Posts tagged ‘Cointreau’

It’s All Orange To Me!

You say Cointreau, I say Grand Marnier?  It’s all orange to me.  Really, what’s the diff?  Here are some orange liqueurs and their descriptions from Wikipedia:

  1. Triple Sec is an orange-flavored liqueur.It is widely used in mixed drinks and recipes as a sweetening and flavoring agent. Better-quality brands are made from brandy or Cognac and often sipped alone, typically as a digestif.Some brands are colorless (or nearly colorless) while others have the golden coloration of their brandy base. It is made from the dried peel of oranges found on Curaçao, an island in theCaribbean.
  2. Cointreau (pronounced [kwan'-tro]) is a brand of triple sec liqueur, and produced in Saint-Barthélemy-d’Anjou, a suburb of AngersFrance. Cointreau sources its bitter oranges from all over the world, usually SpainBrazil and Saint-Raphaël, Haiti.[1][2]In addition to being imbibed as an apéritif, Cointreau is sometimes used as a digestif. Cointreau is considered to be either a premium brand triple sec or a unique category of liqueur. With a 40% alcohol content, Cointreau is strong for a triple sec which usually has an alcohol content around 23%.[1]
  3. Grand Marnier (gʀã maʀnje) is a liqueur created in 1880 by Alexandre Marnier-Lapostolle. It is a kind of triple sec, made from a blend of true cognacs and distilled essence of Bitter orange. Grand Marnier is 40% alcohol (80 proof). It is produced in several varieties, most of which can be consumed “neat” as a digestif and can be used in mixed drinks and desserts.

 

June 29, 2008 at 7:03 pm 1 comment


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