King’s Lock Craft Distillery: $20 for Distillery Tour: Comparative Tasting focussed on sampling spirits and comparing flavors (Up to 51% Off)
Today’s Groupon Ottawa Daily Deal of the Day: King’s Lock Craft Distillery: $20 for Distillery Tour: Comparative Tasting focussed on sampling spirits and comparing flavors (Up to 51% Off)
Buy now from only $20
Value $40
Discount 50% Off
What You’ll Get
- Distillery Tour: Comparative Tasting with Shot Glass and Sample Cocktail for Two
- Distillery Tour: Comparative Tasting with Shot Glass and Sample Cocktail for Four
- Distillery Tour: Comparative Tasting with Shot Glass and Sample Cocktail for Eight
This is a limited time offer while quantities last so don’t miss out!
Click here to buy now or for more details about the deal.
The Fine Print
Promotional value expires 180 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Limit 1 per visit. Valid only for option purchased. Reservations are required for the Distillery tour and must be 19 or older. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.
King’s Lock Craft Distillery
http://www.kingslockcraftdistillery.com/
Munster Hamlet-Richmond 5 Newport Drive, Johnstown, ON K0E 1T1 (49.3 miles)
+16137042529
Cordials: From Monks to Mixologists
A cocktail is only as good as its individual ingredients. Let Groupon give you a cordial introduction to one of the sweeter tools of the bartending trade.
Ask for a cordial in different parts of the world and your experience may vary wildly. In Britain, you’ll enjoy a sweet, often fruity beverage. In the United States, you’ll get a similarly sweet concoction—as long as you’re of age. Unlike the British, Americans generally use the word cordial interchangeably with liqueur, which refers to a spirit such as gin or rum that has been infused, flavored, or distilled with botanical ingredients (most often fruit or nuts) and sweetened. Although they may be mixed into cocktails, cordials such as amaretto (flavored with almonds and apricot pits) and limoncello (flavored with lemons) are traditionally sipped at room temperature out of small glasses as an after-dinner digestif.
Many liqueurs were first designed in 15th-century European monasteries, where the monks used them as medicines to reinvigorate the heart. Though no longer considered remedies for serious illnesses, many of the recipes still exist today. The French, for example, have brewed chartreuse continuously since the early 17th century, working from a long-guarded recipe that calls for 130 ingredients, and frangelico—a hazelnut-flavored liqueur—pays homage to its 300-year-old monastic roots with a monk-shaped bottle.
Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!