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Taking a Shot in the Dark

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“Odorless, colorless and flavorless alcohol” paraphrases the definition of vodka. So what’s this black stuff in my martini?

It’s Blavod, a new triple-distilled and double-filtered black vodka that gets its color from an infusion of black catechu, a flavorless Burmese herb reputed to have aphrodisiac qualities, which makes for some pretty exotic-looking cocktails.

At Flints, a stylish new supper club in Santa Monica, bartender Matthew Goldberg, a veteran of New York’s Asia de Cuba, has put Blavod to use in a variety of libations both classic and new. The Full Moon Martini features a glass of the dark liquor splashed with Vermouth and a pearl onion jutting out on a toothpick. The garnish looks like a full moon hovering over a black sea. And the Moonglow, essentially a Cape Cod, floats Blavod over cranberry juice and soda, creating a two-layered, mild-flavored cocktail that seems to glow from within. The Bumblebee is a martini with a large lemon curl, a Black Eye is a straight shot, and Black Ice is simply Blavod on the rocks.

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“It’s the next step in vodka,” Goldberg says. “It’s really different, mild and clean.” He ranks it with Ketel One and Stoli, but below his favorite super-premiums, Belvedere, Chopin and Sundsvall (a new Swedish super-premium vodka made from a blend of wheat and barley). For Flints owner Dodd Harris, Blavod is a natural in the City of Angels.

“People wear black in this town--it’s the color they use to project their power. Consequently, the black vodka fits their needs.”

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