What percentage is Tamova vodka?
At £10.29 a bottle, Aldi’s triple-distilled Tamova Vodka was the standout bargain of my recent tasting, despite its miserly 37.5% abv.
Is Tamova vodka any good?
Aldi Australia’s $29.99 Tamova Vodka has won the Master medal at The Vodka Masters 2020 spirits contest in the UK. The quadruple distilled alcohol has a ‘sweet, clean and lifted’ taste and is ideal for making refreshing beverages at home, such as martinis or cosmopolitans.
Who makes Aldi Tamova vodka?
IWSC
Essential Drinks Company | Aldi Tamova Vodka | IWSC.
Is Tamova vodka Russian?
Crafted with the finest Russian grain and pure natural water, this 7 times filtered vodka is a superbly smooth spirit with a distinctive Russian taste.
What is Tamova vodka made from?
The Tamova Vodka is a premium vodka produced from the finest grain and triple distilled. It’s a smooth, rounded vodka with a slight sweetness at the end. The triple distilled spirit is reduced to bottling strength and using demineralised water and then filtered twice before bottling.
How much is the cheapest vodka?
The Best Cheap Vodkas Under $20 Right Now
- Prairie Organic Vodka.
- Finlandia.
- New Amsterdam.
- Wódka.
- Råvo.
- Tito’s Handmade Vodka.
- Svedka.
- Smirnoff.
Is Aldi vodka nice?
99 vodka from Aldi is being praised by shoppers, who say it boasts the exact same taste as its premium rival Grey Goose. It has 36 five-star reviews online from happy customers, who say the spirit is ‘Grey Goose without the price tag’.
What is Tamova?
The vodka is designed to be mixed with fresh fruits and herbs, such as berries, apple, lime and mint. Not just a special buy, Tamova vodka is part of the core Aldi range and is available to purchase year-round for the bargain price of $29.
What vodka is the strongest?
Spirytus Vodka
With a whopping 95% abv, Spirytus Vodka is the strongest commercially-available spirit in the world.
Does vodka go bad?
Does Vodka Go Bad? No, vodka really doesn’t go bad. If the bottle stays unopened, vodka shelf life is decades. After about 40 or 50 years, an unopened bottle of vodka may have lost enough flavor and alcohol content—due to a slow, consistent oxidation—to be considered expired.