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The best absinthes for a green drink that will make you paint the town red

Add these absinthe brands to your liquor cabinet

Absinthe with sugar cubes and spoon
Joshua Resnick / Shutterstock

The cocktail revolution has been underway long enough for most people to have tried a Sazerac and realize that absinthe won’t make you hallucinate (if you think you did, try drinking fewer Sazeracs next time). The “green fairy” is more a marketing ploy than a health hazard at this point, but a bottle of absinthe behind the bar still summons images of La Belle Epoque debauchery and pre-Prohibition partying that’ll make you want to grab a flapper and paint the town red. But before you go, make sure you know where to find the good stuff.

Whether you’re mixing Sazeracs at home or hosting your very own Green Hour, here are our favorite authentic bottles of la fée verte.

St George absinthe
St. George

The best absinthe brands to try

St. George Absinthe Verte

St. George Spirits arrived early to the party when the U.S. lifted the ban on absinthe in 2007, bringing the nation its first legal absinthe. This antique-looking bottle is a great addition to any home bar, because, in addition to being delicious and authentic, it comes in a 200ml bottle, making it great for adding to cocktails a spoonful at a time without committing to lugging it between your next four apartments.

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Copper & Kings absinthe
Copper & Kings

Copper & Kings Absinthe Blanche

Copper & Kings Absinthe Blanche is another American addition to the category, doubling down on the spirit’s craft affiliation with a crystal clear version distilled from Muscat grapes that includes both Absinthe’s traditional botanicals and Copper & Kings’ own accents.

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Leopold Brothers Absinthe Verte
Leopold Brothers

Leopold Brothers Absinthe Verte

This green-eyed beauty cleaves to absinthe’s traditional roots, beginning with a base of Chilean pisco, a grape-based spirit to which they add fennel, anise seed, and grande wormwood. The color is so vibrant it may seem artificial, but it’s achieved by infusing the final product with lemon balm and hyssop.

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Pernod Absinthe Superieure
Pernod

Pernod Absinthe Superieure

Pernod is the Belle Époque tipple all absinthes are aiming to replicate. Created in Marseille in 1805, by 1901, France was consuming 36 million liters of absinthe every year, which led to a prohibition of their own. But nobody loves tradition more than the French, and they brought back the original recipe in 2013, so you can party like it’s 1899.

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Absinthe Jade Nouvelle-Orléans
Jade Nouvelle-Orléans

Absinthe Jade Nouvelle-Orléans

Jade Liqueurs is a company dedicated to fastidiously reproducing old-world recipes. This bottle uses hand-crafted stills purchased from Pernod, and its pale green product is peppery and warmly spicy.

Buy at Total Wine

Vieux Pontarlier Absinthe
Vieux Pontarlier

Vieux Pontarlier Absinthe

Tempus Fugit took five years to craft this award-winning absinthe recipe, using traditional absinthe stills in one of the last two remaining absinthe distilleries in Pontarlier, France, and using the facility’s original, pre-ban logbook as a guide. This is what absinthe is meant to taste like.

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La Clandestine Absinthe
La Clandestine

La Clandestine Absinthe

Just like the French and the Americans, the Swiss lifted their century-long absinthe ban in the early 2000s, and Artemisia-Bugnon distilleries began producing this crystal-clear absinthe based on a 1935 recipe. Unlike many traditional absinthes, they recommend enjoying it without sugar.

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Letherbee Charred Oak Absinthe Brun
Letherbee

Letherbee Charred Oak Absinthe Brun

Letherbee’s absinthe stands out because it draws its color from American oak rather than herbs. Its six-month stint in the barrel mellows the flavors and brings a warm, whiskey-like finish to the spirit.

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Golden Moon Redux Absinthe
Golden Moon

Golden Moon Redux Absinthe

The distillers at Colorado’s Golden Moon spent years combing old texts, sourcing rare herbs, and tasting vintage absinthe (somebody’s got to do it) to arrive at the recipe and method for their absinthe, which combines the tested traditions of absinthe history with the best in new craft distilling.

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Doc Herson's Natural Spirits Green Absinthe
Doc Herson's

Doc Herson’s Natural Spirits Green Absinthe

Doc Herson’s Natural Spirits began in a basement in Harlem. They distill all their spirits from scratch, and their absinthe uses 11 different natural botanicals with a hint of mint. For something different, try a bottle of their Red Absinthe, which takes its color from hibiscus.

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Absinthe in glass next to a bottle with a black background
Randy Fath / Unsplash

History of absinthe

Part of absinthe’s mystique is that it was illegal in the States until 2007, largely because of some spurious science that falsely blamed a chemical, thujone, for causing seizures in alcoholics (moral of the story: Don’t let a scientist who blames absinthe for moral decay run your study on absinthe). Before it was legalized, Americans would travel abroad and pay top dollar for any green liquid in a bar, assuming it would get them high, which resulted in a lot of low-quality substitutes and misconceptions about what absinthe was supposed to look and taste like.

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Absinthe is an anise-flavored spirit invented in Switzerland in the early 1800s. It derives its name and flavor from Artemisia absinthium, or grand wormwood (no, wormwood doesn’t make you see things either). The wormwood, fennel, and anise that lend absinthe its licorice flavor often impart a natural green tint, and it’s classified as a spirit, not a liqueur, because it doesn’t contain any added sugar.

Absinthe in a glass
alandiaspirits / Pixabay

How to drink absinthe

Absinthe is bottled at a remarkably high proof — it may not send you on a trip, but it will sneak up on you. There are plenty of ways to drink it, but it’s traditionally served by slowly dripping ice water over a sugar cube suspended over the glass on a fancy-looking spoon. Despite what you’ve seen in the movies, it is neither traditional nor advisable to light the sugar cube on fire. The water dissolves the sugar, and the resulting syrup drips into the glass. Properly made absinthe will “louche” when this happens, becoming translucent in the glass. The fake stuff won’t.

Sazerac cocktail glass
Marler / Wikimedia

Absinthe cocktail: The classic Sazerac recipe

Way back at the beginning of this article, we mentioned the Sazerac, a classic cocktail that is the first experience that most people have with absinthe. It was invented in New Orleans in the mid-1800s, and it is still the official cocktail of New Orleans today. So, did you think we were going to let you go without giving you the recipe for the classic Sazerac cocktail? Of course, we wouldn’t.

(From A Couple Cooks)

Ingredients

  • 3-4 dashes Peychaud’s bitters
  • 1 sugar cube
  • 1 teaspoon absinthe
  • 1 1/2 ounces cognac
  • 1 ounce rye whiskey
  • Lemon twist

Method

  1. Add the sugar cube to a mixing glass and coat it with the bitters.
  2. Muddle the sugar cube with a cocktail muddler or a wooden spoon until it’s mostly dissolved.
  3. Add the rye whiskey, cognac, and absinthe, and fill the mixing glass with ice.
  4. Stir until the mixture is cold and strain into a chilled lowball glass.
  5. Remove about 1 inch of the lemon peel and squeeze into the drink to release the oils.
  6. Run the peel around the rim of the glass and then put it in the glass and serve.
Nate Swanner
Nate is General Manager for all not-Digital-Trends properties at DTMG, including The Manual, Digital Trends en Espanol…
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