-
distilling wine and in
English texts was also
called ardent spirits,
spirit of wine, or
spirits of wine, a name that
could be
applied to
brandy that had...
- Look up
ardent in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Ardent may
refer to:
Ardent spirits,
liquors obtained after repeated distillations from
fermented vegetables...
-
Ardent spirits (ethyl alcohol), in alchemy, are
those liquors obtained after repeated distillations from
fermented vegetables. They are thus
called because...
-
Presbyterian preacher Charles Grandison Finney taught abstinence from
ardent spirits. In the Rochester, New York
revival of 1831,
individuals were required...
- than prohibition. In his treatise, "The
Inquiry into the
Effects of
Ardent Spirits upon the
Human Body and Mind" (1784), Rush
argued that the excessive...
- (October 2006). "The
Birth of the Cosmopolitan: A Tale of Two Bartenders".
Ardent Spirits e-letter. Vol. 7,
Issue 6.
Archived from the
original on 2007-07-07...
- trioxide, As2O3 (extremely poisonous) Aqua vitae/aqua vita/spirit of wine,
ardent spirits – ethanol,
formed by
distilling wine
Butter (or oil) of
antimony – antimony...
- all
liquors of an
intoxicating quality whether ale, porter, wine, or
ardent spirits,
except as medicine." Today, a
number of
temperance organisations exist...
- Mix Drinks. **** and Fitzgerald. p. 36.
Retrieved 25
November 2008. "
Ardent Spirits Bartender Bulletin". ardentspirits.com.
Archived from the
original on...
- States".
United States Senate.
Retrieved 2013-10-07. John
Kobler (1973).
Ardent Spirits: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition. New York: Da Capo Press. p. 342....