Final Word from Tuesday, September 18, 2012
With a ban on hard liquor above 20% now in force, it's time for
Czech ingenuity to take over. Nowhere in the world, as far as we
can tell, has such an arbitrary cap been put on the allowed
alcohol content. A new product category at 19.99% is now ripe
for the picking. There was already a tendency in the country for
alcohol levels to decline as a way to save on the excise tax and
to reduce the retail price, but 19.99% is much too low for a
decent vodka or Czech rum (which are usually 40% and 37.5%,
respectively). Instead, it's up to clever spirits makers to produce
and promote a 19.99% slivovice or vodka that Czechs can fortify
at home through freeze distillation. You stick the booze in the
freezer in an appropriate vessel, bring it to the freezing point of
water, and then add an ice cube or two to capture water crystals.
What is left behind is then more potent than the original product.
Marketed properly, it could perhaps be more popular than the
current rage, flavored beer. Of course a catchy name would be
needed. How about Kalouskovice?[Czech Republic prohibition Miroslav Kalousek]
Glossary of difficult words
ripe for the picking - ready to be exploited;
to fortify - to strengthen the alcohol content of a drink (usually by adding higher-content alcohol to it);
potent - having greater power, influence or effect;
the rage - a widespread temporary fashion;
catchy - instantly appealing and memorable;
Kalouskovice - derived grammatically in the same way as "slivovice" but from "Kalousek."