*please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 WARNING.
  • wormwood
  • anise
  • herbs
  • sugar
  • botanicals
  • juniper
  • caramel
  • spicy
  • mint

Two Birds

Absinthe (0.7l, 70%*) *please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary

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Character Goatson
 
*please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 WARNING.
Flavor Spiral TM
About the Flavor Spiral
What does Two Birds Absinthe taste like?

The Flavor Spiral™ shows the most common flavors that you'll taste in Two Birds Absinthe and gives you a chance to have a taste of it before actually tasting it.

We invented Flavor Spiral™ here at Flaviar to get all your senses involved in tasting drinks and, frankly, because we think that classic tasting notes are boring.

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  • wormwood
  • anise
  • herbs
  • sugar
  • botanicals
  • juniper
  • caramel
  • spicy
  • mint
Dog Dogson's Smartass corner
Character Dogson
Ready for some weird science? When you add a few drops of water to clear green Absinthe, it turns milky white. Scientists call it the "ouzo effect," whic happens when the unique characteristics of anethole (the essential oil responsible for anise flavor), high-proof ethanol and water are mixed.
It typically takes less than four hours to produce a batch of Two Birds Gin at Union Distillers, all under the watchful eye of the co-founder.
The nickname, "The Green Fairy," is the English translation of La Fee Verte, the affectionate French nickname given to the popular drink in the 19th century. Though Absinthe is not a hallucinogen, the Green Fairy was representative of the metaphorical concept of the artistic enlightenment and exploration, of poetic inspiration, of a freer state of mind, of new ideas, of a changing social order.
Absinthe was actually invented by a French doctor named Pierre Ordinaire. He invented absinthe by distilling wormwood and several other herbs into an alcoholic base. Although this may seem strange in today's modern world of medicine, at the time it was considered a viable remedy for patients with various ailments.
Similar drinks
Dog Dogson's Smartass corner
Character Dogson
Ready for some weird science? When you add a few drops of water to clear green Absinthe, it turns milky white. Scientists call it the "ouzo effect," whic happens when the unique characteristics of anethole (the essential oil responsible for anise flavor), high-proof ethanol and water are mixed.
It typically takes less than four hours to produce a batch of Two Birds Gin at Union Distillers, all under the watchful eye of the co-founder.
The nickname, "The Green Fairy," is the English translation of La Fee Verte, the affectionate French nickname given to the popular drink in the 19th century. Though Absinthe is not a hallucinogen, the Green Fairy was representative of the metaphorical concept of the artistic enlightenment and exploration, of poetic inspiration, of a freer state of mind, of new ideas, of a changing social order.
Absinthe was actually invented by a French doctor named Pierre Ordinaire. He invented absinthe by distilling wormwood and several other herbs into an alcoholic base. Although this may seem strange in today's modern world of medicine, at the time it was considered a viable remedy for patients with various ailments.
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