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Drink
Pride? Integrity? Who needs 'em?
by
JOHN GRAHAM
jgraham@wweek.com
The hardy,
barrel-chested settlers of the Olde American West struggled against
mighty odds, all right: grizzlies, blizzards, outlaws, fallow deserts,
impassable mountain ranges--and a horrific, mind-shattering lack
of convenient alcohol stockpiles. One imagines these Jeremiah Johnsons
gladly sucking down anything that even sniffed of a fermented beverage.
Yet somehow
I doubt Wild Spirit would've made their Top 10 list.
Which is not
to say this self-labeled "drink of the frontier" doesn't have more
kick than a drowning horse. It's a hearty
90 proof--plenty strong enough to keep the Donner party warm for
a night or two.
But despite
all the hackneyed homespun maxims scattered across the bottle's
label ("Pride & Integrity," "Paddle Your Own Canoe," "Worthy
of the Brave"), Wild Spirit liqueur reeks of the sharp tang of good
old-fashioned consumer manipulation. For starters, it's bottled
in Philadelphia--a dangerous place in its own right, but far from
the misty pioneer lands promised us by Manifest Destiny. There's
also the fact that, when the transparent, cocoa-touched liqueur
is mixed with cola, you get a chocolatey concoction that tastes
much like a Tootsie Roll. Envision Josey Wales, moments after he'd
calmly ventilated half the saloon with slugs from his still-smoking
Colt, asking for one of these candied treats: "Barkeep." Glare.
"Mix me up one o' them Wild Spirit and Tootsie whatchamacallits."
Squint. "And gimme extra Coke.... I gotta ride later."
Shot straight,
however, Wild Spirit fires up with enough throat-burning heat to
put hair on your chest. And though the slight aftertaste of chocolate
lingers like an ember in a prairie fire, Wild Spirit's closest neighbor
is actually vodka. Of course, that neighbor lives halfway across
the valley and would probably rather eat a bullet than pretend to
know who Wild Spirit was. But the drink resembles a swaggering liquor
more than a sweet liqueur--Cadbury and Godiva won't be hanging around
this homestead anytime soon--and consumers are warned to
treat it as such.
In the end,
though, such differences matter little. Wild Spirit is an obviously
contrived product with the same hyperbolic promises as some snake-oil
restorative tonic. The label speaks of great things, while the bottle's
contents themselves whisper of small--almost nonexistent--miracles.
But there is one significant difference between Wild Spirit and
snake oil: This stuff actually works, provided your highest desire
is to blast your brain like a cliff standing in the way of Union
Pacific track layers.
Then again,
there are cheaper, better ways of achieving that goal. I heard a
guy in the Oregon Territory--name of Henry Weinhard--has got this
beer or something...
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