Last year we had a second new moon in August also known as a Fairy Moon.Isotopia wrote:But, there isn't going to be a full moon during the event this year.
Full moons are for werewolves.
I also became interested in Absinthe after a few Absinthe oriented themecamps at burning man offering Macerations. I've started at the website above in my journey. These are very interesting decotions that will give you a lesson in wormwood's bitterness while curing malaria. Bitterness can be a good enlighting experience, and I've enjoyed these tinctures. But later all the absinthe snobs here will tell you to spend a ton on commerically distilled absinthe.Elorrum wrote:here's a do it yourself absinthe page...
http://www.deadflesh.org/fear/absinthe.html
You are partially correct. thujones are a group of compounds, not a compound itself, thus the toxicity would vary. Also, "Extremely high doses of thujone are dangerous, and have been shown toThujone is a documented deadly poison. As a chemist you would know that. Yet you seem to be advocating "adding as much as possible". Can I assume that you buy the extract and drink it straight? Thus relieving us of any worries that you might attend BM?
*swoon*FATCAMP wrote:I am a second year distiller who specializes in absinthe...I use only my home grown herbs and my own unique blend for my grain alcohol (6row and black patent)...if you need any consulting let me know...for distilling, homebrewing, mead, cider, wine making then i dabble in other zymurgy (sake, ...I plan on having 5 gallons of absinthe, 3gallons of my orange sunshine..(moonshine flavored with sweet orange peel and crazy sweet stevia)...16 gallons of 9month mead, 10 gallons of cucumber pils with a hint of black pepper, 10 gal mango wheat, 10 gallons of something I haven't thought of yet...maybe another baltic double chocolate mocha porter...or a white chocolate brown ale...5 gallons of a cider...then over summer i'm working on collecting, cleaning, sanitizing, and decorating can necklaces similar to what they passed out at canfest this year in reno but with more fur to use as cups...
The trick to making superior absinthe is to use fresh herbs and collect only the hearts...start with a strong base alchy soak herbs for a week run through the still again...use coloring herbs for a day
absinthe advice: have fun with it...traditional isn't only the best...I use brewing hops for more zest or lavender for aroma...basically as long as you have the trinity fennel, wormwood, and anise you are fine so why not capture the terrior of where you live and share where you are from...all of the other countries deviated from the mean enough to be distinct why not the different regions of America?
Also if you need help with still design let me know...
recommended brands: duplias jade cladestine
if any of the other homebrewers/hg distillers want to have a friendly contest one of the afternoons aka an excuse to share ideas and philosophy while getting shit housed...let me know





Pernod is available here for around $80 US. Probably the most prominent in any liquor store in the states is something called "Absinte" which is not the real deal,,,, maceration at best,,,, flavored ethanol at worst. I bought some to share with family one Thanksgiving,,,, very sweet,,,, almost syrup. It's okay if you don't try to convince yourself it is absinthe.Freesponge wrote:Hi guys, I'm coming down from Canada And I was wondering what brands of absinthe are generally available at liquor stores since customs might confiscate my bottles.
I'm looking for french absinthe because I tried Czech (Vodka+wormwood+artificial flavors) "Absinthe" and it tasted awful despite having a lower alcohol content. Here we have a Brand called Pernod and it keeps pretty close to the max Thujone limit, its 68% alcohol or ~140 proof, anything comparable state side?
Don't know about canadian law, but Absinthe was just recently, legalized in the U.S.Freesponge wrote:Trishntek wrote:
Pernod is available here for around $80 US. Probably the most prominent in any liquor store in the states is something called "Absinte" which is not the real deal,,,, maceration at best,,,, flavored ethanol at worst. I bought some to share with family one Thanksgiving,,,, very sweet,,,, almost syrup. It's okay if you don't try to convince yourself it is absinthe.
We've never had a problem taking booze through customs.
Whaaat? This is the first time EVER that I have heard of Booze in the US costing more than up here. A bottle of Pernod goes for $50-60 here and there are shit tons of taxes on top of that as well. I guess i'll be bringing my own Absinthe down in that case. At least beer is cheaper.
Absinte is just a different spelling, usually its the czech style which is basically some random grain alcohol with little more than wormwood and green food colouring. The 'Absints' or absinthe knock offs usually go for 40-50/bottle but have a lower alcohol rating than the Pernod.
I don't drink absinthe straight or traditionally though. Typically I mix it with sugar, water, ice and lemon juice.
what a way to die thoughFreesponge wrote:Absinthe has never been illegal up here. Absinthe was legalized in 07 stateside and Thujone content is limited to 10 ppm or 10mg/kg. Pernod Is borderline legal. Wormwood is a flavoring and Thujone is toxic.
Before you could get any hallucinogenic properties from Thujone you would die from toxicity. Its kind of like getting high off of Hemp, except you can actually die from Thujone.
That has indeed been scientifically proven and was the primary reason for the ban being lifted.FATCAMP wrote:you would die of alcohol before hallucinating...unless you use morning glory and turbina as secret ingredients...
Eichelberger "Brute" is an 80% bitter from Germany that absolutely needs sugar.TomServo wrote:Thats why Id like to see European absinth...from what Ive read, American absinthe is missing a key ingrediant...Im guessing worm wood. I like fire, so the flaming ritual is a must. Supposedly, according to youtube, the Germans make an absinthe especially for the fire ritual.

