For as long as cocktail bars have been slinging drinks, Chartreuse has graced menus and back bars. The liqueur — coming in both yellow and green hues — is based on a secret recipe which, since 1605, ...
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.
It's time to give this herbal liqueur the respect it deserves. “There is a purposeful shortage of Chartreuse based on the monks not wanting to support alcoholism,” Pruitt tells me, though it’s worth ...
Green Key, a Chartreuse-inspired spirit made with more than 72 botanicals Credit: Jeremy Yap/courtesy Wilderness Club A t the height of lockdown, one curious trend emerged that has outlived everyone’s ...
Just as the herbal liqueur is becoming more popular, the French order that has produced it for more than two centuries is pulling back to focus on faith. According to lore, the formula for Chartreuse ...
Chartreuse, a centuries-old liqueur, is made by the Carthusian order of monks in the French Alps. In 2019, the monks capped production to lower their environmental impact and focus on prayer. Now, ...
You can still make Chartreuse-based cocktails using other Alpine herbal liqueurs. “Ready?” says the bartender at No Goodbyes, a bar in D.C., jiggling a bottle of green liquid. My friend and I are ...
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