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- Date: Tue, 2 Mar 93 14:14:57 CST
- From: matthew john baggott <bagg@midway.uchicago.edu>
- To: lamont@hyperreal.com (Lamont Granquist)
- Subject: Absinthe FAQ
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- This FAQ file was prepared by Matthew Baggott (bagg@ellis.uchicago.edu)
- for distribution on the newsgroup alt.drugs. It may be freely reprinted
- and distributed as long as it is properly credited. If you're reprinting
- the file in a zine (e- or otherwise), I'd like to hear about it. Some uses
- of the medline abstracts might be go beyond legal 'fair use' of that
- intellectual property. If I determine this to be a problem, I'll replace
- the abstracts with summaries written by myself. However, people reprinting
- this file may wish to leave out that section of the FAQ if this issue is of
- concern to them. Comments, questions, referenced information, and personally-
- collected anecdotes relating to absinthe and wormwood are welcome. File last
- updated on 3-FEB-93.
-
- The following individuals contributed information or editorial skills to this
- FAQ file: Michael Golden (mgolden@eecs.umich.edu) archived the recipies
- which were posted to rec.food.drink by unknown parties; Laurent Hagimont
- (hagimont@cnam.cnam.fr) and Johnny Svensson (svensson@ISI.edu)
- supplied information about the current availability of absinthe; Johnny
- Svensson also gave information about wormwood's use as a flavoring in
- vodka. Myra Chachkin (cs_myra@gsbvax.uchcicago.edu) provided editorial
- comments on an earlier draft of this FAQ file. These individuals
- deserve much credit for helping to compile obscure data. Nonetheless,
- the perspectives, arguments, and errors of this file are mine alone.
-
- The file contains the following sections: What is absinthe?; What is the
- active component in absinthe?; What plants contain thujone?; How was/is
- absinthe made?; References; Recent references on absinthe/thujone culled
- from medline; and Books on absinthe culled from the University of California
- on-line card catalog. Each of these sections is separated by a partial line
- of minus characters, allowing one to easily page through the document.
-
- ----------
-
- WHAT IS ABSINTHE?
-
- Absinthe is an alcoholic drink made with an extract from wormwood
- (Artemisia absinthium). It is an emerald green drink which is very
- bitter (due to the presence of absinthin) and is therefore traditionally
- poured over a perforated spoonful of sugar into a glass of water. The
- drink then turns into an opaque white as the essential oils
- precipitate out of the alcoholic solution. Absinthe was once popular among
- artists and writers and was used by Van Gogh, Baudelaire, and Verlaine,
- to name a few. It appears to have been believed to stimulate creativity.
- However, in the 1850's, there began to be concern about the results of
- chronic use. Chronic use of absinthe was believed to produce a syndrome,
- called absinthism, which was characterized by addiction, hyperexcitability,
- and hallucinations. This concern over the health effects of absinthe was
- amplified by the prevailing belief in Lamarckian theories of heredity.
- In other words, it was believed that any traits acquired by absinthists
- would be passed on to their children (1). Absinthe's association with
- the bohemian lifestyle also worked to compound fears about its effects,
- much as has happened with marijuana in America. Absinthe was subsequently
- banned in many countries in the beginning of the 1900's.
-
- ----------
-
- WHAT IS THE ACTIVE COMPONENT IN ABSINTHE?
-
- This issue is not entirely resolved. Alcohol is definitely one main
- component. However, another candidate is the monoterpene, thujone, which
- which is considered a convulsant. Thujone's mechanism of
- action is not known, although structural similarities between thujone
- and tetrahydrocannabinol (the active component in marijuana) have led
- some to hypothesize that both substances have the same site of action in
- the brain. Thujone makes up 40 to 90% (by weight) of the essence of
- wormwood, from which absinthe is made (2). Thus, thujone would appear to
- be a good candidate for a second active component in absinthe. Indeed,
- thujone has long been considered to be the neurotoxic cause of
- absinthism.
-
- However, the direct evidence to support this idea is scant. Absinthe
- is 75% alcohol. Therefore, alcohol's effects will limit the amount of
- thujone one can ingest. Quite simply, you can only drink a moderate amount
- of absinthe before you become very drunk from the alcohol. Thujone would
- have to be active at a very low dose or be present in high quantities in
- order to have any appreciable effect. In the "This and That" column
- in _Trends in the Pharmacological Sciences_, "B. Max" made the following
- dose calculations:
-
- How much thujone was present in absinthe? Steam distillation
- of wormwood yields 0.27-0.40% of a bitter, dark-green oil (3)
- In a typical recipe for absinthe, 2.5 kg of wormwood were used
- in preparing 100 liters of absinthe (4). Typically, 1.5 oz was
- consumed (diluted with water) per tipple (5). This is equivalent
- to 4.4 mg wormwood oil per drink, or 2-4 mg thujone. This is
- far below the level at which acute pharmacological effects are
- observed. Even chronic administration of 10 mg/kg thujone to
- rats does not alter spontaneous activity of conditioned
- behavior (6). The literature on the pharmacology of thujone
- is, to put it bluntly, second rate, and conclusions as to its
- effects have been extrapolated far beyond the experimental
- base (7).
-
- Furthermore, the symptoms of absinthism do not appear to be that unlike
- those of alcoholism. Hallucinations, sleeplessness, tremors, paralysis,
- and convulsions can also be noted in cases of alcoholism. This suggests
- that the syndrome "absinthism" mayy well have been caused by alcohol.
- Because absinthe is no longer popular, little research has been done into
- its effects on health. Reports on thujone's/absinthe's toxicity seem
- to rely mostly on case reports from the beginning of the century or
- earlier. Lacking more recent research, it seems most reasonable to take
- reports of absinthe's toxicity with skepticism. Essentially, there is
- little good data to suggest that absinthe's active components were anything
- other than alcohol.
-
- (In fairness, I should mention that several individuals who have taken
- home-made absinthe or who have drunk it where it is legal have claimed
- to me that it produced an intoxication unlike that of alcohol.)
-
- In addition to alcohol and thujone, absinthe sometimes contained
- methanol (wood alcohol), which could have contributed to the symptoms
- of absinthism. Calamus (acorus calamus) and nutmeg (myristica fragrans)
- were also sometimes used in making absinthe. Both plants have reputations
- for being psychedelics, although to my best of knowledge only nutmeg's
- psychedelic properties have been well established. However, it seems
- unlikely that either plant would have been added in the quanitities
- necessary to produce psychoactive effects.
-
- For those of you who want to see the molecule thujone, the following is a
- simple postscript routine which draws the molecule:
-
- %!
- /Times-Roman findfont 18 scalefont setfont
- newpath
- 144 648 moveto
- 30 30 rlineto
- 30 -30 rlineto
- 0 -40 rlineto
- -30 -30 rlineto
- -30 30 rlineto
- 0 40 rlineto
- 30 30 rmoveto
- 0 40 rlineto
- 30 -70 rmoveto
- 30 30 rlineto
- -4 4 rmoveto
- -30 -30 rlineto
- 4 -4 rmoveto
- -30 -70 rmoveto
- 0 -40 rlineto
- -30 -30 rlineto
- 60 0 rmoveto
- -30 30 rlineto
- 0 40 rmoveto
- -30 70 rlineto
- -8 -170 rmoveto
- 4 setlinewidth
- (THUJONE)
- show
- 15 204 rmoveto
- (O)
- show
- stroke showpage
-
- ----------
-
- WHAT MODERN ALCOHOLIC DRINKS ARE THERE WHICH ARE RELATED TO ABSINTHE?
-
- Pernod is basically absinthe without the wormwood. It is named after
- Henri-Louis Pernod, an individual who ran an absinthe factory in France in
- the early 1800s. As a substitute for wormwood, the modern drink Pernod
- uses increased amounts of aniseed. Ricard is the name of another
- modern wormwood-less absinthe.
-
- Also, vermouth, chartreuse, and benedictine all contain small amounts
- of thujone. In fact, vermouth, which is made using the flower heads
- from wormwood, takes its name from the german "wermuth" ("wormwood").
-
- Absinthe (made with wormwood) is still available in Spain and reportedly
- in Denmark and Portugal as well.
-
- Wormwood is popular as a flavoring for vodka in Sweden.
-
- It is also possible to buy oil of wormwood (produced by steam distillation)
- from companies that sell essential oils. One such company is The Essential
- Oil Co., PO Box 206, Lake Oswego, OR, 97034. 503-697-5992; FAX 503-697-0615;
- Orders 1-800-729-5912. Catalog is free, but there is a $50 minimum order
- (orders under $50 are accepted but charged an additional $5 service charge).
- The company also sells other oils of interest to readers of this newsgroup.
- Caution should be exercised with these oils since they can contain
- significant amounts of pharmacologically active and/or toxic elements.
-
- ----------
-
- WHAT PLANTS CONTAIN THUJONE?
-
- According to W. N. Arnold's _Scientific American_ article:
-
- Thujone occurs in a variety of plants, including tansy (Tanace-
- tum vulgare) and sage (salvia officinalis), as well as in all
- the trees of the arborvitae group, of which the thuja (Thuja
- occidentalis), or white cedar, is one. It is also characteristic
- of most species of Artemisia, a genus within the Compositae,
- or daisy, family. Wormwood (Artemisia absinthium) and Roman
- wormwood (Artemisia pontica) were the main sources of the thujone
- in absinthe (4).
-
- ----------
-
- HOW WAS/IS ABSINTHE MADE?
-
- _Simon and Schulter's Guide to Herbs and Spices_ tells us that Henri-Louis
- Pernod used aniseed, fennel, hyssop, and lemonbalm along with lesser
- amounts of angelica, star anise, dittany, juniper, nutmeg, and veronica.
- These ingredients were mascerated together with wormwood plants. After
- leaving the mixture to sit, water was added and the mixture was
- distilled. Dried herbs, including more wormwood, were added to the
- distillate, which was then diluted with alcohol to give a concentration
- of about 75% alcohol by volume (8). Different absinthe manufacturers
- used slightly different ingredients, sometimes using calamus, which
- has been purported to have psychoactive effects.
-
- In addition to these ingredients, manufacturers sometimes added other
- ingredients to produce the drink's emerald green color. Normally, this color
- was due to the presence of chlorophyll from the plants. However, in
- the event that the product was not properly colored, absinthe makers were
- known to add things like copper sulfate, indigo, turmeric, and aniline
- green. Antimony chloride was also used to help the drink become cloudy when
- added to water. Presumably modern makers of Pernod and absinthe use safer
- ingredients for their concoctions!
-
- Here are some recipes for "absinthe" which were originally posted to
- rec.food.drink. Absinthe is placed in quotes since only the last
- recipe here will produce something resembling the traditional drink.
- I have not personally tried these recipes and do not claim that they are safe
- or even tasty.
-
- ** 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 and 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".
-
- ** Absinthe #3 **
-
- >From Arnold's article in _Scientific American_:
-
- An 1855 recipe from Pontarlier, France, gives the following
- instructions for making absinthe: Macerate 2.5 kilograms of dried
- wormwood, 5 kilograms of anise and 5 kilograms of fennel in 95
- liters of 85 percent ethanol by volume. Let the mixture steep for
- at least 12 hours in the pot of a double boiler. Add 45 liters of
- water and apply heat; collect 95 liters of distillate. To 40 liters
- of the distillate, add 1 kilogram of Roman wormwood, 1 kilogram of
- hyssop and 500 grams of lemon balm, all of which have been dried
- and finely divided. Extract at a moderate temperature, then siphon
- off the liquor, filter, and reunite it with the remaining 55 liters
- of distillate. Dilute with water to produce approximately 100
- liters of absinthe with a final alcohol concentration of 74 percent
- by volume (4).
-
- ----------
-
- REFERENCES:
-
- (1) Murphy, R. B. and Schneider, L. H. (1992) _Soc. Neurosci. Abstr._, Vol.
- 18, Part 1, p. 180.
- (2) Simonsen, J. L. (1949) _The Terpenes_ Vol. 2, Univ. Press.
- (3) Guenther, E. (1952) _The Essential Oils_ Vol. 5, Van Nostrand.
- (4) Arnold, W. M. (1989) _Scientific American_ 260 (June), 112-117.
- (5) Vogt, D. D. and Montagne, M. (1982) _Int. J. Addict_ 17, 1015-
- 1029.
- (6) Pinto-Scognamiglio, W. (1968) _Boll. Chim. Farm._ 107, 780-791.
- (7) Max, B. (1990) _TiPS_ 11 (Feb), 58-60.
- (8) Simonetti, Gualtiero (1990) _Simon and Schuster's Guide to Herbs
- and Spices_, Simon and Schuster.
-
- ----------
-
- RECENT ARTICLES ON ABSINTHE AND THUJONE CULLED FROM MEDLINE:
-
- 1. Bonard EC.
- [Absinthe and malaria].
- Revue Medicale de la Suisse Romande, 1992 Oct, 112(10):907-8
- Language: French.
- (UI: 93067843)
-
- 2. Bonkovsky HL; Cable EE; Cable JW; Donohue SE; White EC; Greene YJ; Lambrecht
- RW; Srivastava KK; Arnold WN.
- Porphyrogenic properties of the terpenes camphor, pinene, and thujone
- (with a note on historic implications for absinthe and the illness of
- Vincent van Gogh).
- Biochemical Pharmacology, 1992 Jun 9, 43(11):2359-68.
- (UI: 92304361)
- Pub type: Historical Article; Historical Biography; Journal Article.
-
- Abstract: Camphor, alpha-pinene (the major component of turpentine), and
- thujone (a constituent in the liqueur called absinthe) produced an increase
- in porphyrin production in primary cultures of chick embryo liver cells. In
- the presence of desferrioxamine (an iron chelator which inhibits heme
- synthesis and thereby mimics the effect of the block associated with acute
- porphyria), the terpenes enhanced porphyrin accumulation 5- to 20-fold.
- They also induced synthesis of the rate-controlling enzyme for the pathway,
- 5-aminolevulinic acid synthase, which was monitored both
- spectrophotometrically and immunochemically. These effects are shared by
- well-known porphyrogenic chemicals such as phenobarbital and glutethimide.
- Camphor and glutethimide alone led to the accumulation of mostly uro- and
- heptacarboxylporphyrins, whereas alpha-pinene and thujone resulted in
- lesser accumulations of porphyrins which were predominantly copro- and
- protoporphyrins. In the presence of desferrioxamine, plus any of the three
- erpenes, the major product that accumulated was protoporphyrin. The
- present results indicate that the terpenes tested are porphyrogenic and
- hazardous to patients with underlying defects in hepatic heme synthesis.
- There are also implications for the illness of Vincent van Gogh and the
- once popular, but now banned liqueur, called absinthe.
-
- 3. Arnold WN; Loftus LS.
- Xanthopsia and van Gogh's yellow palette.
- Eye, 1991, 5 ( Pt 5):503-10.
- (UI: 92175120)
- Pub type: Historical Article; Historical Biography; Journal Article.
-
- Abstract: A survey of van Gogh's work from 1886 to 1890 indicated that
- paintings with a yellow dominance were numerous, episodic, and
- multi-regional. His underlying illness, by his own admission, affected his
- life and work; furthermore, episodes of malnutrition, substance abuse,
- environmental exposure, and drug experimentation (all evident from
- correspondence) exacerbated his condition. Accordingly, we reviewed
- plausible agents that might have modified the artist's colour perception.
- Xanthopsia due to overdosage of digitalis or santonin is well documented
- elsewhere, but evidence of useage of either drug by van Gogh cannot be
- substantiated. It is unlikely that ageing of the human lens was an
- influence because of the artist's youth. Sunstroke is too restrictive to
- fit the multiplicity of regions and motifs. Hallucinations induced by
- absinthe, the popular liqueur of the period, may explain particular
- canvases but not the majority of 'high yellow' paintings. Van Gogh's
- proclivity for exaggerated colours and his embrance of yellow in particular
- are clear from his letters and, in contradistinction to chemical or
- physical insults modifying perception, artistic preference is the best
- working hypothesis to explain the yellow dominance in his palette.
-
- 4. Arnold WN.
- Absinthe.
- Scientific American, 1989 Jun, 260(6):112-7.
- (UI: 89266842)
- Pub type: Historical Article; Journal Article.
-
- Comment: As one would expect from _Sci Am_, this is a good general
- article written by someone who has obviously written extensively on
- the subject. However, IMHO the author is insufficiently critical of
- of his historical sources.
-
-
- 5. Arnold WN.
- Vincent van Gogh and the thujone connection.
- Jama, 1988 Nov 25, 260(20):3042-4.
- (UI: 89037535)
- Pub type: Historical Article; Historical Biography; Journal Article.
-
- Abstract: During his last two years Vincent van Gogh experienced fits with
- hallucinations that have been attributed to a congenital psychosis. But the
- artist admitted to episodes of heavy drinking that were amply confirmed by
- colleagues and there is good evidence to indicate that addiction to
- absinthe exacerbated his illness. Absinthe was distilled from an alcoholic
- steep of herbs. Wormwood (Artemisia absinthium) was the most significant
- constituent because it contributed thujone. This terpene can cause
- excitation, convulsions that mimic epilepsy, and even permanent brain
- damage. Statements in van Gogh's letters and from his friends indicate that
- he had an affinity for substances with a chemical connection to thujone;
- the documented examples are camphor and pinene. Perhaps he developed an
- abnormal craving for terpenes, a sort of pica, that would explain his
- attempts to eat paints and so on, which were previously regarded as
- unrelated absurdities.
-
- 6. Ishida T; Toyota M; Asakawa Y.
- Terpenoid biotransformation in mammals. V. Metabolism of (+)-citronellal,
- (+-)-7-hydroxycitronellal, citral, (-)-perillaldehyde, (-)-myrtenal,
- cuminaldehyde, thujone, and (+-)-carvone in rabbits.
- Xenobiotica, 1989 Aug, 19(8):843-55.
- (UI: 90051443)
-
- ----------
-
- BOOKS ON ABSINTHE CULLED FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA ON-LINE CARD
- CATALOG:
-
- 1. Conrad, Barnaby, 1953-
- Absinthe : history in a bottle / Barnaby Conrad III. San Francisco :
- Chronicle Books, c1988.
-
- 2. Delahaye, Marie-Claude.
- L'absinthe : histoire de la fee verte / Marie-Claude Delahaye. Paris :
- Berger-Levrault, c1983.
- Series title: Arts et traditions populaires.
-
- 3. Sangle-Ferriere.
- Nouvelle methode d'analyse des absinthes, par MM. Sangle-Ferriere ... &
- L.
- Cuniasse ... Paris, Vve C. Dunod, 1902.
-
-