Chartreuse -- a color better known these days as "Brat Green" -- gets its name not from a herb or a flower as one might expect, but from an alcoholic beverage. More accurately, chartreuse gets its ...
While it strives for all-local products, The Hangar bar at City Goods on W. 28th Street, uses some Chartreuse to produce traditional and classic cocktails. It will miss the French, green magic.
In my early days of working in a bar, there were certain bottles that I simply never touched. They sat there unloved, unused and unknown, tucked away deep in the back bar of endless bottles, wholly ...
You have to give the people involved with making and selling Chartreuse their props. The consumers of that peculiar, vegetal French liqueur have been wigging out at the news that the monks who make ...
MANY WAYS: Self-described “liquor nerds,” Audrey and Bill Kopp, share several ways to enjoy Chartreuse. Photo by Hannah Ramirez Once one ventures beyond the “base liquors” used to create cocktails — ...
This transcript was prepared by a transcription service. This version may not be in its final form and may be updated. Anthony Bancy: Intrigue swirls around the liquor known as Chartreuse, sometimes ...
While chartreuse is traditionally referred to in the context of the color – it’s a yellowish green that was prevalent between the late 1950s and early ’70s in American interior design ­– it’s also a ...
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The meal is over, the night nearly done. Your host, sensing the need for a digestif, offers up one last drink. “You devil!” you think. There, staring at you, a choice between the herbal liqueurs Green ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio – The worldwide shortage of Chartreuse – an herbal French liqueur used in cocktails like The Last Word – is affecting Northeast Ohio cocktail enthusiasts. The shortage follows an ...