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Alcoholic proof

 

n. A term used to indicate the amount of alcohol in liquor or other spirits. In the United States, proof is exactly twice the percentage of alcohol. Therefore, a bottle of liquor labeled "86 Proof" contains 43 percent alcohol. proof v. To dissolve yeast in a warm liquid (sometimes with a small amount of sugar) and set it aside in a warm place for 5 to 10 minutes until it swells and becomes bubbly. This technique proves that the yeast is alive and active and therefore capable of leavening a bread or other baked good.

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proof spirit

alcoholometry Schemes for indicating alcohol content of a mixture by the comparison of relative volumes of alcohol to water (part of a complex scenario discussed under relative volumic mass). The term came from the use of a simple test to decide whether a liquor fell into the ‘strong’ category, which carried a higher excise duty than the ‘weak’ one. Floating (or not) on oil and igniting the mixture, else a rag soaked with it, were two early techniques, but the term ‘proof’ came from the historic test of mixing some of the liquor with a small amount of gunpowder and igniting; rapid burning was ‘proof’ of it being strongly alcoholic. Many scientific procedures have followed.
[Glazebrook R. T. (ed.) Dictionary of Applied Physics Vol. 3: Meteorology, Metrology and Measuring Apparatus (London: Macmillan, 1923)]

UK The value 100 and the term ‘proof spirit’ correspond to a mixture of ethyl alcohol and water, which, compared to an equal volume of distilled water, has 12/13 = 0.923 076 9~ the weight when both are weighed in air at 51°F (10.56~°C). That corresponds to a proportion of alcohol in the mixture of about 49.3% by weight, 57.1% by volume. For any other mixture, the proof figure is its relative proportion of alcohol by volume, multiplied by 100, i.e. its percentage alcohol divided by 57.1 and multiplied by 100 (= percentage multiplied by 1.753 5, pointing to 175.35 proof as the maximal figure, relating to pure alcohol). The terms ‘under proof’ and ‘over proof’ refer to the proof spirit of 100, and the figure applied relative to that, e.g. 35 under proof means (100 - 35) = 65 proof. The figures are expressed interchangeably as degrees proof (°) or as percentage proof (%), the latter sometimes producing a disconcerting impression when it exceeds 100%.

USA Twice the percentage alcohol by volume. The maximum is thus 200. The value may be expressed as above or below proof. As in the UK, percentage proof figures, being based on volume proportions, equal the change in overall volume that would produce a mixture of proof 100, a useful factor for proportional taxation.

Wikipedia: Alcoholic proof
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Alcoholic proof is a measure of how much alcohol (i.e., ethanol) is contained in an alcoholic beverage. The measure is commonly used in the United States, where it is defined as twice the percentage of alcohol by volume, and has caused some people to question the necessity of dual labeling.

The measurement of alcohol content and the statement of this content on a distilled beverage bottle label is regulated by law. The purposes of such regulations are to tax alcohol and to provide pertinent information to the consumer.

Contents

History

In the 18th century and until 1 January 1980, Britain defined alcohol content in terms of “proof spirit,” which was defined as the most dilute spirit that would sustain combustion of gunpowder.[1]The term originated in the 18th century, when payments to British sailors included rations of rum. To ensure that the rum had not been watered down, it was “proofed” by dousing gunpowder in it, then testing to see if the gunpowder would ignite. If it did not burn, the rum contained too much water and was considered to be “under proof.” A proven sample of rum was defined to be 100 degrees proof; this was later found to occur at 57.15% alcohol by volume, which is very close to a 4:7 ratio of alcohol to total amount of liquid. Thus, the definition amounted to declaring that (4÷7) × 175 = 100 degrees proof spirit.

From this it followed that pure, 100% alcohol had (7÷7) × 175 = 175 degrees proof spirit, and that 50% ABV had (3.5÷7) × 175 = 87.5 degrees proof spirit. To convert percentage of alcohol by volume to degrees proof spirit, multiply the percentage by 1.75.

In the United Kingdom, the proof-to-ABV ratio is 7:4. In the United States, it is 2:1.

From the 1740s until 1816, Customs and Excise and London brewers and distillers used Clarke’s hydrometer to measure degrees proof. Under the Hydrometer Act of 1818, the Sikes hydrometer was used to measure proof; it remained in use until 1980. The Customs and Excise Act of 1952 defined “spirits of proof strength” (i.e., proof spirits):

“Spirits shall be deemed to be at proof if the volume of the ethyl alcohol contained therein made up to the volume of the spirits with distilled water has a weight equal to that of twelve-thirteenths of a volume of distilled water equal to the volume of the spirits, the volume of each liquid being computed as at fifty-one degrees Fahrenheit.”[1]

Governmental regulation

European Union

The European Union follows recommendations of the International Organization of Legal Metrology (OIML). OIML's International Recommendation No. 22 (1973)[2] provides standards for measuring alcoholic strength by volume and by mass [weight]. A preferred method to be used is not stated in the document, but if alcoholic strength by volume is used, it must be expressed as a percentage (%) of total volume, and the water/alcohol mixture must have a temperature of 20°C when measurement is done.

The document does not address alcoholic proof and the labeling of bottles.

United States of America

In the United States, alcohol content is measured in terms of the percentage of alcohol by volume, (ABV). The Code of Federal Regulations (27 CFR [4-1-03 Edition] §5.37 Alcohol content) requires that liquor labels must state the percentage of alcohol by volume. The regulation permits, but does not require, a statement of the proof provided that it is printed close to the ABV number.[3]

Alcoholic proof is twice the percentage of alcohol by volume when measured at a temperature of 60°F (15.5°C). Consequently, 100-proof whiskey contains 50% alcohol by volume; 86-proof whiskey contains 43% alcohol.[4]

The terminology used in the United States is “n proof,” where n is a number — not “n degrees proof.” The term “degrees proof” is not used.

United Kingdom

Since 1 January 1980, the United Kingdom has used the ABV standard to measure alcohol content, as prescribed by the European Union.

“In common with other EC countries, on 1st January, 1980, Britain adopted the system of measurement recommended by the International Organisation of Legal Metrology, a body with most major nations among its members. The OIML system measures alcoholic strength as a percentage of alcohol by volume at a temperature of 20°C. It replaced the Sikes system of measuring the proof strength of spirits, which had been used in Britain for over 160 years.”[5]


Britain, which used to use the Sikes scale to display proof, now uses the European scale set down by the International Organization of Legal Metrology (IOLM). This scale, for all intents and purposes the same as the Gay-Lussac scale previously used by much of mainland Europe, was adopted by all the countries in the European Community in 1980. Using the IOLM scale or the Gay-Lussac scale is essentially the same as measuring alcohol by volume except that the figures are expressed in degrees, not percentages.”[6]

Alcohol content in beverage production

In beer, alcohol content is 3%–12% ABV (most often 4%–6%). Wines (excluding fortified wines) will have 9%–16% ABV (most often 12.5%–14.5%).

Fortified wines, such as port, madeira, marsala, sherry, and vermouth, have 15.5%–20% ABV. The wine is “fortified” by adding a distilled spirit (usually brandy) to it.

Stronger drinks (i.e., spirits) are distilled after fermentation to increase their alcohol content. These form a very broad category of beverages whose alcohol content can range from 20% to 95% ABV.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b How was whisky tested for proof strength? http://www.dcs.ed.ac.uk/home/jhb/whisky/swa/chap6.html
  2. ^ (PDF) International Recommendation No. 22 — Alcoholometry. p. 9. http://www.oiml.org/publications/R/R022-e75.pdf. 
  3. ^ (PDF) Title 27 Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Chapter 1, §5.37. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; Department of the Treasury. p. 62. http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/05dec20031700/edocket.access.gpo.gov/cfr_2003/aprqtr/pdf/27cfr5.37.pdf. 
  4. ^ How does U.S. proof strength compare with British and European strengths? http://www.dcs.ed.ac.uk/home/jhb/whisky/swa/chap6.html
  5. ^ How is the alcoholic strength of Scotch Whisky measured? http://www.dcs.ed.ac.uk/home/jhb/whisky/swa/chap6.html
  6. ^ Regan, Gary (2003). The Joy of Mixology. New York: Clarkson Potter. pp. 356–357. ISBN 0-609-60884-3. 

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Food Lover's Companion. Food Lover's Companion. Copyright © 2001 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Measures and Units. A Dictionary of Weights, Measures, and Units. Copyright © Donald Fenna 2002, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Alcoholic proof" Read more