There are two main types of Chartreuse:
Other kinds of Chartreuse include:
The beverage became popular quickly, and in 1764 the monks adapted the elixir recipe to make what is now called Green Chartreuse. In 1793, the monks were expelled from France and this resulted in the interruption of the manufacture of Chartreuse. Several years later they were allowed to return to their monastery. In 1838, the monks developed a sweeter, 40% alcoholic (80° proof) liqueur, colored with saffron and sold as Yellow Chartreuse. The monks were again expelled from the monastery by French law in 1903, and their real property, including the distillery, was confiscated by the government.
The monks, however, spirited away the recipe for Chartreuse. Finding refuge in Tarragona, Spain, they began producing the liqueur in that location, with the same label, but with an additional label added which said Liqueur fabriquée à Tarragone par les Pères Chartreux ("liquor manufactured in Tarragona by the Carthusian Fathers").
At the same time in Voiron, the French government tried and failed repeatedly to reproduce the recipe. The venture was a disaster. By 1927 the production company was facing bankruptcy, and its shares became nearly worthless. A group of local businessmen in Voiron bought all the shares at this low price, and sent them as a gift to the monks in Tarragona.
Being now again in possession of the distillery, the Carthusian brothers returned to the monastery with the tacit approval of the French government, and began to produce Chartreuse once again. Despite the eviction law, when a mudslide destroyed the distillery in 1935, the French government assigned Army engineers to relocate and rebuild it near a location in Voiron where the monks had previously set up a distribution point. After World War II, the government lifted the expulsion order, making the Carthusian brothers once again legal French residents.
Today the liqueurs are produced in Voiron using the herbal mixture prepared by three monks at the Grande Chartreuse. Other related alcoholic beverages are manufactured in the same distillery (e.g. Génépi). The exact recipes for all forms of Chartreuse remain trade secrets and are known at any given time only to the three monks who prepare the herbal mixture.
In the short story "Reginald on Christmas Presents" (contained in the 1904 collection Reginald by Edwardian English author Saki), the title character declares that "people may say what they like about the decay of Christianity; the religious system that produced green Chartreuse can never really die."
In the Poppy Z. Brite novel Lost Souls, a band of vampire revellers drank Chartreuse for its potency and characteristic green colour.
Hunter S. Thompson mentions green Chartreuse in several of the stories collected in Generation of Swine: Tales of Shame and Degradation in the '80s. Curiously, the characters seem to be drawn to it in moments of great desperation shortly before death.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's most famous novel The Great Gatsby, Gatsby shares a bottle of Chartreuse with Nick, the narrator.
In Evelyn Waugh's famous novel Brideshead Revisited, Anthony and the narrator Charles Ryder drink Chartreuse after dinner. Anthony muses that it's "Real G-g-green Chartreuse, made before the expulsion of the monks. There are five distinct tastes as it trickles over the tongue. It is like swallowing a sp-spectrum."
Rubén Darío speaks of Chartreuse in his Parisian Story The Nymph. ¨It was the hour of Chartreuse,¨ he says, ¨...of the liquid emeralds of mint.¨
The Auberge of the Flowering Hearth by Roy Andries De Groot is the history of Chartreuse as well as a special inn in the valley below the original monastery.
Chartreuse (Likör) | Chartreuse (liqueur) | Chartreuse (Likör) | Chartreuse (likeur) | Chartreuse (likier) | Chartreuse
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"Chartreuse (liqueur)".
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