I don't recall when it happened, but when I heard that young people were drinking a lot of Jägermeister, I thought it might be because the green bottle and the spicy medicinal taste came across as an available substitute for absinthe. Silly me, those young people didn't know what absinthe was. Maybe it's the taste of cough syrup that makes one feel like they are drinking something illicit, especially when cut with ultra-caffeinated Red Bull. But Jägermeister has been around a long time. Long before it was available in the US, German people with using the liqueur as a digestif, which led to using it as cure-all. After all, if it taste like medicine, it might work as medicine. It might surprise you to learn that Jägermeister is a direct descendant of vinegar, although through business, not chemistry. Weird History Food takes us through the story of how Jägermeister was developed, marketed, and imported.
Monday, August 21, 2023
The History of Jägermeister
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Amazing example of success through promotion and hype (and jiggle girls) of a product virtually nobody would drink because they liked the taste. I doubt many would drink it home alone if there was ANY other option.
There are Jägermonsters in the terrific webcomic /Girl Genius/. Here's the wiki about them:
https://girlgenius.fandom.com/wiki/Jägermonster
They're serious about their fancy hats. In a war situation, one says, "Any plen where you lose your het is a bed plen."
Post a Comment