jordanlund,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Becherovka, it’s an herbal alcohol, kind of a cousin to Jägermeister.

Best described as “Christmas in a bottle.”

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Becherovka

june,

Her name is Gladys and she a kind gho- ooooh

Screwball. Does that count as a spirit?

fubarx,

Zwack Unicum from Hungary and 58% Kaoling sorghum liquor from Taiwan. The Kaoling can melt the bottom of plastic cups.

Had a bottle of fermented mare’s milk Kumis gifted from Kazakhstan, but it tasted like rancid cheese. Didn’t want to risk keeping it around once the bottle had been opened.

Mango,

Jumex.

The straight up instant refreshment of chugging a jumex after I get off work is far more pleasing than alcohol IMO.

stoy,

There have been a few people mentooning not drinking alcohol, so perhaps the next thread will be about “what is the must unusual non alcoholic ingredient in your home bar?”

littlewonder,

A bottle of North Korean soju I got while visiting the DMZ.

xkforce,

Malort

Warning: it tastes like grapefruit flavored floor cleaner

brygphilomena,

Not unusual here.

It was when I was living in California though.

It’s bad, sure. But it’s not as bad as people make it out to be. I always join in when I convince people to drink it for the first time.

HATEFISH,

And if you wanna see God / create the five loko get yourself some charged lemonade https://midwest.social/pictrs/image/87ae3b1d-3a51-47d8-853e-037dfb4d3f78.webp

RBWells,

You should post this in !cocktails too.

There are a couple of things I have to order online, that aren’t in the shop here but I like - Heirloom Pineapple Amaro is one. I do make liqueurs so those I guess are the rarest. Like someone else in this thread, I tried infusing cocoa nibs, but in whiskey and it was similarly awful.

stoy,

I wanted the largest reach to get as many responses as possible, so this community seemed like the best bet.

Can you crosspost like on reddit here?

RBWells,

Yes, the copy button at the top.

stoy,

Excellent, I mostly use Memmy on my phone, but I’ll check it out on pc later

Lennnny,
@Lennnny@lemmy.world avatar

I guess the spirit itself - vodka - is not unusual, however I like to infuse local produce, and I have a fucking delicious passionflower vodka made from ripe local fruits. I also had a pawpaw rum, but that has a short shelf life so I had to imbibe it quickly.

stoy,

Vodka in and of itself is not that unusual, but there are unusual vodkas, and I would absolutely classify home made passionflower vodka as beeing unusual.

At the moment Inonly have one bottle of vodka at home, a bottle of Nemiroff DeLux vodka from Ukraine, I just saw it at Systembolaget and thought it was a cool way to both get Vodka and in a small way support Ukraine.

I also have a bottle of Japanese rice vodka on order, I mainly ordered it as it has a beautiful bottle.

Witchfire, (edited )
@Witchfire@lemmy.world avatar

Cacique, which is Costa Rica’s national liquor (only rare because it’s hard to import).

It’s essentially sugar cane hooch that the government decided to nationalize in an attempt to end secret production, back around the mid 1800s. Their plan worked and it became a sort of national identity. The whole history of it is pretty neat.

It doesn’t taste like anything on its own, so it’s mixed with everything and the kitchen sink.

iamnotdunningkruger,

A bottle of Canadian Club legit from 1963. We drank it neat while watching Mad Men.

Devi,

Pisang Ambon, banana liqueur, I tried it in a bar in Spain, really liked it, and bought it. But what do you do with Banana Liqueur in your house? Nothing mixes well with that. Occasionally I sip it, but I've had it a decade and drunk maybe a third.

stoy,

I wonder if you could use banana liqueur with milk and ice cream to make an aloholic banana milkshake…

I just found Pisang Ambon at Systembolaget, what an intencly colored bottle!

Devi,

I'm sure there's one you could but the one I have curdles the milk. That was one of the first things I tried.

RBWells,

Do like the French and use it in cakes. Would be nice in or on banana bread or pancakes.

I have Giffard banana liqueur and it is hard to use, it does add a great element to a few drinks but you don’t need much.

voxthefox,

Probably the earl Grey infused gin I’ve had in a decanter for 4 years now. It’s pretty goof, but hard to mix with

gac11,

Centerba. It means hundred grasses in Italian. It tastes like grain alcohol infused with whatever they cut down in a field. Maybe a hint of mint too? It’s fluorescent green now because food coloring is cheaper than bright green glass apparently.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centerbe

stoy,

That looks really cool, I will have to try and get one just for the look if nothing else

DuckOverload,

A handle of tequila with cacao nibs added. I do infusions, and this was a failed experiment. Should have tried it in a mason jar.

Though it usually works out well. I have a bottle of premium Costco vodka with two anise stars and some simple syrup added. It’s like a homemade ouzo and delightfully sippable for $18 a handle. I also have slices of pear in another bottle, and it’s yummy. And a mason jar of bourbon with black peppercorns, which I like to splash into an Old Fashioned.

Hot tip: Buying flavored liquor is expensive and never as good as infusing it yourself.

SheerDumbLuck,

Have you tried it with Sichuan peppercorns? I hear it’s really different.

ThatFembyWho,

Just finished off a bottle of chartreuse.

Now it would be sacrificio, a type of mezcal.

Most unique I’ve had might be Zirbenz stone pine liqueur.

Obi,
@Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

I was gonna say chartreuse isn’t that exotic but then I remembered I’m French and it might be, when you’re not.

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