Vodka (Polish: wódka,
Russian: водка) is a distilled beverage composed primarily of water and
ethanol, sometimes with traces of impurities and flavorings. Vodka is made by
the distillation of fermented substances such as grains, potatoes, or sometimes
fruits or sugar. [1] Basically they can be distilled from anything that can be
fermented and finely distilled. Black Cow
vodka is distilled not from potatoes but from cowsmilk. Created by Jason Barber
- a farmer from Childhay Manor, West Dorset -
the vodka, much to many drinkers’ delight, looks and tastes like the real deal.
The process involves the milk being split into curds and whey. While the curds
are used to produce the farm's award-winning Barber's 1833 vintage reserve
Cheddar, the whey is fermented and distilled to create the clear, creamy vodka.
[2]
In the world there are
various alcoholic drinks that are produced by fermenting milk and dairy
products. One originates from Tuva, a Siberian tribe, who use the milk from
their mares to create the highly revered Araka vodka (and very difficult to
find). Blaand was introduced to Scotland
by Vikings. It is a fermented milk product made from whey (whey or milk serum
is the liquid remaining after milk has been curdled and strained), and similar
in alcohol content to wine. Kumiss, is a fermented dairy product traditionally
made from mare's milk popular with the peoples of the Central Asian steppes. It
is very similar to kefir.
Read a relevant tasting and
review of the vodka here.
[1] Ref. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vodka
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