AlleyCat
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Ok. We (my SO, I, and a bunch of friends who we have as guests regularly) are having a debate about the effects/amounts of alcohol.
Between all of us, we most often drink either:
1) red wine
2) beer
3) vodka mixed with something (usually orange juice, cranberry, Sprite, etc.) It's never drunk straight-up.
There's other mixed drinks but they are far, far less frequent so I'll leave those out of this.
The guys think that red wine or beer are more potent than vodka because it's drunk straight out of the bottle or can. When they make a vodka-mixed drink, the ratio is usually about 1/10 vodka, 9/10 the "other" liquid as I said above. So, they think the amount of vodka's too little to be as potent as the wine or beer.
I think it's the other way around because I see vodka as a hard liquor versus what I see beer and wine as a "soft" liquor. Who's right?
Also, who is the more likely to feel the effects of the 3 choices above? Assume weight, age, gender, food consumption, all variables, etc. are the same for each person. Meaning I think that even if the guys were right that the 1/10 vodka ratio is less potent, vodka is still a hard liquor. So would the effects of the vodka-mixed drink be felt first before the wine or beer? Or am I making too big a deal of it being a hard liquor?
There's been no hard feelings, it's been a fun friendly debate. I'd just like to know if I have been spouting off a bunch of nonsense.
Between all of us, we most often drink either:
1) red wine
2) beer
3) vodka mixed with something (usually orange juice, cranberry, Sprite, etc.) It's never drunk straight-up.
There's other mixed drinks but they are far, far less frequent so I'll leave those out of this.
The guys think that red wine or beer are more potent than vodka because it's drunk straight out of the bottle or can. When they make a vodka-mixed drink, the ratio is usually about 1/10 vodka, 9/10 the "other" liquid as I said above. So, they think the amount of vodka's too little to be as potent as the wine or beer.
I think it's the other way around because I see vodka as a hard liquor versus what I see beer and wine as a "soft" liquor. Who's right?
Also, who is the more likely to feel the effects of the 3 choices above? Assume weight, age, gender, food consumption, all variables, etc. are the same for each person. Meaning I think that even if the guys were right that the 1/10 vodka ratio is less potent, vodka is still a hard liquor. So would the effects of the vodka-mixed drink be felt first before the wine or beer? Or am I making too big a deal of it being a hard liquor?
There's been no hard feelings, it's been a fun friendly debate. I'd just like to know if I have been spouting off a bunch of nonsense.
