Allen's Coffee Brandy

Allen's Coffee Brandy is a coffee-flavoured liqueur popular in New England, especially Maine. Allen's Coffee Brandy is prepared and bottled by M.S. Walker, Inc. of Norwood, Massachusetts.[1] The beverage is 60 proof.

In the 1990s into the 2000s, the product was the best-selling liquor product in Maine for about 20 years.[2] Sales in 2008 were 1,100,000 bottles.[3] Gary Shaw, vice president of M.S. Walker, has noted that his company ships "a phenomenal amount" of brandy to Maine each month.[4]

Uses

Allen's Coffee Brandy is typically served in a drink consisting of equal parts brandy and milk in a pint glass, sometimes called a "Fat Ass in a Glass". According to Gary Shaw, an executive of the drink's parent company, the brandy's popularity in Maine may originate from fisherman adding it to coffee, "maybe to kind of warm 'em up from the inside as well as the outside". Allen's is also popularly mixed with another Maine staple, Moxie, to produce the "Burnt Trailer", or (with Diet Moxie), the "Welfare Mom".[5]

Consumers of Allen's are known to call the drink by various humorous names, including "Hancock County Panty Remover", "The Champagne of Maine", "Lewiston Martini", and numerous others.[5]

New concoctions and mixers have resulted in new variants and naming conventions. "Maine Breakfast" (alternatively: "Corker") is an Allen's and oat milk.

Legality

Allen's came into some legal question when the United States placed a ban on caffeinated alcoholic beverages. However, with a significantly lower caffeine content, produced by the coffee flavorings and not added intentionally as with (the original) Four Loko and the other alcoholic energy drinks targeted by the ban, Allen's Coffee Brandy is still legal to sell.[6]

See also

 Drink portal
icon Coffee portal

References

  1. McGuire, Peter (16 June 2018). "Hot-selling Fireball passes Allen's as biggest money maker in Maine liquor market". Portland Press Herald. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  2. Coffee Brandy Top-Selling Liquor In Maine | wcsh6.com
  3. Fahrenthold, David A. (January 9, 2006). "A Bittersweet 'Champagne of Maine'". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  4. "Coffee brandy ranks as state's drug of choice". Portland Press Herald. October 19, 1997. Archived from the original on August 19, 2004. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  5. Connelly, Martin (November 25, 2013). "The Champagne of Maine". The Morning News. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  6. Carpenter, Murray (15 November 2010). "Coffee Brandy Escapes Energy Drinks' Troubles". New York Times.
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