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Crème de menthe (French for mint cream) is a sweet, mint-flavored alcoholic beverage. Its flavor primarily derives from Corsican mint or dried peppermint. It is available commercially in a colorless version (called "white") and a green version (colored by the mint leaves, or by added coloring if made from extract instead of leaves). Both varieties have similar flavor and are interchangeable in recipes, except where color is important. Crème de menthe is an ingredient in several cocktails, such as the Grasshopper and the Stinger. It is also served as a digestif and used in cooking as a flavoring (see Mint chocolate). The traditional formula steeps dried peppermint or Corsican mint leaves in grain alcohol for several weeks (creating a naturally green color), followed by filtration and addition of sugar.〔(Classic Liquors Products/Flavors )〕 == Literature == * It gives its name to the sixth chapter of D.H. Lawrence's ''Women in Love'' and is therein mentioned as Rupert Birkin's drink: "Birkin was drinking something green ()" * In Kurt Vonnegut's ''Cat's Cradle'' a bartender invents a cocktail on the day of the bombing of Hiroshima called the End of The World Delight—crème de menthe in a hollow pineapple with whipped cream and a cherry on top. * In Radclyffe Hall's ''The Well of Loneliness'', Jamie, a frustrated lesbian musician, becomes an alcoholic who prefers to drink crème de menthe "...because it kept out the cold in the winter, and because, being pepperminty and sweet, it reminded her of the bulls-eyes at Beedles." * In Dodie Smith's ''I Capture the Castle'', Rose drinks crème de menthe after going for a walk with Neil. He accuses her of drinking it because it contrasts with her hair. Cassandra later drinks it in the pub. * In Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot novels, Poirot is shown to favor liqueurs in general, and crème de Menthe in particular, as his drink of choice. * In Ian Fleming's ''Thunderball'', a crème de menthe frappé (with a maraschino cherry on top) is Emilio Largo's favorite drink. * In James Welch's ''Winter in the Blood'', Agnes is drinking crème de menthe when the narrator talks to her at a bar in Havre. * In Ernst Jünger's Storm of Steel, he describes keeping a bottle in a limestone niche of his trench shelter in WWI. "...my orderlies and I swore by it." * In Marguerite Dura's The Sailor from Gibraltar, the narrator was drinking iced coffees, cremes de menthe and Ice-cream in a cafeteria, while his girlfriend was out seeing Florence's tourist sights. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Crème de menthe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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