Absinthe was banned for about 75 years around the world. The reason for this is a little vague, but here is the Official Story: It poisons people.
This has been disproved.
The Real Story is a bit more shady…
Absinthe was beloved of poets, writers and other layabouts, who were always poor, but very social. They would scrape together their cash and get a drink and a fountain, sit around talking all day and run home to create, inspired by their muse, well into the night.
And that was how it went, for a while.
Along comes a business man who creates a shortage of Absinthe to drive up the price. Lets call him “Lenny”. Lenny is trying to make a bit more cash by creating demand, but some other young fellows see a business opportunity of their own.
These guys create some cheap liquor that tastes and looks like absinthe to fill the demand, and walk away with a tidy profit for a few months.
Lenny loses out, and so, as it turns out, do all the layabouts and poets etc.
The problem is that the “businessmen” were not so much chemists or doctors, so when they started looking for the cheapest materials to create their profits, they struck out in a big way.
They had to get the emerald green colour that the poets loved so much. The cheapest way to do that was to use copper salts. Great colour, not so great for the people who drank it.
Suddenly poets were going crazy, getting sick and even dying.
Drinking Absinthe was the culprit, or so everyone thought.
The government had to take steps after some very public violence. Absinthe was banned. The official word was that the active ingredient was responsible for the violence and aberrant behaviour.
It was banned world wide, for the public good, and there matters rested for 75 years or so.
Enter a grad student in need of a thesis. Absinthe seems like a cool topic…
Why would Thujone affect people like that? No reason at all from a medical perspective. So the student did what students do. And after a while was able to trace all of the above down and prove it.
Absinthe became legal again, and is still affected by its “dangerous” reputation.
So some small batch distillers (like us for instance) now create our own versions for sale.
Try them. They are good, though ours is the best.