The
world's strongest beer, dubbed Snake Venom, contains a massive 67.5 per
cent alcohol by volume, costs $85 to buy and should be consumed in tiny
doses, its Scottish makers say.
Snake
Venom is the product of Scottish brewery Brewmeister, which has upped
the ante from its previous record-holding concoction, the 65 per cent
ABV Armageddon (vodka, by comparison, is typically 80 proof, or 40 per
cent alcohol).
The
brewery decided to manufacture an even stronger beer after some
customers complained its first attempt was too weak, Scotland's Daily
Record reported.
Brewers Lewis Shand and John McKenzie said they didn't want Armageddon,
now the world's second- strongest beer, to have an overwhelming taste,
so they made it oily. This time around, they didn't try to disguise the
sharp taste of the alcohol in Snake Venom.
"The
alcohol is very strong but the beer still tastes like a beer rather
than a spirit. It's hoppy, malty and very pleasant," says the
Brewmeister website.
However,
it's so strong the beer comes with a yellow health warning stuck to the
bottle's neck, advising "this beer is strong - do not exceed 35ml in
one sitting". That's good news because a 275ml bottle retails for £50
($85) online, not including shipping. “It should be poured like it's
whisky,”
Shand told the Daily Record.
The
pair brewed Snake Venom with smoked peat malt and two varieties of
yeast, according to Fox News, and reached such high alcoholic content by
freezing the mixture several times during the fermentation process.
To
put things in perspective, vodka, tequila, and whiskey usually clock in
at about 40% ABV — making Snake Venom an exceptionally caustic brew.
As some point out, whether it’s “technically beer” is up for debate, as
the freeze distillation method used pushes it closer to hard alcohol
territory.
Source: Foodbeast
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