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- Artemesia absinthium (wormwood) is availiable from Horus.
- I believe this plant was allowed to ferment, like grape-juice or
- grain (hops) to form the liquer. Used by renowned writers ie Poe.
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Try the following reference (online databases are great!):
-
- Arnold, Wilfred Niels.
- Absinthe. (liqueur's history and analysis; includes related articles)
- Scientific American v260, n6 (June, 1989):112 (6 pages).
-
- =============================================================================
-
- I've been meaning to repost these recipes for absinthe for some
- time but just haven't gotten to it. A couple of people asked for
- pointers to further information, and I have included a little.
- Unfortunately most of the older books from which I got info on absinthe
- were from various libraries and I can't give a good bibliography.
-
- There are a few pages devoted to the culture of absinthe
- drinking in an essay on Rimbaud by William Ober in his book _Bottoms
- Up!_ (a rather unusual book, check it out). Alexis Lichine mentions it
- in his books on spirits. Wormwood and its chemical constituents are well
- documented in Mrs. Grieve's _Herbal_ (a very good source book on herbs;
- I have found that British sources tend to be much more thorough and
- grounded in research than American ones, which tend to rely on hand me
- down tales and hearsay).
-
- True absinthe was marked by its intense green color (which
- usually came from herbs other than wormwood, which is a gray-green at
- best). This lead to cases in which the drink was adulterated with copper
- salts, doubtless to the consumers detriment. The best absinthe contained
- 70-80% alcohol, which in itself makes a case for why it might be a
- dangerous drink. Of beverages still legal for sale in most places, both
- Campari and Fernet Branca contain wormwood, but are not nearly so
- alcoholic.
-
- The 1911 edition of the Britannica remarks, "There is some
- reason to believe that excessive absinthe-drinking leads to effects
- which are specifically worse than those associated with over-indulgence
- in other forms of alcohol.
-
- The manufacture and sale of true absinthe is still legal in
- Spain.
-
-
- Absinthe #1
-
- 1 pint vodka 2 tsp crumbled wormwood (dried)
- 2tsp anise seed 1/2 tsp fennel seed
- 4 cardomom pods 1 tsp majoram
- 1/2 tsp ground coriander 2 tsp chopped angelica root
- 1 2/3 cups sugar syrup
-
- Place vodka in large jar with tight fitting lid. Add wormwood and shake
- well; steep 48 hrs and strain out. Crush seeds and pods in mortar. Add them
- and all remaining spices to vodka and steep in a warm place 1 week.
- Filter and sweeten. (The sugar syrup mentioned above is your standard
- simple syrup.)
-
-
- Absinthe #2
-
- 1 tsp crumbled wormwood 1 cup vodka
- 2 Tbsp chopped peppermint leaves
- 1 piece of lemon peel, 3/4"x2"
- 1/3-1/2 cup sugar syrup
-
- Steep wormwood in vodka for 48 hours. Strain out and add peppermint
- leaves and lemon peel. Steep for 8 days, strain nd sweeten. Smells good
- but is more bitter than #1.
-
-
- Absinthe Wine
-
- All herbs are dried.
-
- 2 tsp peppermint 2tsp dried wormwood
- 2 tsp thyme 2 tsp lavender
- 2 tsp hyssop 2 tsp majoram
- 2 tsp sage 2 pints port
-
- Steep herbs one week, filter and bottle. My notes describe this as
- "bitter, aromatic and potent".
-
- ===========================================================================
-
- I at last have had the opportunity to try the drug Absinthe, and
- though of reporting my experience on the net.
-
- I was offered to try absinthe when visiting a cousin last week
- end. Interestingly, while absinthe is illegal about everywhere in the
- world, it is still legal in the small country of Andorre situated in
- the mountains between France and Spain. When bringing it back to
- Canada my cousin got searched, but absinthe is so little known in
- Canada that the custom officers thought it was an ordinary bottle of
- liquor, although it was clearly labelled Absinthe. I am told that it
- is another story if you get caught with it in Europe...
-
- For anyone familiar with late nineteeth century French
- litterature Absinthe posseses a very special mystique, since it looks
- like just every French writer of the time was hooked on it. I had
- always been wondering if the effects of Absinthe were due mainly to
- the high alcool content, of if there was anything specific. The fact
- that the main active ingredient, Thujone, is listed a toxic convulsant
- made me somewhat apprehensive.
-
- I drank a total of 3 ounces of absinthe that night. The taste is
- strongly aromatic and the mouth gets completely numb when drinking it.
- The procedure for drinking is to mix the absinthe with water. It then
- turns milky white.
-
- After a few minutes of the first glass I could feel a
- undistinct feeling of warmth and a rather pleasant buzz. The two more
- glasses that I drank afterwards completely convinced me that the
- effect of absinthe has little to do with alcool. After 3 ounces I was
- experiencing a strong buzz, somewhat similar to a long lasting nitrous
- oxide experience, minus the auditory disturbances. Duration was about
- an hour, with a 30 minutes peak. The effect was extremely pleasant,
- although I would not list absinthe as a psychedelic. It definitely
- belongs in terms of subjective effects to the solvent/nitrous oxide
- category, although pharmacologically very different. The following day
- I felt very lethargic, but it is hard to say if it was due to the
- absinthe since we stayed up pretty late that night.
-
- My conclusion: I give it two thumbs up, but would not drink it
- more than occasionally since it is reported as neurotoxic. Try it out
- if ever you go to Andorre.
-
- Pierre St Hilaire
- MIT Media Lab
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.herbs,alt.psychoactives
- From: Galatia.9@debug.cuc.ab.ca (Robin and Ennien Ashbrook)
- Subject: Re: Anyone Ever TRIED Abisinthe?
- Date: Sun, 15 May 1994 02:34:46 GMT
- Message-ID: <1994May15.023446.24820@debug.cuc.ab.ca>
-
- alex@spiral.org (Dave Alexander) writes:
- > I'm planning to make some Abisinthe -- well, not *real* Abisinthe with
- > Pernod, etc., but Wormwood flowers soaked in Seagram's Crown Royal for
- > several months.
- >
- > Has anyone ever actually tried this? I'm looking for something that's
- > mildly opiate-like. I think this should be the ticket, but it would be nice
- > to hear from a first-hand user.
-
- Looks like this is the day for wormwood.
- I have tried absinthe, real absinthe, not wormwood tinctured in alcohol,
- but fermented with honey and anise-seed.
- It gave me some interesting visions, if you like hallucinating. It
- produced an interesting buzz, if you like a sound like drones in your
- head. It also gave me an interesting headache, interesting stomache
- cramps, interesting vomiting and a generally interesting hangover. This
- was from one glass, that is, one ounce of absinthe, on the rocks, with
- ice water as is tradtional.
- Admittedly, my system is very sensitive to chemicals of any sort (cuppa
- tea in the morning keeps me wired 'til supper), but it was enough to
- convince me that I definately didnt want to get addicted to this stuff.
- Absinthe is dangerous. It causes irreparable deterioration of the brain
- stem and liver, due to the powerful hepatics in the wormwood being
- altered by alcohol. Symptoms begin to show within 3 - 6 months of
- continued use (remember, its addictive) and begin with depression,
- emotional instability, and jaundice, then progress to tremors, difficulty
- breathing, erratic heartbeat, neural failure, then finally heart/lung
- failure. For these reasons, absinthe has been banned globally. Absinthe
- was a traditional drink of poets in the 18th and 19th centuries and its
- no coincidence that a) poets were considered to be mad b) poets died
- terribly young (late 20's - early 30's)
- Two years ago, a coven of wiccans in the city had a May Day ritual in
- which they consumed a punch created by their high priest. This punch,
- which he called "Jack in the Green" contained several varieties of
- alcohol with several varieties of herbal narcotics, including wormwood
- and valerian. All those who consumed the punch became very ill. Two
- were taken to hospital when they fell unconscious and could not be
- wakened. All suffered severe stomach cramps and vomited bile for several
- days after. Several suffered hallucinations.
- There are my experiences of this drug. Read them, and do as thou wilt.
- -==- Ennien
-
- --
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
- | Ennein & Robin Ashbrook | |
- | Internet: Galatia.9@Debug.cuc.ab.ca | " To each, their own. " |
- | UUCP: calgary!debug!galatia.9 | |
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: aseem@mit.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.drugs.psychedelic
- Subject: Absinthe experiment
- Date: Mon, 27 Nov 95 06:21:29 GMT
- Message-ID: <49bld4$1f8@senator-bedfellow.MIT.EDU>
-
- Ok, I ordered a fluid ounce of wormwood extract from an ethnobotanical company. The bottle
- was marked with poison symbols, which made me a bit apprehensive. I read
- somewhere that the proper proportions to make the fabled Absinthe was 1 cup of Pernod
- to 1 teaspoon of wormwood. I didn't feel like buying Pernod, so I cracked open the wormwood
- bottle and added a teaspoon to a cup of Absolut vodka. The wormwood was very dark and
- had a very strong odor, kinda minty but with a distinctive edge to it. The oil was very hard
- to wash of the spoon, it stained it green, and the spoon smelled like wormwood for a while.
- This worried me, considering I planned to pour it down my esophagus.
-
- I mixed it vigorously, covered the cup in Saran wrap, and placed it in a refrigerator for two
- days. After the wait, I stirred it up and strained it through a rag, removing a resiny layer
- that had separated from the mixture. The resultant mixture was a cloudy green, it looked
- a little like bong water, and smelled even worse. The white plastic spoon I used to mix it
- was colored green, and wouldn't wash easily. I was getting apprehensive about the stuff,
- and the smell was making me queasy.
-
- I mixed a shot of the mixture with lots of water and sugar. It did not turn opaque white, as I
- read it should. Summing my courage, I started drinking the 16 oz concoction. It had a strong
- taste much like the smell of wormwood, and made my stomach very queasy. Every sip
- I took made me gag and make sour faces. I don't know if my reaction was psychological
- because I was afraid of the stuff, or if I just didn't like the taste, or if the stuff
- really was bad for me and my body was complaining. I put red Kool-Aid crystals in it
- to make it more palatable, but it didn't help. I gave up after a quarter of the cup.
-
- I think I got a buzz off it, there was a drone in my head and I felt like I was on painkillers,
- but I think I need to drink more. I ate alot of food and drank water afterwards, but the horrible
- taste was hard to get out of my mouth, I think it coated my alimentary canal like it did the
- spoon. This thought was not pleasant.
-
- I think I am going to just try and down a shot of the wormwood and vodka without
- diluting it, and hope I don't vomit it out. That will take some courage, though.
-
- Does anyone have any experience with this, did I do anything wrong? Any suggestions
- or dire warnings? If I don't get any negative feedback, I'm just gonna down the shot
- and hope for the best, and then post the results.
-
- I'm open to ideas and suggestions. Wish me luck!
-
- Aseem
-
-
-
-
-