Full Review

Krooked Tusker Distillery

Krooked Tusker Distillery
The Lost Boys Black Garlic Flavored Vodka

Category: Flavored Vodka

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 40%
88 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$38

Krooked Tusker Distillery
The Lost Boys Black Garlic Flavored Vodka

Category: Flavored Vodka

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 40%
Golden amber color. Aromas and flavors of Zapp’s voodoo chips, sweet and savory Creole bbq sauce, chili, garlic, black pepper, vinegar potato chip, and pretzel with a velvety, vibrant, dry medium body and a tingling, interesting, medium-to-long finish manifesting accents of bbq pretzel bits, voodoo chips, and sweet and savory. A fun way to kick your Bloody Mary up a notch.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: Zapp's voodoo chips, sweet and savory Creole bbq sauce, chili, garlic, black pepper, vinegar potato chip, and pretzel
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with accents of bbq pretzel bits, voodoo chips, and sweet and savory
Smoothness Smoothness: Tingling
Enjoy Enjoy: in cocktails
Cocktail Cocktails: Vodka Soda, Collins, Vodka Tonic
Bottom Line Bottom Line: A fun way to kick your Bloody Mary up a notch.

The Producer

Krooked Tusker Distillery

The Producer
10303 Country Route 76
Hammondsport, NY 14840
USA
1 -607-868-3006

Flavored Vodka

Spirits Glass Shot Clear.jpg
Serve in a Shot Glass
Since Vodka tends to be a neutral spirit, it lends itself to blending with flavors and fortifying other beverages. In the 19th century, high-proof "Russian spirit" was held in high esteem by Sherry producers in Spain, who imported it to fortify their wines.

Neutral spirits are still used to fortify Port, Sherry, and other types of fortified wines, although the source of alcohol for such purposes these days tends to be the vast "wine lake" that has been created by European Union agricultural practices.

Flavored Vodkas have been produced from the start, originally to mask the flavor of the first primitive Vodkas, but later as a mark of the distiller's skill. The Russians and Poles in particular still market dozens of flavors.