Why do hangovers get worse with age?

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Remember your early 20s? After a few too many drinks, you’d wake fresh as a daisy, ready to tackle work, run a marathon, pen a bestseller. But, as we slip into later life, our hangovers become incapacitating. Pounding headaches, nausea and hangxiety (read our piece on what that is here) can all turn up after just a couple of tame pints at the pub. Even choosing what to watch on Netflix becomes a chore.

It’s not just your imagination  though - there is some science behind it. According to physicians, as you age, your body’s metabolism slows down and that doesn’t just mean the inevitable waistline expansion. Your body no longer metabolises certain things, including alcohol, as well because your liver doesn’t work quite as efficiently as it did when you were 21.

Enzymes in your liver begin to process alcohol by breaking it down into acetaldehyde, a toxin commonly thought to be a contributor to hangover symptoms. From there, enzymes break the acetaldehyde down into non-toxic acetate. But, here’s the thing: your liver can only do that so fast, and it gets slower as you age. So, in effect, acetaldehyde hangs around in your body for longer, getting pushed into your bloodstream – and increasing that grim hungover feeling.

Of course, there are other factors at play. Your genetics are important – we all have those annoying friends who ‘don’t get hangovers’, at any age – as is the quantity you drink and how often. And, perception matters. You might recall that you didn’t get hangovers when you were younger, but was that really true? Your hangovers may be more about feeling anxious and having low productivity rather than nausea and headaches. 

Earlier in life, feeling rubbish after a big night out with mates almost feels like a badge of honour. Yet over time, the novelty wears off. And, when combined with increased responsibilities like high-pressured jobs or childcare, hangovers genuinely are worse  - and longer - than they used to be as you take longer to recover. 

Want to know why we get ‘hangxiety?’ Read all about it here.

STRYKK: NOT R*M Espresso Martini

Best Mocktails STRYKK espresso martini thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

We love a good Espresso Martini (I mean let’s face it, who doesn’t?!) and now we’ve found the perfect way to enjoy it on days when we want a day off the booze - and it still taste great! Introducing STRYKK: NOT R*M; a superbly balanced spiced rum alternative that blends sugar cane and raisin notes with vanilla and oak wood tone to create a very delicious serve!

Ingredients

50ml STRYKK NOT R*M
50ml Cold Brew concentrate
15ml Sugar syrup
Coffee beans to garnish

Method

Combine all the ingredients together in a shaker with ice. Shake well before straining into a martini glass.

 Find STRYKK here: £14 if you use STRYKK code ‘THREE14’ at checkout (normally £18.99)

Crabbie's Colada

Crabbie's Yardhead Crabbie's Colada Best Whisky Cocktail thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

On the Bring a Bottle Podcast this week (episode 40), Aidy mixed up a storm with his Crabbie’s Colada: a twist on a Pina Colada using Crabbie’s Yardhead whisky. Here’s how you can make one yourself for a tropical fiesta in a glass.

Ingredients

40ml Crabbie’s Yardhead
20ml Dead Man’s Fingers Coconut Rum
50ml Coconut Water
50ml Pineapple Juice
25ml Fresh Lime Juice
25ml Agave Syrup
Glassware: Poco Grande Glass

Method
Combine all ingredients into a shaker with ice and give it a good go for a minute or so. Strain and pour over more ice into a Poco Grande Glass or similar large, copa style glass and garnish with as much pizazz as you would like. Umbrellas are a must.

Like this? Try Aidy’s Marmalade Sour recipe, the Fettercairn 1824 Martini or the White Russian

One Drink, Three Ways: Nouaison Gin Reserve

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One Drink, Three Ways is the signature feature by The Three Drinkers. Join The Three Drinkers’ Helena, Aidy and Colin as they take one bottle and create a trio of phenomenal serves which you can enjoy anytime, anywhere. From rums and whiskies to gins and wine styles, the three help you get the most out of your glass. It’s time to get liquid on lips.

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Nouaison Gin Reserve recently won the coveted ‘out of the ordinary’ spirits prize at this year’s People’s Choice Drinks Awards; a category that was sponsored by us, The Three Drinkers! It’s an intriguing spirit, made by distilling French grapes (like Cognac), which is then redistilled with botanicals, herbs, fruit and spices using traditional Gin methods, before being aged in Cognac-seasoned oak barrels. It’s Gin meets Cognac in a quirky and complex way, but it absolutely works. Sip it alone or try it in one of these three delicious serves.


Helena’s Choice: Stinger

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I love the Nouaison Gin Reserve in this cocktail for something totally out of the ordinary. The mint really lifts the botanicals and the cream enhances the spice. The result is something unlike anything you’ve tasted before and totally moreish.

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Stinger

Recipe

60 ml Nouaison Gin Reserve

5 ml Mint cream

Garnish: Mint Sprig and  / or a piece of white chocolate.

Glassware: Rocks glass

Method

Build the drink in the rocks glass by combining the ingredients over ice cubes, then stir with a bar spoon, garnish and serve.



Aidy’s Choice: Smash & Fresh

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You know I love my Gin sours and this serve offers something very different from the norm that your guests will adore. With a refreshing kick from the Absinthe cordial and lemon juice combo, it’s the perfect kick starter to any meal or festive occasion. I know I know, absinthe does come with a stigma that it’s way too powerful and overbearing, but trust me, everything here balances together so well - you will be super surprised and thoroughly refreshed!

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Smash & Fresh

Recipe

45 ml Nouaison Gin Reserve

20 ml Cordial Absinthe

20 ml Lemon Juice

20 ml Egg White

Garnish: Mint Sprig

Glassware: Coup or coupette

Method 

Pour all the wet ingredients into a shaker, dry shake (without ice) to get the egg white to foam, then shake with ice for ten seconds. Double strain over a coupette glass and garnish a mint sprig.


Colin’s Choice: Nouaison Old Fashioned

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The Gin botanicals and the citrus spice here add an intriguing twist to a traditional Old Fashioned recipe, pepping the whole thing up. Try serving it to your guests or to your partner without telling them what it is and watch as they become a Gin Reserve convert!

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Nouaison Old Fashioned

Recipe

45ml Nouaison Gin Reserve

5ml Sugar Syrup 

2 Dashes Orange Bitters 

1 Orange Zest 

Garnish: Orange Peel Twist

Glassware: Old Fashioned Glass or Tumbler

Method 

Gently blend ingredients into a mixing glass and strain into an Old Fashioned glass over a large ice cube or sphere. Garnish with an orange peel twist.

Gin Cocktails award winning gins Nouaison gin thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

UK
ABV: 42%
Size: 500ml
Buy it now for £37.00

Don’t forget to check out our whisky, rum and vermouth One Drink Three Ways suggestions too!

The Marmalade Sour

The Marmalade Sour Aidy Smith thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Words by Aidy Smith

If you’re anything like me, marmalade goes on pretty much everything, even a cocktail! Interestingly, the tartness, sweetness and orange punch work hand in hand with gin, so perhaps this is a new alternative to the breakfast martini?!

Ingredients:

60ml Quality Gin (we recommend Highclere Castle Gin)
15ml Lemon Juice
4 teaspoons of Quality Marmalade

Method:

Pop all of the ingredients into a shaker and stir to combine the marmalade with the liquid. Pop in your ice, shake and fine strain into a glass (we strain to avoid lumps of marmalade in the glass). Et voila!

Find Highclere Castle Gin here: UK £38.07 // US $39.99

HAVANA CLUB BAR ENTREPRENEUR OF THE YEAR: The Winners

Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur Awards Winners

Last week, we were excited to watch the winners being crowned at the 2020 Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur Awards; a competition that recognises the passion, entrepreneurship and this year particularly, the resilience and determination of the people behind the world’s most revolutionary bars. A respected panel of judges crowned one overall winner and three other category winners from a shortlist of thirteen finalists. 

Here are the winners of this year’s Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur Awards. Remember their names - you’ll be seeing a lot more of them in the future!

Overall Winner: Oliver Margan

Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur of the year winner Oliver Margan

Meet Oliver Margan, overall winner of the 2020 Bar Entrepreneur awards. Having founded cocktail bar Maybe Mae six years ago, in the heart of Adelaide’s west end, at the tender age of twenty two, Oliver has been credited for establishing the city’s cocktail culture, with six new bar openings under his belt. What impressed the judges the most was his unfailing optimism and entrepreneurial spirit, which sits alongside his highly regarded skills behind the bar, a focus on sustainably sourced cocktail ingredients and his support for gender equality within the industry. Oliver was awarded with a €20,000 cash prize to invest in his business. 

Other Category Winners

As well as crowing an overall winner, Havana Club awarded €10,000 each to three other candidates who showed determination and passion in three other categories: The True Grit Award, which honours strength, resilience and bravery during the most challenging period of modern-day hospitality; One to Watch, which focuses on emerging talent and the achievements of those under the age of 30 and Social & Eco Entrepreneurship, which recognises a commitment to improving the environment or a local community, while achieving business success.

Winner: True Grit - Rani Al Raji

Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur of the year true grit winner rani al raji

This year’s True Grit award was presented to Rani Al Raji, owner of Beirut’s Brazzaville; a neighbourhood bar that has continued to serve the community and remain a hub of positivity through the challenges of 2020 including the pandemic and Beirut’s horrific explosion. Rani’s team did what they could not just to survive, but to thrive despite the shortages and the struggles seen in the country’s capital. 

 Winner: Social and Eco Entrepreneurship: - Yeferson Avila and Jean Trinh

Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur Awards Social and Eco Entrepreneurship Winner Yeferson Avila and Jean Trinh

Columbia’s Yeferson Avila and Jean Trinh, co-owners of Alquímico Farm in Cartagena, were awarded with the Social and Eco Entrepreneurship prize for their commitment to keeping their staff, small producers and local farmers in business despite the pressures of the pandemic. While having to close their popular, three-story mansion bar, Yeferson and Jean instead put their team to work at the Alquímico Farm where they grow organic produce to use in their cocktail programme. The farm has since become an educational space for the local agricultural community and professionals from the drinks industry who want to learn more about vegetables, fruits and spices from planting to harvest.

Winner: One to Watch - Omer Gazit-Shalev

Havana Club Bar Entrepreneur Awards One to Watch Winner Omer Gazit Shalev

Omer is a clear rising star in the global bar community. He managed to impress the judges with the variety and diversity of projects he has taken on despite his young age. As the CEO of Monkey Business, a unique style of hospitality group, he and his teams manage several of Israel’s most famous food and drink venues and are being credited with redefining the country’s bar experience in general.

The Judges

The judges for this competition are all key figures in the global drinks and business industries:

  • Rhys Oldfield: co-founder of Be at One and a leading adviser to food and drink businesses.

  • Juan Valls: owner of El Nino, Sinner Club and key figure behind Spain’s FIBAR.

  • Vijay Mudaliar: founder of Native Bar in Singapore and its concept to explore local culture through the lens of drinks.

  • Ara Carvallo: co-founder of Barra Mexico, the world’s first zero carbon bar trade show and Latin America’s key spirits trade show.

  • Kelsey Ramage: winner of the One to Watch category in 2019 and owner of Trash Tiki, which focuses on creating cocktails from waste.

  • Tess Posthumus: successful business entrepreneur and owner of the Netherlands’ leading bars, Flying Dutchman and Dutch Courage in Amsterdam.

  • Cécile Bulle: business educator who leads a mentoring programme helping students and alumni from Paris Dauphine University establish their business.

  • Rasmus Lomborg: bartender, bar manager and entrepreneur who has opened multiple bars across the UK and Europe.

The winners were announced during a virtual ceremony presented by leading global rum ambassador Ian Burrell and featured a showstopping live concert from international rapper Kelvyn Colt.


To find out more about the awards and the winners check out @havanaclub_pro on Instagram, use the hashtag #BEA2020 or read more here

The Fettercairn 1824 Martini

Fettercairn 1824 Martini whisky cocktail thethreedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Fettercairn Distillery, founded in 1824, was one of the very first licensed distilleries in Scotland. Located in a small village in Aberdeenshire under the Grampian foothills in the Howe of Mearns, this distillery got a new lease of life in the 1950s and is now creating exciting new expressions using their stocks of well-aged whiskies.

This elegant and contemplative cocktail is perfect for refined sipping as an aperitif or digestif on any occasion. Based on a classic Old Fashioned recipe but without the mixer, it uses ingredients that gently enhance the tropical fruit flavour of the whisky. Serve in your most elegant Martini glass, well-chilled.

Ingredients
50ml Fettercairn 12 Year Old Whisky
5ml Coconut sugar syrup
4 Dashes of pineapple and star anise bitters
Garnish: 1 Pineapple leaf
Glass: Elegant Martini glass

 Method
Combine all ingredients together into a mixing glass and stir well, before straining into a chilled Martini glass. Garnish with an attractive pineapple leaf.

Want more whisky cocktail recipes? See the Fettercairn Tropical Highball, the Craighouse Rocks, the Jura Sunset, The Dalmore Old Fashioned and The Dalmore Mackenzie Highball

The Fettercairn Tropical Highball

Fettercairn Tropical Highball whisky cocktail thethreeedrinkers.com the three drinkers

Long, light and refreshing, this is a super simple, perfect highball serve that showcases the light vibrancy of Fettercairn 12 Year Old and accentuates the tropical distillery character derived from Fettercairn’s unique, copper cooling ring distillation process.

Ingredients
25ml Fettercairn 12 Year Old whisky
25ml Coconut Water
4 Dashes of Pineapple and Star Anise Bitters
Top with Soda Water
Garnish: Dried pineapple and flamed star anise
Glass: Highball Glass

Method
For the perfect highball and for any occasion, simply build all Ingredients in the highball glass, then garnish with dried pineapple and flamed star anise.

Fettercairn Distillery, founded in 1824, was one of the very first licensed distilleries in Scotland. Located in a small village in Aberdeenshire under the Grampian foothills in the Howe of Mearns, this distillery got a new lease of life in the 1950s and is now creating exciting new expressions using their stocks of well-aged whiskies.

Want more whisky cocktail recipes? See the Fettercairn 1824 Martini, the Craighouse Rocks, the Jura Sunset, The Dalmore Old Fashioned and The Dalmore Mackenzie Highball.