PureLiqueur Schnapps, Cordials, Liqueurs. As long as it's tasty.

7Oct/093

Liqueur Review: St-Germain

While browsing through one of the larger discount liquor stores in Nashville TN I saw this liqueur I had not noticed before.

St-Germain Liqueur

St-Germain Liqueur

I think the amazing bottle is really what got my interest, but never the less I had to give this one a try. It was $35 so not too pricey.

Background:

Doing a little reading a about St-Germain is interesting. Turns out it is a flower or floral liqueur made from Elderflowers and various other ingredients. St-Germain contains 100% natural ingredients and no preservatives which is points in my book. Worthy of note as well is the mention that St-Germain has roughly half the sugar of most Liqueurs. Though I have not seen the actual amounts in grams yet.

It imported from France by Maison 6ème Arr., Philadelphia, PA.

On the St-Germain website you can learn that every load of elderflowers they use to make this stuff is hand-picked and then bi-cycled.. yes bi-cycled from the foot hills of the Alps down to a market where they purchase them to make the liqueur.

Visual:

As I said previously, the fancy French bottle is probably what drew my eyes to it. The bottle is really sweet; the label and metal cap all create a really artistic old world look.

The liqueur inside is a pale but golden yellow. It is actually quite inviting. I think the bottle really adds to the color, if it was a simple plain bottle then the pale yellow liquid may have looked less appealing. You don't see many pale yellow colored Liqueurs, or if you do they are in a darker bottle.

Overall a very pleasing and impressive bottle. Lots of French words and it includes a miniature tag-like book with a story about the liqueur.

Nose:

Needless to say, I would go out on a limb and say a floral liqueur should have a good nose. They ARE made with flowers.

St-Germain does not disappoint! It smells like sweet nectar. Honey-dew, sugar, vanilla, pear and melon are all words that came to mind when I take a whiff.

I have to say with this being my first floral liqueur that the smell is good, but it does not smell like it would *taste* good. The flowery smell is strange if you are new to floral liqueurs. That all changes though once you take a sip.

Taste:

Sweet, like any liqueur very sweet. It is hard to separate smell from taste with something as aromatic as this, but some of the nose remains in the taste. You get citrus, orange, lemon along with a nectar type flavor. It's fairly thick and The finish is a bit syrupy for my taste but overall satisfying.

Final:

I like this liqueur. I didn't think I could get into floral liqueurs, but my goal here is to try every liqueur possible. This is really good stuff, I especially like the citrus taste combined with the sweet floral smell. It is very well balanced.

Due to syrupy finish I don't think I could drink much more than a single serving by itself, but it will make a great after dinner drink and an even better mixer. I'm imagining it right now with ginger ale...

For more reading check out

St-Germains Website and the wikipedia page on Elderflower

Comments (3) Trackbacks (1)
  1. This sounds very interesting. I’ve not had anything quite like that before, but now I’m very interested in trying it. Thank you for the review.

  2. I made elderflower liqueur once and it was delicious. I didn’t make it that syrupy sweet though. The elderflowers are blooming right now here in central Florida… I may give it another go. Thanks for reminding me. By the way, it’s supposed to help you sleep.

  3. If you find the recipe you used, I’ll be glad to post it. Maybe I’ll drink some tonight to help me sleep since I have not slept well in a while!


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