] because there is little historical material available.[16][17] For many centuries, beverages differed significantly compared to the vodka of today, as the spirit at that time had a different flavor, color, and smell, and was originally used as medicine. It contained little alcohol, an estimated maximum of about 14%. Distillation techniques were developed in Roman Egypt by the 3rd century, but the description of aqua ardens ("burning water", i.e., alcohol) made by distilling wine with salt appears in Latin works only by the 12th century. The process was well known among European medieval chemists by about 1300.[18]

Poland

The world's first written mention of the word wódka was in 1405 from Akta Grodzkie recorder of deeds,[19] in the court documents from the Palatinate of Sandomierz in Poland.[19] At the time, the word wódka referred to chemical compounds such as medicines and cosmetics' cleansers. The production of liquor begins in the mid-15th century, with varied local traditions emerging throughout Europe, in Poland as vodka (Polish: wódka or gorzałka). In the 16th century, the Polish word for the beverage was gorzałka (from the Old Polish verb gorzeć meaning "to burn"), which is also the source of Ukrainian horilka (горілка). The word written in Cyrillic appeared first in 1533, about a medicinal drink brought from Poland to Russia by the Russian merchants.[19]

In these early days, the spirits were used mostly as medicines. Stefan Falimierz asserted in his 1534 works on herbs that vodka could serve "to increase fertility and awaken lust". Wodka lub gorzałka (1614), by Jerzy Potański, contains valuable information on the production of vodka. Jakub Kazimierz Haur, in his book Skład albo skarbiec znakomitych sekretów ekonomii ziemiańskiej (A Treasury of Excellent Secrets about Landed Gentry's Economy, Kraków, 1693), gave detailed recipes for making vodka from rye.

Some Polish vodka blends go back centuries. Most notable are Żubrówka, from about the 16th century; Goldwasser, from the early 17th century; and aged Starka vodka, from the 16th century. In the mid-17th century, the szlachta (nobility of Poland) were granted a monopoly on producing and selling vodka in their territories. This privilege was a source of substantial profits. One of the most famous distilleries of the aristocracy was established by Elżbieta Izabela Lubomirska and later operated by her grandson, Alfred Wojciech Potocki. The Vodka Industry Museum, located at the park of the Potocki country estate has an original document attesting that the distillery already existed in 1784. Today, it operates as "Polmos Łańcut".[20]

Vodka production on a much larger scale began in Poland at the end of the 16th century, initially at Kraków, whence spirits were exported to Silesia before 1550. Silesian cities also bought vodka from Poznań, a city that in 1580 had 498 working spirits distilleries. Soon, however, Gdańsk outpaced both these cities. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Polish vodka was known in the Netherlands, Denmark, England, Russia, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Romania, Ukraine, Bulgaria and the Black Sea basin.

Early production methods were rudimentary. The beverage was usually low-proof, and the distillation process had to be repeated several times (a three-stage distillation process was common). The first distillate was called brantówka, the second was szumówka, and the third was okowita (from aqua vitae), which generally contained 70–80% ABV. Then the beverage was watered down, yielding a simple vodka (30–35% ABV), or a stronger one if the watering was done using an alembic. The exact production methods were described in 1768 by Jan Paweł Biretowski and in 1774 by Jan Chryzostom Pasek. The late 18th century inaugurated the production of vodka from various unusual substances including even the carrot.[21]

Though there was a substantial vodka cottage industry in Poland back to the 16th century, the end of the 18th century marked the start of real industrial production of vodka in Poland (Kresy, the eastern part of Poland was controlled by the Russian empire at that time). Vodkas produced by the nobility and clergy became a mass product. The first industrial distillery was opened in 1782 in Lwów by J. A. Baczewski. He was soon followed by Jakub Haberfeld, who in 1804 established a factory at Oświęcim, and by Hartwig Kantorowicz, who started producing Wyborowa in 1823 at Poznań. The implementation of new technologies in the latter half of the 19th century, which allowed the production of clear vodkas, contributed to their success. The first rectification distillery was established in 1871. In 1925, the production of clear vodkas was made a Polish government monopoly.[21]

After World War II, all vodka distilleries were taken over by Poland's Marxist–Leninist government. During the martial law of the 1980s, the sale of vodka was rationed. Following the success of the Solidarity movement and the abolition of single-party rule in Poland, many distilleries began struggling financially. Some filed for bankruptcy, but many were privatized, leading to the creation of various new brands.[21]

Russia

 
Russian Vodka in various bottles and cups

Russian Empire

A type of distilled liquor designated by the Russian word vodka came to Russia in the late 14th century. In 1386, the Genoese ambassadors brought the first aqua vitae ("water of life") to Moscow and presented it to Dmitry Donskoy, the grand prince. The liquid obtained by distillation of grape must was thought to be a concentrate and a "spirit" of wine (spiritus vini in Latin), whence came to the name of this substance in many European languages (like English spirit, or Russian спирт, spirt).

Perhaps one of the earliest terms linked to vodka production was varenoe vino ("distilled wine") which appears in a 1399 document. Another term used was perevara, a precursor to vodka, which last appears in official documents in 1495. The term korchma is one of the oldest official terms used for vodka, which was used alongside varenoe vino, but later came to denote illegally produced vodka by the 16th century. Other terms that referred to vodka included goriachee vino ("burning wine"), zhzhenoe vino ("burnt wine"), and khlebnoe vino ("bread wine").[22][23][24]

According to William Pokhlyobkin, in around 1430, a monk named Isidore from the Chudov Monastery inside the Moscow Kremlin made a recipe of the first Russian vodka.[25] Having a special knowledge and distillation devices, he became the creator of a new, higher quality type of alcoholic beverage. This "bread wine", as it was initially known, was for a long time produced exclusively in the Moscow grand principality and in no other Russian principality (this situation persisted until the era of industrial production). Thus, this beverage was closely associated with Moscow. In 1474, Ivan III created the first Russian state monopoly on vodka.[26] In 1505, the first exports of distilled Russian vodka arrived in Sweden.[26] By the 16th century, government-run taverns known as kabaks replaced privately-run korchmas.[24] Giles Fletcher, who was the English ambassador in Russia, wrote:

In every great towne of his Realme he hath a Caback or drinking house, where is sold aquavitæ (which they call Russewine) mead, beere, &c. Out of these hee receiveth rent that amounteth to a great summe of money.

— Of the Russe Common Wealth (1591)[24]

Until the mid-18th century, the drink remained relatively low in alcohol content, not exceeding 40% ABV. Multiple terms for the drink were recorded, sometimes reflecting different levels of quality, alcohol concentration, filtering, and the number of distillations; most commonly, it was referred to as "burning wine", "bread wine", or even in some locations simply "wine". In some locations, grape wine may have been so expensive that it was a drink only for aristocrats. Burning wine was usually diluted with water to 24% ABV or less before drinking. It was mostly sold in taverns and was quite expensive. At the same time, the word vodka was already in use, but it described herbal tinctures (similar to Nalewka), containing up to 75% ABV, and made for medicinal purposes.

 
A Vodka museum in Russia, located in Verkhniye Mandrogi, Leningrad Oblast.

The first written usage of the word vodka in an official Russian document in its modern meaning is dated by the decree of Empress Elizabeth of 8 June 1751, which regulated the ownership of vodka distilleries. By the 1860s, a government policy of promoting the consumption of state-manufactured vodka made it the drink of choice for many Russians. In 1863, the government monopoly on vodka production was repealed, causing prices to plummet and making vodka available even to low-income citizens. The taxes on vodka became a key element of government finances in Tsarist Russia, providing at times up to 40% of state revenue.[27] By 1911, vodka comprised 89% of all alcohol consumed in Russia. This level has fluctuated somewhat during the 20th century but remained quite high at all times. The most recent estimates put it at 70% (2001).

Post-Soviet Russia

Vodka remains a major source of state revenue and therefore of power. Seizing control of the state spirits monopoly Rosspirtprom and its Kristall distillery was instrumental for Vladimir Putin to consolidate his power as prime minister and president.[28] Under his rule, the "Putinka" ("little Putin") brand of vodka became a bestseller, partly to Putin's financial benefit.[28]

Other popular Russian vodka producers or brands include Stolichnaya and Russian Standard.[29]

William Pokhlebin's A History of Vodka

During the late 1970s, Russian culinary author William Pokhlebkin compiled a history of the production of vodka in Russia, as part of the Soviet case in a trade dispute; this was later published as A History of Vodka. Pokhlebkin wrote that while there is a wealth of publications about the history of consumption and distribution of vodka, virtually nothing had been written about vodka production. One of his assertions was that the word "vodka" was used in popular speech in Russia considerably earlier than the middle of the 18th century, but the word did not appear in print until the 1860s.

Pokhlebkin's sources were challenged by David Christian in the Slavic Review in 1994, who criticized the lack of valid references in Pokhlebkin's works and its pro-Russian bias. Pokhlebkin is also known for his Pan-Slavic sympathies under the leadership of Russia and sentiments that, in David Christian's opinion, discredit most of his work, especially his History of Vodka.[30]

Sweden

Up until the 1950s, vodka was not used as a designation for Swedish distilled beverages, which were instead called brännvin ("burn-wine"), the word having the same etymology as the Dutch Brandewijn, which is the base for the word brandy. This beverage has been produced in Sweden since the late 15th century, although the total production was still small in the 17th century.[31] From the early 18th century, production expanded, although production was prohibited several times, during grain shortages. Although initially a grain product, potatoes started to be used in the production in the late 18th century and became dominant from the early 19th century.[32] From the early 1870s, distillery equipment was improved.

Progressively from the 1960s, unflavoured Swedish brännvin also came to be called vodka. The first Swedish product to use this term was Explorer Vodka, which was created in 1958 and initially was intended for the American export market. Although it ultimately failed to do so, it remains one of the most popular vodka brands in Sweden today.[33][34] In 1979, Absolut Vodka was launched, reusing the name of the old Absolut Rent Brännvin ("absolutely pure brännvin") created in 1879.

After Sweden joined the European Union in 1995, the regulations were changed so that privately owned companies could produce Vodka.[35]

Vodka has become popular among young people, with a flourishing black market.[36] In 2013, the organizers of the so-called "vodka car" were jailed for two and a half years for having illegally provided thousands of liters to young people, some as young as 13.[37]

Production

 
An old Ukrainian vodka still.
 
Vodka bottling machine, Shatskaya Vodka (Shatsk, Russia)

Vodka may be distilled from any starch- or sugar-rich plant matter; most vodka today is produced from grains such as sorghum, corn, rye or wheat. Among grain vodkas, rye and wheat vodkas are generally considered superior. Some vodkas are made from potatoes, molasses, soybeans, grapes, rice, sugar beets and sometimes even byproducts of oil refining[38] or wood pulp processing. In some Central European countries, such as Poland, some vodka is produced by just fermenting a solution of crystal sugar and yeast. In the European Union there are talks about the standardization of vodka, and the Vodka Belt countries insist that only spirits produced from grains, potato and sugar beet molasses be allowed to be branded as "vodka", following the traditional methods of production.[39][40]

In the United States, many vodkas are made from 95% pure grain alcohol produced in large quantities by agricultural-industrial giants Archer Daniels Midland, Grain Processing Corporation,[41] and Midwest Grain Products (MGP).[42] Bottlers purchase the base spirits in bulk, then filter, dilute, distribute and market the end product under a variety of vodka brand names.[43] Similar methods are used in other regions such as Europe.[44]

This pure grain alcohol, also known as rectified spirit, neutral spirit, or ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin is also available directly to consumers in some areas, as products such as Everclear, Polmos spirytus rektyfikowany, and others. In contrast to very-high ABV vodkas such as the Bulgarian Balkan 176° with 88% ABV, these grain alcohol products are not considered vodka; they have not (yet) gone through the filtration and refining process used to produce vodka.[5][44][45]

A study conducted on NPR's Planet Money podcast revealed negligible differences in taste between various brands of vodka, leading to speculation as to how much branding contributes to the concept of "super-premium vodkas".[46]

Distilling and filtering

A common property of the vodkas produced in the United States and Europe is the extensive use of filtration before any additional processing including the addition of flavorants. Filtering is sometimes done in the still during distillation, as well as afterward, where the distilled vodka is filtered through activated charcoal and other media to absorb trace amounts of substances that alter or impart off-flavors to the vodka. However, this is not the case in the traditional vodka-producing nations, so many distillers from these countries prefer to use very accurate distillation but minimal filtering, thus preserving the unique flavors and characteristics of their products.

The master distiller is in charge of distilling the vodka and directing its filtration, which includes the removal of the "fore-shots", "heads" and "tails". These components of the distillate contain flavor compounds such as ethyl acetate and ethyl lactate (heads) as well as the fusel oils (tails) that impact the usually desired clean taste of vodka. Through numerous rounds of distillation, or the use of a fractioning still, the taste is modified and clarity is increased. In contrast, the distillery process for liquors such as whiskey, rum, and baijiu allow portions of the "heads" and "tails" to remain, giving them their unique flavors.

Repeated distillation of vodka will make its ethanol level much higher than is acceptable to most end users, whether legislation determines strength limits or not. Depending on the distillation method and the technique of the still master, the final filtered and distilled vodka may have as much as 95–96% ethanol. As such, most vodka is diluted with water before bottling.

Flavoring

 
A vodka distillery in Bialystok, Poland, where the bison grass vodka "Żubrówka" is produced
 
Finnish-grown six-row barley and glacial spring water, Finlandia Vodka

While most vodkas are unflavored, many flavored vodkas have been produced in traditional vodka-drinking areas, often as home-made recipes to improve vodka's taste or for medicinal purposes. Flavorings include red pepper, ginger, fruit flavors, vanilla, chocolate (without sweetener), and cinnamon. In Russia, vodka flavored with honey and pepper, pertsovka in Russian, is also very popular. In Poland and Belarus, the leaves of the local bison grass are added to produce żubrówka (Polish) and zubrovka (Belarusian) vodka, with slightly sweet flavors and light amber colors. In Lithuania and Poland, a famous vodka containing honey is called krupnik.

This tradition of flavoring is also prevalent in the Nordic countries, where vodka seasoned with herbs, fruits, and spices is the appropriate strong drink for several seasonal festivities. Sweden has forty-odd common varieties of herb-flavored vodka (kryddat brännvin). In Poland and Ukraine, a separate category (nalyvka in Ukraine and nalewka in Poland) is used for vodka-based spirits with fruit, root, flower, or herb extracts, which are often home-made or produced by small commercial distilleries. Their alcohol contents vary between 15 and 75%. In Estonia, vodkas are available with barberry, blackcurrant, cherry, green apple, lemon, vanilla, and watermelon flavors.[47]

In most cases, vodka flavoring comes from a post-distillation infusion of flavors. Through the fermentation process, grain mash is transformed into a neutral alcohol beverage that is unflavored. The process of flavoring vodka so that it tastes like fruits, chocolate, and other foods occurs after fermentation and distillation. Various chemicals that reproduce the flavor profiles of foods are added into vodka to give it a specific taste.

Today

Vodka is less likely than other spirits to produce the undesirable after-effects of heavy consumption (though no less likely to intoxicate) because of its low level of fusel oils and congeners, which are impurities that flavor spirits.[48]

Since the year 2000, because of evolving consumer tastes and regulatory changes, several 'artisanal vodka' or even 'ultra premium vodka' brands have appeared.

European Union regulation

The success of grape-based vodka in the United States in the early twenty-first century prompted traditional vodka producers in the Vodka Belt countries of Poland, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, and Sweden to campaign for EU legislation that would define vodka as only spirits made from grain or potatoes.[39][40] This proposition provoked heavy criticism from South European countries, which often distill used mash from wine-making into spirits; although higher-quality mash is usually distilled into some variety of pomace brandy, the lower-quality mash is better turned into neutral-flavored spirits instead. Any vodka not made from either grain or potatoes would have to display the products used in its production. This regulation entered into force in 2008.[6]

Canadian regulations

Under Canadian regulations, Vodka is a potable alcoholic distillate obtained from potatoes, cereal grain or any other material of agricultural origin fermented by the action of yeast or a mixture of yeast and other micro-organisms.[49]

United States regulations

In 1956, it was put into revenue ruling that sugar not more than 0.2% and trace amounts of citric acid are not considered flavoring agent. The meaning of "trace amounts" of citric acid was clarified as not more than 1,000ppm in 1995.[50]

It is no longer defined as "to be without distinctive character, aroma, taste, or color."[51] The law includes other requirements: Vodka cannot be aged in wood; it may or may not be charcoal filtered; and it must meet minimum distillation and bottling proofs.[52]

Boycotts

In summer 2013, American LGBT rights activists targeted Russian vodka brands for boycott over Russia's anti-gay policies.[53][54][55]

In late February 2022, with the Russian invasion of Ukraine, some North American liquor stores and bars expressed symbolic solidarity with Ukraine, and opposition to Russia, by boycotting Russian vodka brands.[56][57]

One critic argued that boycotts of Russian-branded vodka may inadvertently affect U.S. vodka manufacturers and noted that only 1.2 percent of U.S. vodka imports come from Russia.[58]

Illegal production

In some countries, black-market or "bathtub" vodka is widespread because it can be produced easily and avoids taxation. However, severe poisoning, blindness, or death can occur as a result of dangerous industrial ethanol substitutes being added by black-market producers.[59] In March 2007 in a documentary, BBC News UK sought to find the cause of severe jaundice among imbibers of a "bathtub" vodka in Russia.[60] The cause was suspected to be an industrial disinfectant (Extrasept)—95% ethanol but also containing a highly toxic chemical—added to the vodka by the illegal traders because of its high alcohol content and low price. Death toll estimates list at least 120 dead and more than 1,000 poisoned[vague]. The death toll is expected to rise due to the chronic nature of the cirrhosis that is causing jaundice.[citation needed]

Public health effects

Estimates of the annual death toll resulting from vodka consumption extend up to the thousands in Russia.[61][62]

Cooking

 
Penne alla vodka

Vodka can also be used in cooking and various recipes are improved by the addition of vodka or rely on it as a key ingredient. Vodka sauce is a pasta sauce made from tomato sauce, cream, and vodka that gained popularity in the 1970s. Vodka can be used in baking as a substitute for water: pie crusts can be made flakier with vodka.[63] It may be used in seafood dishes, cheesecake, or bitters.[64][65]

See also

References

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  48. ^ *Price, Pamela Vandyke (1980). The Penguin Book of Spirits and Liqueurs. Penguin Books. pp. 196 ff. ISBN 0-14-046335-6.
  49. ^ Branch, Legislative Services (3 June 2019). "Consolidated federal laws of canada, Food and Drug Regulations". laws.justice.gc.ca. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  50. ^ "ATF Ruling 97-1". 29 December 1995.
  51. ^ Allan, M. Carrie (28 October 2021). "Vodka has a new definition — it's still neutral, but no longer flavorless". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  52. ^ "27 CFR § 5.22 – The standards of identity". LII / Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  53. ^ "Vodka boycott in U.S. spreads on concerns over gay rights in Russia". Reuters. 1 August 2013. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  54. ^ Abad-Santos, Alexander (8 August 2013). "The Russian Vodka Boycott Is Working, Whether You Like It or Not". The Atlantic. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  55. ^ "Stoli CEO Speaks Out On How Company Will Respond To Vodka Boycott". HuffPost. 31 July 2013. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  56. ^ "Canadian liquor stores remove Russian vodka from shelves after Ukraine invasion". Reuters. 26 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  57. ^ "Boycotting Russian vodka brands: How big of an impact does it have and on who?". MSN. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  58. ^ "Why Are You Boycotting American Vodka To Punish Russia?". 28 February 2022.
  59. ^ Eke, Steven (29 November 2006). "'People's vodka' urged for Russia". BBC News. Retrieved 22 November 2008.
  60. ^ Sweeney, John (10 March 2007). "When vodka is your poison". BBC News. Retrieved 22 November 2008.
  61. ^ See, e.g., Korotayev A., Khaltourina D. Russian Demographic Crisis in Cross-National Perspective. Russia and Globalization: Identity, Security, and Society in an Era of Change 4 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Ed. by D. W. Blum. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008. P. 37–78; Khaltourina, D. A., & Korotayev, A. V. 'Potential for alcohol policy to decrease the mortality crisis in Russia', Evaluation & the Health Professions, vol. 31, no. 3, Sep 2008. pp. 272–281 1 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine.
  62. ^ Korotayev, A., Khaltourina, D., Meshcherina, K., & Zamiatnina, E. Distilled Spirits Overconsumption as the Most Important Factor of Excessive Adult Male Mortality in Europe. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 2018, 53(6), 742-752 8 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  63. ^ "The Boozy Ingredient Your Baked Goods Are Missing". Epicurious. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  64. ^ "How to Cook with Vodka » Feast + West". Feast + West. 27 May 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  65. ^ Chowhound. "10 Recipes Using Vodka". Chowhound. Retrieved 6 March 2018.

Further reading

  • Begg, Desmond (1997). The Vodka Companion: A Connoisseur's Guide. Running. ISBN 0-7624-0252-0.
  • Broom, Dave (1998). Complete Book of Spirits and Cocktails. Italy: Carlton Books Ltd. ISBN 1-85868-485-4.
  • Delos, Gilbert (1998). Vodkas of the World. Edison, New Jersey: Wellfleet Press. ISBN 0-7858-1018-8.
  • Elborn, Geoffrey (2013). The Dedalus Book of Vodka. Dedalus. ISBN 978-1-907650-04-8.
  • Faith, Nicholas; Ian Wisniewski (1977). Classic Vodka. London: Prion Books Ltd. ISBN 1-85375-234-7.
  • Lingwood, William; Ian Wisniewski (2003). Vodka: Discovering, Exploring, Enjoying. New York: Ryland Peters & Small. ISBN 1-84172-506-4.
  • Rogala, Jan (2004). Gorzałka czyli historia i zasady wypalania mocnych trunków. Baobab. ISBN 83-89642-70-0.

External links

  • History in a Vodka Bottle: How Baczewski Ruled European Royal Courts, Invented Marketing & Rose from the Ashes

vodka, wodka, redirects, here, other, uses, wódka, vodka, disambiguation, polish, wódka, ˈvutka, russian, водка, ˈvotkə, swedish, vodka, vɔdkɑː, clear, distilled, alcoholic, beverage, different, varieties, originated, poland, russia, sweden, composed, mainly, . Wodka redirects here For other uses see wodka and vodka disambiguation Vodka Polish wodka ˈvutka Russian vodka ˈvotke Swedish vodka vɔdkɑː is a clear distilled alcoholic beverage Different varieties originated in Poland Russia and Sweden 1 2 Vodka is composed mainly of water and ethanol but sometimes with traces of impurities and flavourings 3 Traditionally it is made by distilling liquid from fermented cereal grains and potatoes since introduced in Europe in the 1700s Some modern brands use corn sugar cane fruits honey and maple sap as the base VodkaSmirnoff Red Label vodkaTypedistilled alcoholic beverageCountry of origin Poland Russia Sweden 1 2 Region of originCentral Northern and Eastern EuropeAlcohol by volume 35 40 Proof US 70 80 ColorclearIngredientsWater grainsRelated productsFlavored vodka nalewkaSince the 1890s standard vodkas have been 40 alcohol by volume ABV 80 U S proof 4 The European Union has established a minimum alcohol content of 37 5 for vodka 5 6 Vodka in the United States must have a minimum alcohol content of 40 7 Vodka is traditionally drunk neat not mixed with water ice or other mixers and it is often served freezer chilled in the vodka belt of Belarus Estonia Finland Iceland Latvia Lithuania Norway Poland Russia Sweden and Ukraine 3 It is also used in cocktails and mixed drinks such as the vodka martini Cosmopolitan vodka tonic screwdriver greyhound Black or White Russian Moscow mule Bloody Mary and Caesar Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Poland 2 2 Russia 2 2 1 Russian Empire 2 2 2 Post Soviet Russia 2 2 3 William Pokhlebin s A History of Vodka 2 3 Sweden 3 Production 3 1 Distilling and filtering 3 2 Flavoring 4 Today 4 1 European Union regulation 4 2 Canadian regulations 4 3 United States regulations 5 Boycotts 6 Illegal production 7 Public health effects 8 Cooking 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymologyThe name vodka is a diminutive form of the Slavic word voda water interpreted as waterkin root vod water k diminutive suffix among other functions a ending of feminine gender 8 9 10 In English literature the word vodka appeared in around the late 18th century In a book of travels published in English in 1780 presumably a translation from German Johann Gottlieb Georgi correctly explained that kabak in the Russian language signifies a public house for the common people to drink vodka a sort of brandy in 11 William Tooke in 1799 glossed vodka as rectified corn spirits 12 using the traditional English sense of the word corn to refer to any grain not just maize In French Theophile Gautier in 1800 glossed it as a grain liquor served with meals in Poland eau de vie de grain 13 Another possible connection of vodka with water is the name of the medieval alcoholic beverage aqua vitae Latin literally water of life which is reflected in Polish okowita Ukrainian okovita Belarusian akavita and Scandinavian akvavit Whiskey has a similar etymology from the Irish and Scottish Gaelic uisce beatha uisge beatha People in the area of vodka s probable origin have names for vodka with roots meaning to burn Polish gorzala Ukrainian gorilka romanized horilka Belarusian garelka romanized harelka Lithuanian degtine Samogitian degtene is also in use colloquially and in proverbs 14 Latvian degvins Finnish paloviina In Russian during the 17th and 18th centuries goryashѣe vino or goryachee vino goryashchee vino burning wine or hot wine was widely used Others languages include the German Branntwein Danish braendevin Dutch brandewijn Swedish brannvin and Norwegian brennevin although the latter terms refer to any strong alcoholic beverage History nbsp The vodka belt countries of Northern Central and Eastern Europe are the historic home of vodka These countries have the highest vodka consumption in the world Scholars debate the beginnings of vodka 15 because there is little historical material available 16 17 For many centuries beverages differed significantly compared to the vodka of today as the spirit at that time had a different flavor color and smell and was originally used as medicine It contained little alcohol an estimated maximum of about 14 Distillation techniques were developed in Roman Egypt by the 3rd century but the description of aqua ardens burning water i e alcohol made by distilling wine with salt appears in Latin works only by the 12th century The process was well known among European medieval chemists by about 1300 18 Poland The world s first written mention of the word wodka was in 1405 from Akta Grodzkie recorder of deeds 19 in the court documents from the Palatinate of Sandomierz in Poland 19 At the time the word wodka referred to chemical compounds such as medicines and cosmetics cleansers The production of liquor begins in the mid 15th century with varied local traditions emerging throughout Europe in Poland as vodka Polish wodka or gorzalka In the 16th century the Polish word for the beverage was gorzalka from the Old Polish verb gorzec meaning to burn which is also the source of Ukrainian horilka gorilka The word written in Cyrillic appeared first in 1533 about a medicinal drink brought from Poland to Russia by the Russian merchants 19 In these early days the spirits were used mostly as medicines Stefan Falimierz asserted in his 1534 works on herbs that vodka could serve to increase fertility and awaken lust Wodka lub gorzalka 1614 by Jerzy Potanski contains valuable information on the production of vodka Jakub Kazimierz Haur in his book Sklad albo skarbiec znakomitych sekretow ekonomii ziemianskiej A Treasury of Excellent Secrets about Landed Gentry s Economy Krakow 1693 gave detailed recipes for making vodka from rye nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Chopin Wyborowa Zubrowka LuksusowaSome Polish vodka blends go back centuries Most notable are Zubrowka from about the 16th century Goldwasser from the early 17th century and aged Starka vodka from the 16th century In the mid 17th century the szlachta nobility of Poland were granted a monopoly on producing and selling vodka in their territories This privilege was a source of substantial profits One of the most famous distilleries of the aristocracy was established by Elzbieta Izabela Lubomirska and later operated by her grandson Alfred Wojciech Potocki The Vodka Industry Museum located at the park of the Potocki country estate has an original document attesting that the distillery already existed in 1784 Today it operates as Polmos Lancut 20 Vodka production on a much larger scale began in Poland at the end of the 16th century initially at Krakow whence spirits were exported to Silesia before 1550 Silesian cities also bought vodka from Poznan a city that in 1580 had 498 working spirits distilleries Soon however Gdansk outpaced both these cities In the 17th and 18th centuries Polish vodka was known in the Netherlands Denmark England Russia Germany Austria Hungary Romania Ukraine Bulgaria and the Black Sea basin Early production methods were rudimentary The beverage was usually low proof and the distillation process had to be repeated several times a three stage distillation process was common The first distillate was called brantowka the second was szumowka and the third was okowita from aqua vitae which generally contained 70 80 ABV Then the beverage was watered down yielding a simple vodka 30 35 ABV or a stronger one if the watering was done using an alembic The exact production methods were described in 1768 by Jan Pawel Biretowski and in 1774 by Jan Chryzostom Pasek The late 18th century inaugurated the production of vodka from various unusual substances including even the carrot 21 Though there was a substantial vodka cottage industry in Poland back to the 16th century the end of the 18th century marked the start of real industrial production of vodka in Poland Kresy the eastern part of Poland was controlled by the Russian empire at that time Vodkas produced by the nobility and clergy became a mass product The first industrial distillery was opened in 1782 in Lwow by J A Baczewski He was soon followed by Jakub Haberfeld who in 1804 established a factory at Oswiecim and by Hartwig Kantorowicz who started producing Wyborowa in 1823 at Poznan The implementation of new technologies in the latter half of the 19th century which allowed the production of clear vodkas contributed to their success The first rectification distillery was established in 1871 In 1925 the production of clear vodkas was made a Polish government monopoly 21 After World War II all vodka distilleries were taken over by Poland s Marxist Leninist government During the martial law of the 1980s the sale of vodka was rationed Following the success of the Solidarity movement and the abolition of single party rule in Poland many distilleries began struggling financially Some filed for bankruptcy but many were privatized leading to the creation of various new brands 21 Russia nbsp Russian Vodka in various bottles and cupsRussian Empire A type of distilled liquor designated by the Russian word vodka came to Russia in the late 14th century In 1386 the Genoese ambassadors brought the first aqua vitae water of life to Moscow and presented it to Dmitry Donskoy the grand prince The liquid obtained by distillation of grape must was thought to be a concentrate and a spirit of wine spiritus vini in Latin whence came to the name of this substance in many European languages like English spirit or Russian spirt spirt Perhaps one of the earliest terms linked to vodka production was varenoe vino distilled wine which appears in a 1399 document Another term used was perevara a precursor to vodka which last appears in official documents in 1495 The term korchma is one of the oldest official terms used for vodka which was used alongside varenoe vino but later came to denote illegally produced vodka by the 16th century Other terms that referred to vodka included goriachee vino burning wine zhzhenoe vino burnt wine and khlebnoe vino bread wine 22 23 24 According to William Pokhlyobkin in around 1430 a monk named Isidore from the Chudov Monastery inside the Moscow Kremlin made a recipe of the first Russian vodka 25 Having a special knowledge and distillation devices he became the creator of a new higher quality type of alcoholic beverage This bread wine as it was initially known was for a long time produced exclusively in the Moscow grand principality and in no other Russian principality this situation persisted until the era of industrial production Thus this beverage was closely associated with Moscow In 1474 Ivan III created the first Russian state monopoly on vodka 26 In 1505 the first exports of distilled Russian vodka arrived in Sweden 26 By the 16th century government run taverns known as kabaks replaced privately run korchmas 24 Giles Fletcher who was the English ambassador in Russia wrote In every great towne of his Realme he hath a Caback or drinking house where is sold aquavitae which they call Russewine mead beere amp c Out of these hee receiveth rent that amounteth to a great summe of money Of the Russe Common Wealth 1591 24 Until the mid 18th century the drink remained relatively low in alcohol content not exceeding 40 ABV Multiple terms for the drink were recorded sometimes reflecting different levels of quality alcohol concentration filtering and the number of distillations most commonly it was referred to as burning wine bread wine or even in some locations simply wine In some locations grape wine may have been so expensive that it was a drink only for aristocrats Burning wine was usually diluted with water to 24 ABV or less before drinking It was mostly sold in taverns and was quite expensive At the same time the word vodka was already in use but it described herbal tinctures similar to Nalewka containing up to 75 ABV and made for medicinal purposes nbsp A Vodka museum in Russia located in Verkhniye Mandrogi Leningrad Oblast The first written usage of the word vodka in an official Russian document in its modern meaning is dated by the decree of Empress Elizabeth of 8 June 1751 which regulated the ownership of vodka distilleries By the 1860s a government policy of promoting the consumption of state manufactured vodka made it the drink of choice for many Russians In 1863 the government monopoly on vodka production was repealed causing prices to plummet and making vodka available even to low income citizens The taxes on vodka became a key element of government finances in Tsarist Russia providing at times up to 40 of state revenue 27 By 1911 vodka comprised 89 of all alcohol consumed in Russia This level has fluctuated somewhat during the 20th century but remained quite high at all times The most recent estimates put it at 70 2001 Post Soviet Russia Vodka remains a major source of state revenue and therefore of power Seizing control of the state spirits monopoly Rosspirtprom and its Kristall distillery was instrumental for Vladimir Putin to consolidate his power as prime minister and president 28 Under his rule the Putinka little Putin brand of vodka became a bestseller partly to Putin s financial benefit 28 Other popular Russian vodka producers or brands include Stolichnaya and Russian Standard 29 William Pokhlebin s A History of Vodka During the late 1970s Russian culinary author William Pokhlebkin compiled a history of the production of vodka in Russia as part of the Soviet case in a trade dispute this was later published as A History of Vodka Pokhlebkin wrote that while there is a wealth of publications about the history of consumption and distribution of vodka virtually nothing had been written about vodka production One of his assertions was that the word vodka was used in popular speech in Russia considerably earlier than the middle of the 18th century but the word did not appear in print until the 1860s Pokhlebkin s sources were challenged by David Christian in the Slavic Review in 1994 who criticized the lack of valid references in Pokhlebkin s works and its pro Russian bias Pokhlebkin is also known for his Pan Slavic sympathies under the leadership of Russia and sentiments that in David Christian s opinion discredit most of his work especially his History of Vodka 30 Sweden Up until the 1950s vodka was not used as a designation for Swedish distilled beverages which were instead called brannvin burn wine the word having the same etymology as the Dutch Brandewijn which is the base for the word brandy This beverage has been produced in Sweden since the late 15th century although the total production was still small in the 17th century 31 From the early 18th century production expanded although production was prohibited several times during grain shortages Although initially a grain product potatoes started to be used in the production in the late 18th century and became dominant from the early 19th century 32 From the early 1870s distillery equipment was improved Progressively from the 1960s unflavoured Swedish brannvin also came to be called vodka The first Swedish product to use this term was Explorer Vodka which was created in 1958 and initially was intended for the American export market Although it ultimately failed to do so it remains one of the most popular vodka brands in Sweden today 33 34 In 1979 Absolut Vodka was launched reusing the name of the old Absolut Rent Brannvin absolutely pure brannvin created in 1879 After Sweden joined the European Union in 1995 the regulations were changed so that privately owned companies could produce Vodka 35 Vodka has become popular among young people with a flourishing black market 36 In 2013 the organizers of the so called vodka car were jailed for two and a half years for having illegally provided thousands of liters to young people some as young as 13 37 Production nbsp An old Ukrainian vodka still nbsp Vodka bottling machine Shatskaya Vodka Shatsk Russia Vodka may be distilled from any starch or sugar rich plant matter most vodka today is produced from grains such as sorghum corn rye or wheat Among grain vodkas rye and wheat vodkas are generally considered superior Some vodkas are made from potatoes molasses soybeans grapes rice sugar beets and sometimes even byproducts of oil refining 38 or wood pulp processing In some Central European countries such as Poland some vodka is produced by just fermenting a solution of crystal sugar and yeast In the European Union there are talks about the standardization of vodka and the Vodka Belt countries insist that only spirits produced from grains potato and sugar beet molasses be allowed to be branded as vodka following the traditional methods of production 39 40 In the United States many vodkas are made from 95 pure grain alcohol produced in large quantities by agricultural industrial giants Archer Daniels Midland Grain Processing Corporation 41 and Midwest Grain Products MGP 42 Bottlers purchase the base spirits in bulk then filter dilute distribute and market the end product under a variety of vodka brand names 43 Similar methods are used in other regions such as Europe 44 This pure grain alcohol also known as rectified spirit neutral spirit or ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin is also available directly to consumers in some areas as products such as Everclear Polmos spirytus rektyfikowany and others In contrast to very high ABV vodkas such as the Bulgarian Balkan 176 with 88 ABV these grain alcohol products are not considered vodka they have not yet gone through the filtration and refining process used to produce vodka 5 44 45 A study conducted on NPR s Planet Money podcast revealed negligible differences in taste between various brands of vodka leading to speculation as to how much branding contributes to the concept of super premium vodkas 46 Distilling and filtering This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A common property of the vodkas produced in the United States and Europe is the extensive use of filtration before any additional processing including the addition of flavorants Filtering is sometimes done in the still during distillation as well as afterward where the distilled vodka is filtered through activated charcoal and other media to absorb trace amounts of substances that alter or impart off flavors to the vodka However this is not the case in the traditional vodka producing nations so many distillers from these countries prefer to use very accurate distillation but minimal filtering thus preserving the unique flavors and characteristics of their products The master distiller is in charge of distilling the vodka and directing its filtration which includes the removal of the fore shots heads and tails These components of the distillate contain flavor compounds such as ethyl acetate and ethyl lactate heads as well as the fusel oils tails that impact the usually desired clean taste of vodka Through numerous rounds of distillation or the use of a fractioning still the taste is modified and clarity is increased In contrast the distillery process for liquors such as whiskey rum and baijiu allow portions of the heads and tails to remain giving them their unique flavors Repeated distillation of vodka will make its ethanol level much higher than is acceptable to most end users whether legislation determines strength limits or not Depending on the distillation method and the technique of the still master the final filtered and distilled vodka may have as much as 95 96 ethanol As such most vodka is diluted with water before bottling Flavoring Main article Flavored liquor nbsp A vodka distillery in Bialystok Poland where the bison grass vodka Zubrowka is produced nbsp Finnish grown six row barley and glacial spring water Finlandia VodkaWhile most vodkas are unflavored many flavored vodkas have been produced in traditional vodka drinking areas often as home made recipes to improve vodka s taste or for medicinal purposes Flavorings include red pepper ginger fruit flavors vanilla chocolate without sweetener and cinnamon In Russia vodka flavored with honey and pepper pertsovka in Russian is also very popular In Poland and Belarus the leaves of the local bison grass are added to produce zubrowka Polish and zubrovka Belarusian vodka with slightly sweet flavors and light amber colors In Lithuania and Poland a famous vodka containing honey is called krupnik This tradition of flavoring is also prevalent in the Nordic countries where vodka seasoned with herbs fruits and spices is the appropriate strong drink for several seasonal festivities Sweden has forty odd common varieties of herb flavored vodka kryddat brannvin In Poland and Ukraine a separate category nalyvka in Ukraine and nalewka in Poland is used for vodka based spirits with fruit root flower or herb extracts which are often home made or produced by small commercial distilleries Their alcohol contents vary between 15 and 75 In Estonia vodkas are available with barberry blackcurrant cherry green apple lemon vanilla and watermelon flavors 47 In most cases vodka flavoring comes from a post distillation infusion of flavors Through the fermentation process grain mash is transformed into a neutral alcohol beverage that is unflavored The process of flavoring vodka so that it tastes like fruits chocolate and other foods occurs after fermentation and distillation Various chemicals that reproduce the flavor profiles of foods are added into vodka to give it a specific taste TodayVodka is less likely than other spirits to produce the undesirable after effects of heavy consumption though no less likely to intoxicate because of its low level of fusel oils and congeners which are impurities that flavor spirits 48 Since the year 2000 because of evolving consumer tastes and regulatory changes several artisanal vodka or even ultra premium vodka brands have appeared European Union regulation The success of grape based vodka in the United States in the early twenty first century prompted traditional vodka producers in the Vodka Belt countries of Poland Finland Estonia Lithuania and Sweden to campaign for EU legislation that would define vodka as only spirits made from grain or potatoes 39 40 This proposition provoked heavy criticism from South European countries which often distill used mash from wine making into spirits although higher quality mash is usually distilled into some variety of pomace brandy the lower quality mash is better turned into neutral flavored spirits instead Any vodka not made from either grain or potatoes would have to display the products used in its production This regulation entered into force in 2008 6 Canadian regulations Under Canadian regulations Vodka is a potable alcoholic distillate obtained from potatoes cereal grain or any other material of agricultural origin fermented by the action of yeast or a mixture of yeast and other micro organisms 49 United States regulations In 1956 it was put into revenue ruling that sugar not more than 0 2 and trace amounts of citric acid are not considered flavoring agent The meaning of trace amounts of citric acid was clarified as not more than 1 000ppm in 1995 50 It is no longer defined as to be without distinctive character aroma taste or color 51 The law includes other requirements Vodka cannot be aged in wood it may or may not be charcoal filtered and it must meet minimum distillation and bottling proofs 52 BoycottsIn summer 2013 American LGBT rights activists targeted Russian vodka brands for boycott over Russia s anti gay policies 53 54 55 In late February 2022 with the Russian invasion of Ukraine some North American liquor stores and bars expressed symbolic solidarity with Ukraine and opposition to Russia by boycotting Russian vodka brands 56 57 One critic argued that boycotts of Russian branded vodka may inadvertently affect U S vodka manufacturers and noted that only 1 2 percent of U S vodka imports come from Russia 58 Illegal productionIn some countries black market or bathtub vodka is widespread because it can be produced easily and avoids taxation However severe poisoning blindness or death can occur as a result of dangerous industrial ethanol substitutes being added by black market producers 59 In March 2007 in a documentary BBC News UK sought to find the cause of severe jaundice among imbibers of a bathtub vodka in Russia 60 The cause was suspected to be an industrial disinfectant Extrasept 95 ethanol but also containing a highly toxic chemical added to the vodka by the illegal traders because of its high alcohol content and low price Death toll estimates list at least 120 dead and more than 1 000 poisoned vague The death toll is expected to rise due to the chronic nature of the cirrhosis that is causing jaundice citation needed Public health effectsSee also Alcohol and health Estimates of the annual death toll resulting from vodka consumption extend up to the thousands in Russia 61 62 Cooking nbsp Penne alla vodkaVodka can also be used in cooking and various recipes are improved by the addition of vodka or rely on it as a key ingredient Vodka sauce is a pasta sauce made from tomato sauce cream and vodka that gained popularity in the 1970s Vodka can be used in baking as a substitute for water pie crusts can be made flakier with vodka 63 It may be used in seafood dishes cheesecake or bitters 64 65 See alsoList of cocktails with vodka List of vodkas Vodka sauce Vodka warReferences a b The History of Vodka Proof a b The Art of Distilling Revised and Expanded An Enthusiast s Guide to the Artisan Distilling of Whiskey Vodka Gin and other Potent Potables Quarry Books January 2019 ISBN 9781631595554 a b Herlihy Patricia 2012 Vodka A Global History Reaktion Books p 12 ISBN 9781861899293 Evseev Anton 21 November 2011 Dmitry Mendeleev and 40 degrees of Russian vodka Science Moscow English Pravda Ru Retrieved 6 July 2014 a b The Production of Vodka Archived from the original on 22 January 2008 Retrieved 20 January 2007 a b Regulation EC No 110 2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 January 2008 on the definition description presentation labelling and the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks and repealing Council Regulation EEC No 1576 89 EUR Lex Retrieved 17 February 2020 United States Code of Federal Regulations Title 27 Section 5 22 a 1 United States Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 23 November 2011 Retrieved 31 May 2011 Vodka at the Encyclopaedia Britannica vodka Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 22 November 2008 Etymology of the word vodka in Chernyh P Ya Istoriko etimologicheskij slovar sovremennogo russkogo yazyka Moskva Russkij yazyk Media 2004 Georgi Johann Gottlieb 1780 Russia or a compleat historical account of all the nations which compose that Empire printed for J Nichols T Cadell H Payne and N Conant p 115 Tooke William 1799 View of the Russian empire during the reign of Catharine the Second and to the close of the present century Volume 1 Piccadilly T N Longman and O Rees Pater Noster Row and J Debrett p 362 Gautier Theophile 1800 Voyage en Russie G Charpentier et cie pp 354 406 The heritage of professor Juozas Balcikonis the great educator of the native language Archived from the original on 11 April 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Smith A F 2007 The Oxford companion to American food and drink Oxford University Press p 693 ISBN 978 0 19 530796 2 Blocker Jack S Fahey David M and Tyrrell Ian R 2003 Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History An International Encyclopedia Vol 1 A L ABC CLIO pp 389 636 ISBN 1 57607 833 7 Ermochkine Nicholas and Iglikowski Peter 2003 40 degrees east an anatomy of vodka Nova Publishers p 217 ISBN 1 59033 594 5 Multhauf Robert P 1966 The Origins of Chemistry London Oldbourne ISBN 9782881245947 pp 204 206 a b c History of vodka production at the official page of Polish Spirit Industry Association KRPS 2007 in Polish Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Count Alfred Potocki Factory Museum of Liqueurs Rosolios and Rum Polmos Distillery Archived from the original on 26 December 2013 Retrieved 25 November 2013 a b c Leszek Wiwala 2010 Od gorzalki do wodki zarys historii polskiej wodki History of Polish vodka Wydawnictwo Leon ISBN 978 83 928861 0 5 page needed Pokhlyobkin William 17 December 1992 A History of Vodka Verso pp 100 107 ISBN 978 0 86091 359 7 Goldstein Darra 24 May 2022 The Kingdom of Rye A Brief History of Russian Food Univ of California Press pp 24 26 ISBN 978 0 520 38389 0 a b c Schrad Mark March 2014 Vodka Politics Alcohol Autocracy and the Secret History of the Russian State OUP USA pp 79 83 ISBN 978 0 19 975559 2 Pokhlyobkin William Pohlyobkin V V 2007 The history of vodka Istoriya vodki Moscow Tsentrpoligraph Centrpoligraf p 272 ISBN 978 5 9524 1895 0 a b DeSalle Rob Tattersall Ian 12 July 2022 Distilled A Natural History of Spirits Yale University Press pp 140 141 ISBN 978 0 300 26510 1 Bromley Jonathan 2002 Russia 1848 1917 Heinemann pp 40 ISBN 978 0 435 32718 7 a b Schrad Mark Lawrence 5 May 2023 Russia Has a Vodka Addiction So Does Vladimir Putin But Not the Same Way POLITICO Retrieved 7 May 2023 Some vodka manufacturers onlinevodka net Archived from the original on 13 April 2009 Slavic Review Vol 53 no 1 1994 pp 245 247 Brannvinslagstiftning Archived 21 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Nordisk familjebok volume 4 1905 Brannvinsbranning Archived 21 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Nordisk familjebok volume 4 1905 Conaxess Trade Explorer Vodka Conaxess Trade Retrieved 12 December 2019 Sweden sales volume of the leading spirits brands in Systembolaget stores 2018 Statista Retrieved 5 December 2019 Oversyn av vissa bestammelser i alkohollagen samt av bestammelserna om forsaljning av teknisk sprit m m Kommittedirektiv 1998 19 Riksdagen www riksdagen se Vodka mobile selling booze to Swedish kids Archived 4 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine Thelocal se 10 February 2012 Retrieved on 19 July 2013 Atalade for vodkabilen domda till fangelse Archived 6 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Expressen se 3 May 2013 Retrieved on 19 July 2013 Ermochkine Nicholas and Iglikowski Peter 2003 40 degrees east an anatomy of vodka Nova Publishers p 65 ISBN 1 59033 594 5 a b EU Farm Chief Warns of Legal Action in Vodka Row Archived from the original on 10 March 2007 Retrieved 10 March 2007 a b Alexander Stubb The European Vodka Wars Archived 15 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine a December 2006 Blue Wings article Ethyl Alcohol Alcohol Markets www grainprocessing com Product MGP www mgpingredients com Nasaw Daniel 7 June 2012 Why are there so many brands of vodka on sale BBC News Retrieved 14 July 2012 a b Spirits in bulk Akwawit Polmos Archived from the original on 5 August 2017 Retrieved 4 August 2017 The agricultural ethyl alcohol we produce is the basic component of clear and fine vodkas Our product is used for manufacturing vodkas of the best brand in Poland Everclear Uses and Products FAQs Make it Your Own with Everclear Luxco Retrieved 4 August 2017 Is There Really A Difference Between Expensive Vodka And Cheap Vodka NPR org Retrieved 19 March 2018 Estonian Vodka flavors therealculture com Archived from the original on 1 April 2010 Price Pamela Vandyke 1980 The Penguin Book of Spirits and Liqueurs Penguin Books pp 196 ff ISBN 0 14 046335 6 Branch Legislative Services 3 June 2019 Consolidated federal laws of canada Food and Drug Regulations laws justice gc ca Retrieved 15 July 2019 ATF Ruling 97 1 29 December 1995 Allan M Carrie 28 October 2021 Vodka has a new definition it s still neutral but no longer flavorless Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 27 December 2023 27 CFR 5 22 The standards of identity LII Legal Information Institute Retrieved 22 January 2021 Vodka boycott in U S spreads on concerns over gay rights in Russia Reuters 1 August 2013 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Abad Santos Alexander 8 August 2013 The Russian Vodka Boycott Is Working Whether You Like It or Not The Atlantic Retrieved 26 February 2022 Stoli CEO Speaks Out On How Company Will Respond To Vodka Boycott HuffPost 31 July 2013 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Canadian liquor stores remove Russian vodka from shelves after Ukraine invasion Reuters 26 February 2022 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Boycotting Russian vodka brands How big of an impact does it have and on who MSN Retrieved 26 February 2022 Why Are You Boycotting American Vodka To Punish Russia 28 February 2022 Eke Steven 29 November 2006 People s vodka urged for Russia BBC News Retrieved 22 November 2008 Sweeney John 10 March 2007 When vodka is your poison BBC News Retrieved 22 November 2008 See e g Korotayev A Khaltourina D Russian Demographic Crisis in Cross National Perspective Russia and Globalization Identity Security and Society in an Era of Change Archived 4 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Ed by D W Blum Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press 2008 P 37 78 Khaltourina D A amp Korotayev A V Potential for alcohol policy to decrease the mortality crisis in Russia Evaluation amp the Health Professions vol 31 no 3 Sep 2008 pp 272 281 Archived 1 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Korotayev A Khaltourina D Meshcherina K amp Zamiatnina E Distilled Spirits Overconsumption as the Most Important Factor of Excessive Adult Male Mortality in Europe Alcohol and Alcoholism 2018 53 6 742 752 Archived 8 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Boozy Ingredient Your Baked Goods Are Missing Epicurious Retrieved 6 March 2018 How to Cook with Vodka Feast West Feast West 27 May 2015 Retrieved 6 March 2018 Chowhound 10 Recipes Using Vodka Chowhound Retrieved 6 March 2018 Further readingBegg Desmond 1997 The Vodka Companion A Connoisseur s Guide Running ISBN 0 7624 0252 0 Broom Dave 1998 Complete Book of Spirits and Cocktails Italy Carlton Books Ltd ISBN 1 85868 485 4 Delos Gilbert 1998 Vodkas of the World Edison New Jersey Wellfleet Press ISBN 0 7858 1018 8 Elborn Geoffrey 2013 The Dedalus Book of Vodka Dedalus ISBN 978 1 907650 04 8 Faith Nicholas Ian Wisniewski 1977 Classic Vodka London Prion Books Ltd ISBN 1 85375 234 7 Lingwood William Ian Wisniewski 2003 Vodka Discovering Exploring Enjoying New York Ryland Peters amp Small ISBN 1 84172 506 4 Rogala Jan 2004 Gorzalka czyli historia i zasady wypalania mocnych trunkow Baobab ISBN 83 89642 70 0 External linksHistory in a Vodka Bottle How Baczewski Ruled European Royal Courts Invented Marketing amp Rose from the Ashes Portals nbsp Liquor nbsp DrinkVodka at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vodka amp oldid 1192076244, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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