im 99.9 percent sure you are mistaken.
Yes. This would be an issue, a very big issue.
When you purchase food products that are either labeled as bourbon , whiskey, baileys, jack Daniels, etc. they are not using actual alcohol products in most cases, they merely use a chemical compound that tastes similar to the desired liquor.
This is because the misconception posted by other users.
When food, with alcohol is brought to temp, cooked, baked, etc some alcohol dissipates, but its a lot less than you would think. we studied this in school and I could dig up some facts, but here is a quick link.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooking_with_alcohol
- alcohol added to boiling liquid and removed from heat: 85% alcohol retained
- alcohol flamed: 75% alcohol retained
If you sold a product that had a very miniscule amount of alcohol in it, you would be sued out of this world.
isn't that Cardbeourdeaux? That I get.
artificial tequia? still wondering???? is there such a thing? Inquiring minds want to know~
not really, tequila has a lot of legal backing to protect its name, and where its sold / purchased AKA mexico.
You cant make tequila and sell it from the USA, etc.
"Mexican laws state that tequila can be produced only in the state of Jalisco and limited regions in the states of
Guanajuato,
Michoacán,
Nayarit, and
Tamaulipas.Mexico is granted international right to the word "tequila". The United States officially recognizes that spirits called "tequila" can only be produced in Mexico, although by agreement bulk amounts can be shipped to be bottled in the U.S"