Absinthe, an intense alcoholic spirit favored by artists such as Degas, Van Gogh and Hemingway, is making a comeback in the U.S. after being banned by the government for almost 100 years.
Its rebirth in trendy restaurants and bars is a triumph of marketing -- and of maneuvering through a maze of federal rules on formulas and labels. It took a Swiss distiller, an importer and a Washington attorney four years to navigate the bureaucracy, even after the drink was legalized again in Europe.
"This is a complex issue, and we are addressing it as best we can," said Art Resnick, a spokesman for the U.S. Treasury Department's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, referring to the process that led this year to the agency approving four absinthe brands for sale in the U.S.
For much of the 19th and early 20th centuries, the typically green liquor, also known as the Green Fairy, was wildly popular among artists in Europe. It was the subject of the Edgar Degas painting "L'Absinthe." Emile Zola mentioned it in a novel and Ernest Hemingway wrote: "Got tight last night on absinthe. Did knife tricks."
Absinthe was believed to hold large concentrations of wormwood, a plant containing the chemical thujone, which could induce hallucinations and a drug-like state. It was thought to be the source of Van Gogh's impulse to cut off his ear.
Imports of absinthe were banned by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1912 because other countries had outlawed it. Later, a Food and Drug Administration rule requiring that products be "thujone-free" kept it off the market.
The whiff of illegality made absinthe all the more desirable. Groups like the Wormwood Society kept the mystique alive. It was bootlegged, sold widely over the Internet and smuggled in by travelers.
Once bans on the liquor were lifted in Europe in the 1990s, the campaign began in the U.S. to restore absinthe to the cocktail menu. The campaign was successful. Absinthe costs $50 to $60 a bottle.
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