Those who work in the world of food and booze tend to make a hobby of trafficking in weird hangover cures of questionable efficacy. I've been advised to chase a heavy night of drinking with restoratives including a single salted, baked potato; saltines and Gatorade; a beverage forged from an unholy alliance of Tabasco and Alka-Seltzer; and a cocktail of various off-label, mail-order dietary supplements combined with all the coffee you can stomach. I have yet to find a wholly workable solution.
But living as we do in an era when there's a special drink for every purpose, why rely on homemade remedies? There are drinks on the market to get you drunk, wired, drunk-wired, tired, ultra-hydrated, skinny, or buff. The final frontier of functional imbibing, if you will, is a beverage that has the power to actually stop hangovers. And you can bet there are people investing money into finding it.
Should I Be Drinking Mercy?
Should I Be Drinking Mercy?
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