The first thing you need to know about Absinthe is that it
is most strongly flavored of licorice/anise. Since your friend
explicitly asked for absinthe, he probably knows this, but
you might still discreetly enquire; if they want it just because
they "heard it gets you really high" or some such, but hate
licorice, then they probably won't really appreciate your gift.
There's also a lot of culture/mystique that has grown up
around absinthe: various ways of mixing it with water,
dissolving sugar into it, and so on. Absinthe is always
diluted with water for drinking. This causes it to louche:
turn cloudy as terpenes precipitate out. The end result
looks something like very watery milk.
If you're giving absinthe as a gift to new inductees into
the club, it would be nice to give it as "a set" that includes
at least an absinthe spoon (a slotted/pierced spoon upon
which one places a sugar cube through which you pour the
water.
There are also absinthe glasses. These contain a lower
area that serves as a convenient measure for the absinthe
and then a larger upper area which will contain the water
you add (to suit your taste).
Also, there are at least two main families of absinthe:
Regular and "Suisse" (Swiss). The Suisse stuff contains
much more alcohol.
Finally, absinthe varies in its legality. For a while, any
absinthe that contains wormwood (and its active ingredient
thujone) was strictly illegal in America. You could buy this
stuff called "Absente", but it's a far cry from the real deal.
You could also buy pastis (for example, Pernod "51" and
Ricard), and they taste a lot like absinthe but have none
of the thujone in them. They are an absolutely standard
after-dinner drink in France, and you'll hear them referred
to as a "Frenchman's milk" (owing to that louching effect I
described earlier). The laws now been changed and at least
some real absinthes are legal in the US, but I think the
high-test stuff is still dubious. Regardless, it's pretty
easy to obtain.
We buy ours from a German web business:
http://www.alandia.deWe've thoroughly enjoyed a bottle of their La Bleue
Clandestine, a non-green 106-proof Suisse absinthe
and have now begun a second bottle. We've also got a
bottle of Suisse Verte waiting in reserve; maybe we'll
crack it open and do a side-by-side taste test and
report back. Well, assuming we can still type. ;)
In any case, good gifting and if you like the flavor of
licorice and you drink alcohol, try a bottle for yourself!
Tesha