Is Absinth legal in the USA?
The law is cloudy to say the least, but as we understand it, Absinthe is illegal for resale in the USA, but not illegal for personal consumption. So, the way we get round it is to process your transaction in the UK and post the Absinth to you which usually takes about 5 working days. The Sebor Absinth we ship to the USA is the same recipe that we sell in Europe, so it has the maximum wormwood permissible..
http://www.seborabsinth.com/faqs/legal_us.asp
What about the modern absinthes?
Although absinthe continued to be made on a small scale in Spain, its modern revival really has its origins in the collapse of the Iron Curtain, and Czechoslavakia’s 1987 "Velvet Revolution". A Czech entrepreneur, Radomil Hill, having inherited a small family distillery dating from the 1920’s, decided, with the return of a free market economy, to start producing absinthe again as his grandfather had done before him. Sales took off, especially in the UK, where an innovative publicity campaign soon made absinthe a must-have drink in trendy nightclubs and bars. Other manufacturers in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere soon followed suite, and today absinthe is made again not only in Spain, Czechoslovakia and Germany, but also, on a very small scale, in France and Switzerland. Unfortunately almost all modern absinthes, including, disgracefully, the newly released Pernod absinthe, are artificially coloured oil-mixes, of dubious quality. Most Czech and German brands in particular, are a travesty of what true absinthe should be, with almost no traditional herbal and floral character. Genuine absinthe may be obtained from clandestine production in Switzerland, or from Liqueurs de France, whose Un Emile 68%, made by the old firm of Emile Pernot in Pontarlier, up until recently was the only commercially available full-strength distilled absinthe. Since absinthe have become more and more popular, more distilleries have actually taken up absinthe production once again. There are now a better selection of distilled absinthes commercially available, such as the range of the Jade Liqueurs absinthe, the Un Emiles, the Verte and Blanche de Fougerolles 72, Lemerciers Abisinthe, Francois Guy, White Fairy, Kübler and a few others. All produced in France and Switzerland. There is also the Spanish absenta - Segarra, by Julian Segarra, available in both 45% and 68% versions distilled using only wormwood and anise. Un Emile 68%
Conclusion...
Absinthe will not make you crazy. Absinthe is not a drug, no more than any other drink containing alcohol. However, I can agree to the fact that one WANT all the myths to be true, and while sitting there, preparing your absinthe, the mind wonders of to those old days at the parisian cafés.
Sources and references for the information found here, come from; Oxygenees Absinthiana and the book "Absinthe" written by Barnaby Conrad III
http://www.absinthe.se/default.asp?load ... he.se/art/