I had a bottle of Arak from Palestine, that a previous boss had imported, and then gifted to me. It’s anise flavored, clear when warm, looks like a snow globe if you refrigerate it, and turns white when poured over ice. So neat, but it tasted like anise :-P
There’s a liquor from south/southeast Asia also called arak but it’s totally different (not anise flavored, made from coconut or palm sap). Wonder if the etymologies are the same.
I love Arak. Every country in that region has its local anise booze, and Israeli Arak is my favorite. I basically make my own by infusing vodka with anise.
That’s basically what I tasted when I drank it - anise and intense alcohol is what I remember. It smelled/felt really strong, but I couldn’t read the label at all so I have no idea what the proof actually was. At least making your own with a base like vodka you get to know that :-P
Absinthe would be closest but this is essentially the anise and then a sweet grape flavor to it. A bit less complexity in ingredients yet it still has quite a lot of depth depending on the bottle.
I had a bottle of Arak from Palestine, that a previous boss had imported, and then gifted to me. It’s anise flavored, clear when warm, looks like a snow globe if you refrigerate it, and turns white when poured over ice. So neat, but it tasted like anise :-P
There’s a liquor from south/southeast Asia also called arak but it’s totally different (not anise flavored, made from coconut or palm sap). Wonder if the etymologies are the same.
https://balipedia.com/bali-arak/
That sounds good, too! Interesting read, thanks!
I love Arak. Every country in that region has its local anise booze, and Israeli Arak is my favorite. I basically make my own by infusing vodka with anise.
That’s basically what I tasted when I drank it - anise and intense alcohol is what I remember. It smelled/felt really strong, but I couldn’t read the label at all so I have no idea what the proof actually was. At least making your own with a base like vodka you get to know that :-P
Sounds similar to absinthe
Absinthe would be closest but this is essentially the anise and then a sweet grape flavor to it. A bit less complexity in ingredients yet it still has quite a lot of depth depending on the bottle.