Negroni by Long Flint
I’ve sung the praises of Long Flint before so I won’t go into it again, see my Paloma post to read a little more.
The first thing that strikes you about this Negroni ASDFASDs is the depth of colour, it looks purple in a lively an evocative way that still evokes nature. This branding and vivid colour give you a feeling that this is a drink of class and you’re not dissapointed on opening it.
On opening I got floral note on the nose with a smell of hibiscus and hints of cranberries.
The taste starts with a light fruity sourness and ends with a nice balanced bitterness that lingers on the tongue. The length of the bitterness is what makes this a really interesting beverage: not the sudden and short punch of tonic, it evokes the negroni of it’s name, but as the bottle says a much lighter version, which is helped by the delicate carbonation. The bitterness lingers making this drink a more serious beverage - I can imagine myself drinking this as an aperatif, sitting in a sun soaked piazza after a long days work.
Floral, light and refreshing with a serious depth and length, this drink is supremely balanced.
If you like a bitter drink like an Apperol/campari or even an juicy IPA you’ll enjoy this drink.
Additionally it makes you look well sophisticated. Try severing it up on ice to your friends on a spring evening before dinner or at the end of a meal to settle the stomach - chuck a spring of rosemary or sage (maybe an orange peel delicately placed on top) to garnish and i’m sure it’ll rock their socks off.
Scoring: 5/5
Price: £3.5 - £4
The first thing that strikes you about this Negroni ASDFASDs is the depth of colour, it looks purple in a lively an evocative way that still evokes nature. This branding and vivid colour give you a feeling that this is a drink of class and you’re not dissapointed on opening it.
On opening I got floral note on the nose with a smell of hibiscus and hints of cranberries.
The taste starts with a light fruity sourness and ends with a nice balanced bitterness that lingers on the tongue. The length of the bitterness is what makes this a really interesting beverage: not the sudden and short punch of tonic, it evokes the negroni of it’s name, but as the bottle says a much lighter version, which is helped by the delicate carbonation. The bitterness lingers making this drink a more serious beverage - I can imagine myself drinking this as an aperatif, sitting in a sun soaked piazza after a long days work.
Floral, light and refreshing with a serious depth and length, this drink is supremely balanced.
If you like a bitter drink like an Apperol/campari or even an juicy IPA you’ll enjoy this drink.
Additionally it makes you look well sophisticated. Try severing it up on ice to your friends on a spring evening before dinner or at the end of a meal to settle the stomach - chuck a spring of rosemary or sage (maybe an orange peel delicately placed on top) to garnish and i’m sure it’ll rock their socks off.
Scoring: 5/5
Price: £3.5 - £4
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