Kathy Nichols

The Green Fairy finds a new home in Walker’s Point

By - May 21st, 2010 04:00 am

Club Anything’s new absinthe lounge opens for business tonight.

Elixir will be located in the club’s back room, complete with the appropriate apparatus (absinthe fountain, slotted spoons, glasses) and a server well versed in the history, preparation and correct serving methods for absinthe — both as a ‘drip’ and as a cocktail additive.

Founder and Chief Distiller from Milwaukee’s Great Lakes Distillery (the supplier of Elixir’s featured absinthe varieties, Amerique 1912 verte and Amerique 1912 rouge) Guy Rehorst will be on hand  tonight offering free samples and answering questions about this historically enigmatic beverage.

Absinthe (also known as “la fée verte” or “The Green Fairy,”  a nickname attached to the drink by the French in the 19th century) has been prominently displayed in artwork and literature through the works of masters like Vincent van Gogh, Picasso, Hemingway and Edgar Allen Poe. The spirit (rather than a liqueur, as it is bottled without the addition of sugar) was banned in the U.S. from 1912 to 2007,  based on the belief that it caused “inappropriate behavior,” a claim that has since been disproven.

Thujone, once thought to be absinthe’s active ingredient, received the blame for the erratic behavior that was (reportedly) caused by drinking it. Now regulated in the U.S., drinks containing it must have less than 10 parts per million, which allows them to be designated as thujone-free. According to Rehorst, however, it was recently determined that thujone doesn’t survive the distillation process.

Rumored to inspire creativity and act as an aphrodisiac, it has gathered a worldwide cult following.

The anise-flavored spirit has a high alcohol content (up to 72 percent ABV) and is made by steeping wormwood (an herb related to the daisy family), anise and fennel. A traditional “drip” is made by dripping cold water from a stylized fountain (a strange and beautiful contraption with four spigots that operate at varying speeds) onto sugar, which rests on a slotted spoon into a glass of absinthe, sweetening the somewhat bitter taste. It then turns into a white liquid called “louche” as the essential oils separate.

The bar will feature these drips, made with your choice of 8 varieties of the spirit, ranging in price from $8 to $10. Also offered will be a number of specialty cocktails, including the “French Bulldog” (a concoction including absinthe verte, gin and grapefruit juice),  the colorfully named “Monkey Gland” (which combines gin, orange juice and grenadine), “Death in the Afternoon,” a champagne cocktail reportedly invented and named by Hemingway after one of his books, and plenty of other creatively-named and concocted beverages. A variety of beers and wines are also available.

Starting in a few weeks, the lounge will be open regularly Wednesday through Saturday from 5 p.m. to bar close. For further information, please see Elixir’s website .

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