When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: sangster's original liqueur bottle with 5 glass

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sangster's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangster's

    Sangster's liqueur can be compared to Baileys Irish Cream, Kahlúa coffee liqueur and Carolans Irish Cream Liqueur. During the 2003 San Francisco World Spirits Competition, a comprehensive international spirits competition, Sangster's won a gold medal against these liqueurs. [2] [3] The liqueur has an alcohol content at 15% alcohol by volume.

  3. Alexandre Le Grand (merchant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandre_Le_Grand_(merchant)

    The legend of Bénédictine in stained glass, at the Palais Bénédictine.. The modern history of Bénédictine liqueur begins in 1863 when Alexandre Legrand – an industrialist, a merchant in wine and spirits, and also an art collector – discovered in his family library a 16th-century grimoire belonging to the Benedictine abbey of Fécamp.

  4. Vintage spirits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vintage_spirits

    A government health warning means the bottle can't have been produced before the late 1980s. Measurements in milliliters were adopted after 1979. [10] Until the 2010s, it was not uncommon for collectors of vintage spirits to find bottles in liquor stores that had gone unsold for decades and buy them at their original sticker price.

  5. Costco Liquor Prices: Which Kirkland Brand Alcohol Is Worth It?

    www.aol.com/best-costco-brand-liquors-buy...

    Many a liquor connoisseur has compared it to the high-end Grey Goose — in part because it's made in the same distillery — but get this: It outranks the higher-end brand in most face-offs.

  6. Pony glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pony_glass

    A pony glass may mean one of two types of small glassware: A quarter-pint glass of beer: 5 imp fl oz (142 ml), metricated to 140 ml in Australia. A small, stemmed glass of about one ounce, [1] similar to a stemmed shot glass. Used for liqueurs or cordials, [2] hence also called a "cordial glass" or "liqueur glass".

  7. South Carolina Dispensary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Carolina_Dispensary

    Liquor bottled by the state dispensary was the only liquor to be sold legally in South Carolina. From 1893 to 1900 the bottles used by the dispensary had an embossed design featuring a palmetto tree with crossed logs under the base of the trunk, and from 1900 to 1907 an overlaying and intertwining S, C and D "script" design replaced the tree ...