This 400-year-old hangover remedy promises to keep you going this festive season
Too much drinking and food was often associated with Christmas festivities even back then and was known as surfeiting.
The festive season is here and people across the globe will definitely be looking forward to party hard during the holidays. But while revelling all night involving binge drinking may sound great, it’s likely that mornings will be plagued by hangovers which can spoil the fun.
But a 400-year-old recipe seems to hold the key to boozing all night without letting it leave you with a headache the next morning. The recipe for the so called surfeit water came as a popular indigestion remedy back in the 17th century.
Too much drinking and food was often associated with Christmas festivities even back then and was known as surfeiting. The recipe has two quarters of aqua vitae infused with damask rose water, white sugar, raisins and a substance produced in digestive system of whales called ambergris.
A guide from 1616 has the recipe for a frontlet infused with thyme, maidenhair and roses.