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Benedictine Dom Liqueur
$70.00
D.O.M is a herbal liqueur beverage invented by Alexandre Legrand in the 19th century and produced in France. D.O.M. stands for Deo Optimo Maximo which means - To God most good, most great.The recipe contains 27 plants and spices, primarily, Angelica, Hyssop and Lemon Balm. It has a medium to deep amber color with a greenish-gold rim. Its aromas include a wealth of spices, friuts, Cloves, cardamorn and liquorice mingle with honey, butterscotch, prune and orange. Its taste is full of herbs and spices but has a balanced sweetness. It is intense but displays real complexity.
Capacity: 1LT
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amber l
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:40
hi i’m amber here.i’m just gift birth on the 3 oct 08.i really want to know that can i consume alcohol? i did alcohol 1 glass of d.o.m benedictine every night before i sleep.but i also want to know that whether i can drink beer,wine or other liqueur?please guide me.thank you very much.
ynyr_yeng
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:43
effects of small amount of drink per day? D.O.M Benedictine
evolved⚛more
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:46
You opinion on Benedictine monks producing an alcoholic alcohol? It has at least as much caffeine as 8 cans of coke, a high alcohol content, and has been blamed for a enormous crime wave in Scotland.
The monks are refusing to remark.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk have never drunk it, sounds bloody fabulous d
I just think it’s highly amusing that they said one in 10 of the related crimes, the bottle was used as a weapon. Awesome!
Pangloss (L'Union Fait La Fo
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:50
As much caffeine as 8 cans of Coke?
I love those monks!
Patio of Fun
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:52
It’s my favorite liqueur of all time, I usually chose the B and B over the straight Benedictine. But they priced it out of my range twenty years ago. Personal responsibility has to be taken, you can’t blame bad behavior on a liqueur that was never intended to be consumed by the bottle at a unmarried sitting.
Daniel misses the country
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:54
eh - same sorts of beverages were around thousands of years before the monks. chances are that if they didn’t create it - someone else would have.
i say have a pint for me!
⌡Machine Head⌠
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:57
And we have never heard of Dom Perignon or The Christian Brothers because….?
ralph_5772
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:02:59
People need to be responsible for their own actions. It is entirely possible to enjoy alcohol in a responsible manner, so it is fine for the monks to produce it. If some jerks cannot hold their liquor, they need to take it upon themselves to quit, rather than expecting society to become a nursery where nobody can get anything that could potentially be misused.
lowball
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:03:01
It’s the same as guns don’t kill people, people kill people. The monks don’t commit the crime wave, it’s people who commit the crime wave. That’s a tall leap, blaming the monks.
Pax Romana
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:03:03
Monks have produced alcoholic beverages for a long time…Frangelico, Chartreus, etc…why should They remark? When people break out in fights or commit crimes for drinking vodka or Jack Daniels, are those companies supposed to respond? I’ve watched people alcohol 8 Jaeger bombs mixing drink and caffeine, and no one expects Jaeger to remark.
People have to memorize to alcohol responsibly and take responsibility for their own actions.
skeptik
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:03:06
As the article says, Buckfast has been consumed in Scotland for 80 years. If it caused crime, you wouldn’t just be seeing it recently.
Far more likely - it has recently become popular with a specific segment of the population that is more likely to commit crimes when drunk. Blaming Buckfast for some kind of crime wave is analogous to blaming Burberry for the behavior of Chavs.
And whether a person drinks an entire bottle of the stuff, I’d worry less about the 8 Cokes’ of caffeine than approximately the 6 1/2 Budweisers’ worth of drink. Or approximately 5 1/2 pints of Guinness.
Eclectic Heretic
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:03:08
Well, whether they have producing the stuff for over 80 years and it is just now causing a crime wave I rather suspect that it has become somewhat of a fad and will probably die out. I do know that the Benedictines make some very excellent brandies, never knew they were into wine. And whether it were taken off the market, there would just be some other product that got used for the same object. They have a drinking culture there, so booze is the drug of choice so to speak. In the Us, we have fads like Ecstasy and weed and coke that come and go. Same difference.
PaulCyp
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:03:10
How ridiculous! Do you suppose that’s why Coco-cola started using plastic bottles? Because some people were using the glass bottles as weapons??????? Anybody who downs a whole bottle of wine at one sitting has more to worry approximately than caffeine!
maven
at Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 13:03:12
We need to mention that throughout history monks have had to endure some horrific fasting. Interestingly, beer didn’t count. Try maybe a Belgian triple bock and you will discover why they called it liquid bread