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what does it mean on a bottle of spirit when it says .... proof. & how can you get over 100% proof
ie, i had some vodka that was 176 proof
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Proof is another (older) measure of the strength of an alcoholic liquid.
It had its origins in days when a simple test was needed that the liquor did indeed contain a *correct* measure (or more) of alcohol. And it was indeed a simple test.
Some of the liquor was poured over a little gunpowder and ignited. If the alcohol content was adequate, then it would burn 'just right' with a steady blue flame and eventually ignite the gunpowder. If there was insufficient alcohol then it would fizzle out and the gunpowder would be too wet to burn. The 'just right' condition 'proved' the liquor and it was declared to be '100% proof'.
In the US a very simple relationship is defined between 'proof' and %AbV. It is that
proof = 2 � %AbV
So, 180 proof (US) = 90 %AbV.
It the UK it was laid down by an Act of Parliament in 1816 that "a quantity of 100% proof liquor would have the same weight as 12/13 ths of the same volume of pure water at 51�F." (That is twelve thirteenths)
So,
100 proof (UK) = 57.06 %AbV
200 proof (US) = 100 %AbV = 175.25 proof (UK)
100 proof (US) = 50 %AbV = 87.6 proof (UK)
At one time (in the days of sailing ships, cannons and gunpowder) the makers of Plymouth Gin distilled a special gin for the Royal Navy. It was 57%AbV or 100% proof. Why?
In order to keep it secure it was stored in the magazine close by the gunpowder. So, even if it leaked and wetted the gunpowder, at 100% proof the gunpowder would still explode.
Though that need has been long gone, they still market the stuff!
In the metric system, it is very convenient to know that the %AbV multiplied by 10 immediately tells us how many millilitres of alcohol there are in 1 litre of the mixture. But other measures are much used and the arithmetic is not so easy.
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