homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Your favorite drinks - under the microscope

Well, microscopic drinks are not really a thing, aren’t they? Not in the clubs where I go, anyway – we like our drinks large. But just stop a moment and think – how would your cocktail or beer look under a microscope? I’d wager this: it’s not like anything you thought. So, this awesome company […]

Mihai Andrei
August 11, 2015 @ 7:30 am

share Share

American Amber Ale

Well, microscopic drinks are not really a thing, aren’t they? Not in the clubs where I go, anyway – we like our drinks large. But just stop a moment and think – how would your cocktail or beer look under a microscope? I’d wager this: it’s not like anything you thought.

Bourbon

So, this awesome company called BevShots specializes on microscopic pictures of alcoholic drinks. How do they do this? The pictures were taken after the drinks have been crystallized on a slide and shot under a polarized light microscope. As the light refracts through the beverage crystals, the resulting photos have naturally magnificent colors and composition.

Bloody Mary.

You can buy the printed pictures on the website and use them in your room – this would certainly make for some interesting guest conversation. Just remember: decorate responsibly! To Lester Hutt, president of BevShots, it was just a matter of time before science turned into art.

“I thought to myself that this could do very well as a modern art line,” Hutt says of Davidson’s photographs. “What was nice about it was the images were already all taken; there’s no research that had to go into it.”

English Oatmeal Stout.

Champagne.

But it’s important to note that as you’re looking at these images, you aren’t viewing the actual molecular structure of the alcohol, but rather the crystallized form of the drink, which Davidson achieved by letting a drop of the liquid dry out on a microscope slide. For some drinks, like a piña colada or a margarita, with ingredients other than pure alcohol in them, the crystallization process was fairly straightforward, because the presence of various other particles (like sugar or salt) helped crystals form. But for whiskey or vodka, the process took quite a lot of time – from a few weeks to as much as six months.

Dry Martini.

Vodka.

“If you look at some of the hard liquors, the crystals on those just didn’t form as well as the margarita or martini, because there wasn’t as much dissolved in it to crystallize out. If you have very pure vodka, really all it’s going to be is ethanol and vodka,” Hutt explains. “Those crystals are not as well defined.”

Margarita.

White wine.

Just like snowflakes, no two drinks crystallize alike.

Who always shows up to end the night? Tequila.

Whiskey.

Belgian lambic beer.

 

 

 

share Share

How Hot is the Moon? A New NASA Mission is About to Find Out

Understanding how heat moves through the lunar regolith can help scientists understand how the Moon's interior formed.

America’s Favorite Christmas Cookies in 2024: A State-by-State Map

Christmas cookie preferences are anything but predictable.

The 2,500-Year-Old Gut Remedy That Science Just Rediscovered

A forgotten ancient clay called Lemnian Earth, combined with a fungus, shows powerful antibacterial effects and promotes gut health in mice.

Should we treat Mars as a space archaeology museum? This researcher believes so

Mars isn’t just a cold, barren rock. Anthropologists argue that the tracks of rovers and broken probes are archaeological treasures.

Hidden for Centuries, the World’s Largest Coral Colony Was Mistaken for a Shipwreck

This massive coral oasis offers a rare glimmer of hope.

This Supermassive Black Hole Shot Out a Jet of Energy Unlike Anything We've Seen Before

A gamma-ray flare from a black hole 6.5 billion times the Sun’s mass leaves scientists stunned.

Scientists Say Antimatter Rockets Could Get Us to the Stars Within a Lifetime — Here’s the Catch

The most explosive fuel in the universe could power humanity’s first starship.

Superflares on Sun-Like Stars Are Much More Common Than We Thought

Sun-like stars release massive quantities of radiation into space more often than previously believed.

This Wild Quasiparticle Switches Between Having Mass and Being Massless. It All Depends on the Direction It Travels

Scientists have stumbled upon the semi-Dirac fermion, first predicted 16 years ago.

New Study Suggests GPT Can Outsmart Most Exams, But It Has a Weakness

Professors should probably start changing how they evaluate students.