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For years I've used Angostura bitters and always have watched the paper wrapping slowly become colored by the bitters splashing when they are dispensed, no matter how carefully you are. Usually a flying droplet will shoot past the vessel you're aiming at before any goes into it, and when you're done
there's a new schmear on the outside of the glass and, inevitably, dripping down from the ostensible 'pouring nozzle' onto the paper wrapping. I've wondered at this because there are ancient solutions to dispensing a dash, neatly and efficiently, the same volume every time. My Victorian sister-in-law uses a Waterford dasher to add her concoction of flavors to seltzer water. No drip, no splash.
It will be 200 years next year since this stuff was invented, so why does the Angostura bottle still fail as a dispenser and why does it require a jacket? (See link on the jacket, no one knows why the spout is so bad. )There must be some reason or strategy. I think it is a marketing ploy, a reverse psychology sales tactic. Make the product messy, inexact and difficult to use, in a package that fouls itself and looks unsightly, and permanently stains your clothing and temporarily stains your skin. Then make it an absolute necessity in the consumption of liquor. What a winner this will be! Behind every bar and in every kitchen, but why? WHY?
If we knew the secret of The Angostura Ploy we could be gods.
Angostura History
https://cocktail-so...-angostura-bitters/ Some wherefors [minoradjustments, Sep 07 2023]
Saki
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saki != sake [pertinax, Sep 08 2023, last modified Sep 10 2023]
[link]
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It's a clear rant, not an idea or invention... but a pain I share. |
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I always thought the extended paper wrap was thoughtfully provided to keep this stuff from staining anything but its own bottle. But no! The iconic oversize label was a mistake and they are stuck with it. Or they chose to be stuck with it. Either way, they have chanced upon a sure-fire winner for almost 200 years. So do a search for 'bitters' and stand back. Among thousands of options the messiest one wins. Now they're advertising bitters that aren't bitter. Go figure. |
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You seem a little bitter about it. |
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A problem that's not a problem, esp when you only drink Bushmills, Jameson, Galway Hooker, Absinthe and Saki (not in the one glass) |
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I feel like this issue is playing ketchup. |
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//Bushmills, Jameson, Galway Hooker, Absinthe and Saki// |
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If you're going to mix your drinks, I suppose you could do worse than to mix them with H H Munro. |
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The former bartender says that stuff is nothing but crap. Stinks, Tastes awful and should never have been let out of the lab. |
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My cousin loves his Old Fashioneds, made with Jack Daniel's, maple syrup, orange slice, some other mulling thing of his, and Angostura bitters. I've sent him bitters made with everything in life but he told me not to send him any more exotic herbal things. He's stuck on Angostura.
Isn't Jaegermeister a bitter, really? Underberg hangover stuff kind of works. Tastes bad enough that you forget the head. I use Angostura in a glass of plain Coke or iced tea, soups, marinades, omelettes, stir-fries, etc. It's great stuff. Hate the packaging. |
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Jaeger, a bitter? Anise is a sweetener isn't it? |
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[21 Quest] Yeah, it's a rant. It's a hard thing when you realize you rant better than invent. |
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I tasted Jaeger once. Not for me. That's when I decided it was a bitter. Checking the ingredients I don't know what the hell it is. Germans call it a digestive. |
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I'm sorry.if I was impolite. I didn't realise anyone actually liked that stuff. |
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Do you know how many times I've clicked on this idea not remembering what the hell Angostura is? |
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...well me neither but, like a lot of times. |
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I love old fashioneds, with Bourbon or rye. Angostura bitters are an absolute MUST HAVE ingredient. You muddle it with a sugar cube and a few drops of distilled water in the bottom of the glass before adding the ice and pouring the whiskey. Then you stir it all together, and if you want a game changing twist... use a cocktail smoker with pecan wood chips. |
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