20111205

REPEAL (of Prohibition) DAY - A Grand Excuse for a Gin Cocktail



REPEAL OF PROHIBITION
December 5th 1933

Today we celebrate the ratification of the Twenty-First Amendment to the Constitution aka the repeal of Prohibition.  This revoked the Eighteenth Amendment and ended a 13 year ban on the sale and distribution of alcohol in the United States between the years of 1919 to 1933.

The Eighteenth Amendment essentially took the business licenses away from every brewer, distiller, vintner, wholesaler and retailer of alcoholic beverages in the United States while the Volstead Act (otherwise known as the National Prohibition Act) gave   the “Commissioner of Internal Revenue, his assistants, agents, and inspectors” the power to enforce the 18th Amendment.

Of all the cocktails that you can now legally drink, today is a perfect day to enjoy some Gin Cocktails because gin (or rather "bathtub" gin) was the true darling of the era of illegal alcohol and speakeasies. Gin became synonymous with prohibition for one reason, it did not require the aging of whiskey which had been the more popular liquor in the U.S. prior to the ban on alcohol.  Gin could be, and was, brewed in all manner of slap-dash distilleries - including bathtubs! -  thus prohibition ushered in the era of bathtub gin and gin joints and the Gin Martini became the godfather of cocktails!

“Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine.” Rick Blain (Humphrey Bogart), Casablanca

You might also enjoy trying these
Vintage Prohibition Era Cocktails

National Repeal Day was instituted by Jeffrey Morgenthaler in the mid-2000s, who said if there's any day to celebrate alcohol this is the one and I wholeheartedly agree. I don't know if he's done it yet, but I suggest he petition the White House to make this a national holiday.

Some Prohibition Trivia:
  • Prohibition was sometimes referred to as "the noble experiment"
  • The Eighteenth Amendment did not ban the use of possession of alcohol for personal use as long as the spirits did not leave the house or get distributed outside the home.
  • Alcohol was also still available via a physician's prescription. 
  • Churches and the clergy were also provided a provision for the use of wine as a holy sacrament.
  • The term "Speakeasy" for the illegal saloons that operated during Prohibition, comes from the practice of advising drinkers "speak quietly" or "speak easy" about an unlicensed saloon in public, or when inside it, so as not to alert the police and neighbors.
  • The term "The Real McCoy" comes out of the Prohibition Era: Captain William S. McCoy, who facilitated most of the rum running during prohibition via ships from the Caribbean to Florida, was said to never water down his imports thus making his rum "the real thing" aka "the real McCoy".

HAPPY REPEAL DAY
from TheMartiniDiva





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