So here we go – my first post using the new WordPress blog. If any of this gets weirdly formatted, blame WP, as I’m trying to do it in “Visual” mode and I’m not seeing a hell of a lot of difference between this mode and “Code” mode. (As an aside, I’m using Firefox 2.0.0.15, so if anyone has any advice for a WYSIWYG visual editor, it’d save me the time of remembering to HTML tag everything.)
A couple of interesting things for me this week. I went out both Monday and Tuesday nights with my old friend Roy. Monday night we went to Ireland’s Four Courts, an Irish bar in the Courthouse area of Arlington, and the bartender knew him from a while ago. We had fun and at one point she bought us each a whiskey (Jameson’s for me, Powers for him). That’s always cool.
Tuesday night we went to Velocity Five, a sports bar/restaurant near him that he’s been wanting to try. I stuck with Pilsner Urquell that night but at the end of our run there the bartender offered to buy us a shooter. We ended up with SoCo (Southern Comfort, if anyone is actually unfamiliar with it) and lime.
If you haven’t had that shooter before it’s one of those odd ones, in my opinion. It seems like (and really is) a very college drink. However, it’s surprisingly refreshing and not a drink to back down from. I’ve done shots of it in a number of different bars – all of which use Rose’s Lime, I believe, and not regular lime juice – and I’m very tempted to buy a bottle of Southern Comfort and experiment with it.
That’d be a huge step for me. My first year in college was not kind to me in regards to Southern Comfort, especially living with a first year roommate like Roy who enjoyed his Southern Comfort mixed with Diet Dr. Pepper.
Enough about SoCo. Now on to exploding bottles and this is something about which I really want the advice of those y’all in the blogging world out there. Maybe not necessarily advice but feedback…
A while ago I picked up a few extra bottles of Creole Shrubb. I gave one of them to a kickball teammate who is a huge fan of Grand Marnier. He said he would pay me back by giving me a bottle of homemade limoncello. I tried it at a Memorial Day cookout – it was very good, made with Everclear and vodka as the alcoholic ingredients and tons and tons of lemon and (I believe) sugar.
On Saturday he gave me the last bottle of limoncello from his current batch kept in a ceramic stoppered bottle from World Market. He had it on ice when he gave it to me – I put it in the cooler with the rest of the ice. After the cookout was over I put it in the freezer of my fridge at home, and after a day or so in there I moved it into smaller fridge I keep in my room for bar supplies.
Wednesday night I’m sitting in my room reading right before bed and my cats are running around. I hear what sounds like them knocking something over – but I don’t see them, and I don’t see anything fall, so I forget about it and go back to sleep.
Thursday morning I get up and go to get a Coke Zero out of the fridge. The bottle had broken in half and a large part of the fridge was covered in limoncello.
Let me tell you what, that stuff is hard to clean.
But what could’ve caused the bottle to break?
There was no impact against the fridge that I saw or noticed.
A materials science degree friend suggested thermal shock, but there are no warm spots or heat sources that I could find on that part of the fridge, nor was it in a drastically different temperature place as long as I had it. I had not opened it yet.
The only thing I can think of is that the glass simply was weak and doomed to fail. Unless the fact that it was the last of the batch, and unopened, and some secondary process amongst the booze, lemon, and sugar caused a pressure build-up…
But I don’t know.
Any ideas out there?
I’ve made a LOT of limoncello in my time, and I’ve never had a bottle break due to any pressures from within. Actually I’ve never broken a bottle yet. Perhaps the bottle was not sitting flat and a small jostle by the cats was all it took to push it over? The other possibility is that some nasty bacteria was in the bottle, maybe feeding on the sugar, and eventually popped the bottle. In which case you’re probably lucky you didn’t drink it. I think the first explanation is more likely though.
I just looked over the bottles in SeanMike’s bar, and I am horrified that the only tequila you have is a rotgut Jose Cuervo. You should be shot.
If you have only one tequila in the world, it should be Sauza Hornitos. There are many other true agave tequilas to choose in this world. Get out there and do it!
Well, it’s not regular Cuervo, it’s the Tradicional, which isn’t QUITE as bad…:-)
I haven’t stocked up on tequilas yet because I never get around to drinking them. My next bottle will probably be Cazadores, though I do have some minis of Patron that’s probably a bit too expensive. I’ve had the Sauza Hornitos before.
I wonder if Bill still has his “price vs. quality” tequila list.