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Żubrówka facts for kids

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Żubrówka
ZBG-700 B.jpg
A 700-millilitre (25 imp fl oz; 24 US fl oz) bottle of Żubrówka vodka
Type Flavored vodka
Manufacturer Polmos Białystok (Poland), Belalco (Belarus), Bulbash (Belarus), Minsk Kristall (Belarus) and others
Country of origin Poland
Introduced 16th century
Proof (US) 80

Żubrówka Bison Grass Vodka (Polish pronunciation: [ʐuˈbrufka]) is a flavored Polish vodka, which contains a bison grass blade (Hierochloe odorata) in every bottle. The Żubrówka brand name is also used on bottles of conventional vodka, labeled as Żubrówka Biała. An easy way to tell the difference is to look for the blade of grass in the bottle. The grass is sourced from the Białowieża Forest, hand-picked and dried under natural conditions.

Żubrówka ranks as the third or fourth best-selling vodka brand in the world (after Smirnoff, Absolut, and occasionally Khortytsia). Żubrówka is available in more than 80 markets worldwide.

Żubrówka is manufactured at the Polmos Białystok distillery. While it is claimed that the recipe dates back as far as the 14th century, commercial production of Bison Grass Vodka first began at the distillery in 1928. The brand is owned by Central European Distribution Corporation International, which was acquired by Roust International in 2013. Since 2022, it has been owned by the Maspex Group.

Etymology and brand

In Polish, the word turówka is officially used for bison grass, while the name żubrówka has been used in folk terminology and colloquially. The name comes from the term zubr (Polish: żubr, pronounced [ʐubr]), the word for the European bison in many Slavic languages and Baltic languages.

The brands Zubrovka and Żubrówka are registered by Sojuzplodoimport in Russia and Roust International in Poland.

United States variant

Before 2010 Żubrówka was illegal in the United States because the grass it is made from contains coumarin which the FDA classifies as a "substances generally prohibited from direct addition or use as human food." Since 2011 the manufacturers have made a version of Żubrówka from rye grain which aims to have a flavor similar to the original.

Methods of consumption

Żubrówka Bison Grass Vodka is usually served chilled on its own. An alternative is mixing it with apple juice, a drink known in Polish as tatanka or szarlotka (Polish for "apple cake"); known in the UK as a Frisky Bison, and in the US as a Polish Kiss. It is sometimes served over vanilla ice cream, and another common mixer is ginger ale. A Black Bison is żubrówka mixed with blackcurrant juice. A Żubrate is mixed with a mate based lemonade, such as Club Mate.

In popular culture

  • Żubrówka is mentioned in Moscow-Petushki, a pseudo-autobiographical postmodernist prose poem by Russian writer and satirist Venedikt Yerofeyev.
  • In a letter dated July 31, 1892, Anton Chekhov writes to Natalia Lintvaryova: "To begin with, thanks for the Żubrówka. I drank five shots of it one after the other and found it does wonders for cholera."
  • The bison emblem (Mylvivä härkä, "roaring bull") of Fighter Squadron 11, Lapland Air Command, Finnish Air Force, originated from the label of Polmos Żubrówka. It was introduced in 1941 as the emblem of PLeLv 46, on its Dornier 17 bombers, and later adopted by Fighter Squadron 11. Pilots of PLeLv 46 had seen the Żubrówka label while picking up Do 17 bombers from Warsaw.
  • Żubrówka figures prominently in the movie Suzhou River.
  • Żubrówka is featured in W. Somerset Maugham's novel The Razor's Edge (and in the 1984 film adaptation).
  • The name of the country Żubrówka in the movie The Grand Budapest Hotel is named after this style of vodka.
  • Navy SEAL Chris Kyle mentions it in his book American Sniper while working with the Polish GROM.
  • Żubrówka is shown on a table in the Magic City episode "Angels of Death" during a scene involving a conversation between Sy Berman (James Caan) and Ben Diamond (Danny Huston).

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Żubrówka para niños

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