I tried it with a shot of Edinburgh Gin. The vapours were pleasantly warm, smooth and aromatic, and did reflect the gin, though the higher-toned floral and spice I could pick up by smelling a glass of it were less apparent.
Though the flavour hit was frustratingly brief it did deliver a light-headed sensation from the alcohol. The Vaportini undoubtedly works, but I found it made me thirsty. French military helicopter pilot Eric Gormand discovered smoking shisha pipes whilst on a tour of duty. After 10 years in the army he left to develop his own range of high-end pipes called Airdiems. Mostly, however, they vaporise cocktails: I tried a blend of Cointreau, Solerno blood orange liqueur and a drop of lemon essence oil.
The result was enjoyably fresh and citrusy, like smoking a clean, alcoholic cigar but with a lighter-bodied mouthfeel. The flavour is fleeting but when served alongside a Kiss Me Deadly cocktail in conventional liquid form mandarin and lavender shrub, gin, champagne the two complemented each other nicely.
David Edwards has made a bit of a name for himself inventing creative sprays, including those that all you too taste various drinks and foods like coffee and chocolate, without consuming any calories. His previous inventions have sold over , units. The product has seemingly endless applications, from sneaking in a quick drink at lunch for today's workaholic work force, to giving oneself a quick injection of 'liquid courage before approaching a stranger at a bar or party.
If the product ever makes it to America's shores it will surely mean an epidemic of spray overdoses at colleges across the country. Is it aware of the existence of this spray? What comments does it have? It has been reported that the creators intend to sell this product in the EU. When sprayed into the mouth this is said to produce a slight light-headedness which passes almost immediately, leaving users with the taste and memory of an intense sensation.
The aim was to provide the same agreeable sensation as comes with a sip of alcohol, but without the risk of becoming drunk. Because each spray of the device contains nearly 1, times less alcohol than a standard shot, it's said it would take hundreds of actuations to deliver the alcohol content found in a typical drink.
But while some reports have claimed WAHH Quantum Sensations spray actually gets users drunk for a few seconds before they sober up just as fast, the team behind it is keen to stress this is not actually the case.
It is precisely to avoid drunkenness. It stimulates the pleasure of alcohol without the alcohol. There is almost no alcohol in the product, yet the aerosol gives an instantaneous lightheadedness, slight, not disorienting, and is intended for anything but the experience of being drunk" There are two types of WAHH Quantum Sensations spray — the Flash, which offers a tonic flavor and a strong and instantaneous sensation, and the Demon, which is described as having a spicy, wooded and slightly fruity flavor and said to be best served vaporized on salty or sweet foods.
In describing WAHH Quantum Sensations, David Edwards said, "Its ability to deliver flavor with each actuation that grows in intensity with the vapor cloud of millions of tiny micro-droplets makes WAHH an exciting food spray for the future. Source: Lelaboratoire. LOG IN.
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