List of liqueurs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A selection of liqueurs

Liqueurs are alcoholic beverages that are bottled with added sugar and have added flavors that are usually derived from fruits, herbs, or nuts. Liqueurs are distinct from eaux-de-vie, fruit brandy, and flavored liquors, which contain no added sugar. Most liqueurs range between 15% and 55% alcohol by volume.

Berry liqueurs[]

  • 99 Berries
  • Chambord (raspberry)
  • Crème de cassis (blackcurrant)
  • Guavaberry
  • Hideous (raspberries, other berries and citrus fruits)
  • Lakka (cloudberry)
  • Lillehammer (lingonberry)
  • Mirto (Sardinian traditional bitterish liqueur made with myrtle, used as digestive drink at the end of meals)
  • Murtado (ugniberry)
  • XUXU (strawberry)
  • (stone bramble)

Chocolate liqueurs[]

Coffee liqueurs[]

Bottles of Sombai rice wine infused with anise and coffee
Midnight Espresso coffee liqueur
  • Allen's Coffee Brandy
  • Black Canyon Distillery, Richardo's Decaf Coffee Liqueur[citation needed]
  • Café Rica – a Costa Rican coffee liqueur[1]
  • Caffè Borghetti - an Italian coffee liqueur
  • Kahlúa – a Mexican coffee liqueur[2]
  • Kavalan Distillery Sweet coffee liqueur
  • Kamora
  • Licor de café - a Galician coffee liqueur
  • Midnight Espresso Regular Coffee Liqueur[citation needed]
  • Midnight Espresso Decaf Coffee Liqueur[citation needed]
  • Mr Black Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur[citation needed]
  • Patrón XO Cafe[citation needed]
  • Sheridan's – an Irish coffee liqueur
  • Sombai rice wine infused with anise and coffee
  • Flor de Caña Spresso – a Nicaraguan coffee liqueur[3]
  • San Andre (Goa)[citation needed]
  • St. George Spirits NOLA Coffee Liqueur
  • Tia Maria
  • Toussaint Coffee Liqueur – a Haitian coffee liqueur[4]

Cream liqueurs[]

A bottle and glass of Carolans

Crème liqueurs[]

A bottle and glass of Crème de cassis

Flower liqueurs[]

A bottle of Crème de Violette

Fruit liqueurs[]

A bottle of homemade limoncello
Note: Kirsch and Slivovitz are fruit brandies rather than liqueurs.

Herbal liqueurs[]

Note: the exact recipes of many herbal liqueurs (which may contain 50 or more different herbs) are often closely guarded trade secrets. The primary herbal ingredients are listed where known.

Anise-flavored liqueurs[]

A bottle of Licor Aniz Escarchado
A bottle of ouzo
Bottles of Sombai Liqueur Anise & Coffee
Note: Absinthe, Arak, Rakı, Ouzo and similar anise-flavored beverages contain no sugar and thus are flavored liquors rather than liqueurs.

See also Category:Anise liqueurs and spirits

Other herbal liqueurs[]

"Altvater" by Gessler, originally from Austrian Silesia
(33 %) - produced in Slovakia
  • Allasch (caraway, flavoured with bitter almonds, angelica, orange)
  • Agwa de Bolivia (37 herbs)
  • Altvater
  • Amaro
  • Becherovka (anise seeds, cinnamon, and other herbs)
  • Beirão (seeds and herbs from around the world)
  • Barrow's Intense Ginger Liqueur(Handmade in Brooklyn, NY with Fresh Ginger)
  • Bénédictine (27 herbs and spices)
  • Boilo (a homemade Christmas liqueur from the Pennsylvania Coal Region)
  • Calisaya (cinchona calisaya bark, Seville orange extract and other botanicals)
  • Canton (spirits, brandy, six varieties of ginger, ginseng, and honey)
  • Chartreuse (130 herbal extracts) Green and Yellow versions
  • Crème de menthe (mint)
  • Cynar (artichoke)
  • Danzig Goldwasser (gold leaf, roots, and herbs)
  • (tequila, vodka, caffeine, and ginseng)
  • Fernet (myrrh, rhubarb, chamomile, cardamom, aloe, and saffron)
  • Galliano (30 herbs)
  • Gammel Dansk Bitter Dram (a Danish digestif bitter with 29 herbs)
  • Goldschläger (cinnamon, with gold leaf)
  • Jaan Paan Liqueur (sweet paan flavored)
  • Jägermeister (56 herbs)
  • Killepitsch (combination of 90 fruits, berries, herbs, and spices)
  • the King's Ginger liqueur, a Berry Bros 1903 formulation to revivify Edward VII from cold car journeys
  • Krupnik (honey and up to 50 different herbs)
  • Kümmel (caraway seed, cumin, and fennel)
  • Mamajuana (rum, tree barks, herbs, spices and honey)
  • Mastica (mastic resin)
  • Mastichato (mastic resin)
  • Menta (peppermint liqueur)
  • Metaxa
  • Riga Black Balsam (Rigas Melnais Balzams)
  • (herbs and spices) – Made by monks at the Singeverga Monastery in Porto, Portugal, it is a sweet-tasting liqueur[6]
  • Sơn Tinh (Vietnamese traditional and contemporary herbal recipes infused in aged rice spirit)
  • Strega (70 herbs, including mint, fennel, and saffron)
  • Tubi 60 (lemon, citrus, tree barks, spices, herbs: ginger, mint, anise, saffron, turmeric, cumin & others)
  • Underberg (a German digestif bitter)
  • Unicum (more than 40 herbs)
  • – first made by Sokan Shiozawa in 1602[7][8]

Honey liqueurs[]

Nut-flavored liqueurs[]

  • Amaretto (almonds, or the almond-like kernels from apricots, peaches, cherries, or similar stone fruits)
  • Disaronno (apricot kernel oil)
  • Frangelico (hazelnuts and herbs)
  • Nocello (walnut and hazelnut)[9]
  • Nocino (unripe green walnuts)
  • – a walnut liqueur[10] prepared using unripe green walnuts
  • Peanut liqueur
  • Peanut Lolita (peanut)
  • Pochteca Almond Liqueur
  • Ratafia (brandy flavored with almonds, fruit, or fruit kernels; also a flavored biscuit)
  • – a pecan liqueur produced in Kentucky, United States[11]

Whisky liqueurs[]

  • Atholl Brose (Scotch whisky, Benromach single malt spirit, honey, secret spice recipe, from Gordon & Macphail)
  • (Scotch whisky, honey, sloe)
  • Cock o' the North (single malt, blueberry)
  • Drambuie (Scotch, heather honey, herbs, and spices)
  • (Irish whiskey, coffee, honey, almond, peanut)
  • (Scotch, bourbon, citrus, spices)
  • Fireball Cinnamon Whisky (Canadian whisky, cinnamon, spices)
  • (Canadian whisky, vanilla, chocolate, caramel)
  • Glayva (Scotch, Seville oranges, spices, herbs, and honey)
  • (Scotch, citrus, pear, brown sugar)
  • (Glenturret single malt, honey, spices)
  • Heaven Hill (Evan Williams cherry, honey and apple orchard variations)
  • Irish Mist (aged Irish whiskey, heather and clover honey, aromatic herbs, and other spirits)
  • Jack Daniel's Tennessee Honey (Jack Daniel's whiskey, honey)
  • Jeremiah Weed (Bourbon whiskey, orange, vanilla)
  • Jim Beam Honey (Jim Beam bourbon, honey)
  • Jim Beam Red Stag (Jim Beam bourbon with other flavorings – variations include black cherry, honey tea, and cinnamon spiced)
  • (Chivas, honey, herbs and spices)
  • (Scotch, honey, sloe)
  • (Bourbon, honey, spices)
  • (Old Pulteney single malt, prune, spices)
  • (Scotch, oranges, spices)
  • Rock and Rye (American rye whiskey, citrus, rock candy)
  • Sortilège Maple Whiskey Liqueur (Canadian whisky, maple syrup)
  • (Speyside malts and fermented comb honey)
  • Southern Comfort (neutral grain spirits with whiskey, peach, orange and spice flavorings)
  • (Deanston single malt, Scottish berries, French herbs)
  • (Wild Turkey (bourbon), honey, spices)
  • Yukon Jack (Canadian whisky, honey)

Other liqueurs[]

  • Advocaat (egg yolks and vanilla)
  • (several varieties, the most popular of which is cinnamon)
  • (orange peels, apples, vanilla and caraway seeds)
  • Ancho Reyes (poblano peppers)
  • (spices and fruit)
  • Aurum (rum, tea, and tangerines)
  • Baczewski
  • Bärenfang (honey; one export version is named Bärenjäger)
  • Beechleaf noyau (Beech leaves and gin)
  • (vodka, herbs and spices)
  • Campari (bitter and aromatic herbs, plants, and fruit)
  • Cynar (artichoke and other herbs and plants)
  • Damiana (herb of the same name)
  • (cinnamon, apple, black pepper and peppermint)
  • Génépi (alpine flower of the same name)
  • Izarra (numerous herbs and other flavorings)
  • (rum liqueur)
  • (vanilla, brandy, and vodka)
  • Licor de oro (whey, saffron and lemon peel)
  • Liqueurs de Sodabi - NeHo Likors (distilled, then flavoured, palm-wine; flavours include banana, cinnamon, pineapple, passion fruit; made by NeHo Likors in Togo)
  • Mesi (honey)
  • Palm wine (coconut wine)
  • Patxaran (Sloes, coffee beans, and vanilla pod)
  • (not the peppers stuffed into olives, but allspice; made in Jamaica by Wray and Nephews)
  • Returner (Earl Grey tea)
  • (lapsang souchong tea, fruits, spices, and Chardonnay brandy)
  • (orange, ginger, clove, other herbs and spices, and white tea)
  • Rumpleminze (peppermint)
  • Salmiakki Koskenkorva (salmiakkikossu, salmari, salmiakki; originally Turkish pepper salty licorice)
  • Sève Fournier (Champagne cognac, cocoa sap, vanilla, iris, and plant extracts)
  • Sơn Tinh (Vietnamese , similar to Japanese sake)
  • or Sorrel (Jamaican white rum, pimento/allspice, clove, cassia, ginger, nutmeg, hibiscus)
  • Tuaca (brandy, vanilla, and citrus)
  • TY KU (Asian spirit base (sake and soju), with yuzu, honeydew, mangosteen, green tea, wolfberry, and ginseng)
  • Vana Tallinn (rum, citrus oil, vanilla, cinnamon, and other spices)
  • (egg yolk, sugar and marsala wine)
  • (a chai-flavoured liqueur containing oak-aged rum, cream, black tea, vanilla, and spices)
  • (cinnamon, chili peppers, and other ingredients)

See also[]

Notes[]

References[]

  1. ^ McNeil, J. (2001). The Rough Guide to Costa Rica. Rough Guides. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-85828-713-3. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  2. ^ Dopson, L.R.; Hayes, D.K. (2015). Food and Beverage Cost Control. Wiley. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-118-98849-7. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  3. ^ "Flor de Caña - Flor de Caña Spresso". www.flordecana.com. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
  4. ^ Halley, N. (2005). The Wordsworth Dictionary of Drink: An A-Z of Alcoholic Beverages. Wordsworth Collection. Wordsworth Editions, Limited. p. 595. ISBN 978-1-84022-302-6. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  5. ^ Sellick, Will (2010). The Imperial African Cookery Book: Recipes from English-speaking Africa. p. 392. ISBN 9780955393686. Retrieved 12 November 2018.
  6. ^ Scherb, M. (2009). A Taste of Heaven: A Guide to Food and Drink Made by Monks and Nuns. Penguin Publishing Group. p. pt20. ISBN 978-1-101-13339-2. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  7. ^ Nihon Bōeki Shinkōkai (1961). Food of Japan: Farm and Marine Products, Seasonings and Stimulants, Etc. Japan Export Trade Promotion Agency. p. 4. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  8. ^ Mallal, B.A. (1996). The Malayan Law Journal. Malaya Publishing House Limited. p. 349. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  9. ^ Lagasse, E. (2015). Essential Emeril: Favorite Recipes and Hard-Won Wisdom From My Life in the Kitchen. Time Incorporated Books. p. 631. ISBN 978-0-8487-4666-7. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
  10. ^ Spring, M. (1987). Great Europ Itinerary. Doubleday. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-385-23336-1. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
  11. ^ Ford, Barb Ford (2015-06-07). "Rivulet Pecan Liqueur a perfect addition to your recipe". Murfreesboro Post.com. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
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