Author, with sample.
Author, with sample.

I come from a family of drinkers who are also medical professionals. With this lineage, you might think I’d have some expertise curing hangovers, and yet, I have never encountered a truly successful hangover cure in all of my drinking life. Unless you have access to a 24/7 saline drip, or you’ve managed to unearth the best pickle juice in existence, they just don’t work. So when a sample box of Never Too Hungover, a single-shot product claiming to prevent hangovers, arrived at The Stranger HQ, I had my suspicions.

According to the product’s website, “a primary cause of hangovers is the result of a toxin called acetaldehyde. Never Too Hungover helps neutralize this toxin and supports the body to defuse it, therefore helping reduce the effects of a hangover. Never Too Hungover also rehydrates the body and restores vital nutrients, so it provides benefits even if you’re not trying to help prevent or recover from a hangover.” Okay, sure, thrill me with SAT words. But does it work? I decided to find out. By getting drunk. For science!

First impressions: The color is a fleshy pinkish-red, not unlike when you puke Gatorade. The whole bottle reeks of Fruity Pebbles diarrhea.

5:23pm — Dark Bar

I chug the whole thing in one go. It tastes like Sweetarts. Or Tylenol Chewables. Or if you used cotton candy like a Brillo pad and then drank your dishwashing liquid. It’s powdery and florid, and I feel like my mouth is vibrating a little bit.

5:27pm — First drink: Rhubarb and Orange-Infused Gin

I feel like this taste is going to be a part of my body forever. Maybe that lingering taste serves as a deterrent to drinking, and that’s how you prevent a hangover? What a reach-around.

I also feel like I’m developing more mucus. Or maybe I’m just developing an increased sense of paranoia about my body now that this “great berry taste” is inside me.

6:20pm — Second drink: Spokane Hathaway at Tavolata

My dad is in town and he’s taking my sister and me out to fancy dinner. I happily nosedive into this drink and wait patiently for him to drop his usual bomb of whatever he’s into these days.

Yahtzee: my dad declares he is really into evolution, and now he’s telling me about the fossils he’s purchased this year.

6:51pm — Dinner: Lamb gnocchi; third drink: Whatever Dude

Now he’s telling me how to buy a dinosaur.

Apparently most assembled dinosaurs are 85 percent real, and the rest of their skeleton is assembled from a bone mesh cobbled together hot dog-style from other miscellaneous fossils, dead animals, and random bonery.

He’s thinking he’ll casually mount a dinosaur above his mantle—a Psittacosaurus, to be exact. Its name means “parrot lizard,” which becomes obvious when we look it up on Wikipedia.

8:08pm — Fourth drink: Elk Cove Pinot Grigio at the Triple Door

Now we’re discussing what you’d have to give up in your personal life to work for the CIA.

8:25pm — Fifth drink: Elk Cove Pinot Grigio

My sister has started to gently cry as Mackenzie Mercer of The Young Evils sings Patsy Cline’s “He Called Me Baby.”

I drunk-text Mercer’s husband when I realize he’s hosting the show I’m at.

9:09pm — Sixth drink: Elk Cove Pinot Grigio

The show is now over, but we’ve reached the part of the evening when my dad asks about our love lives, so that leads us to:

10:35pm — Seventh drink: Pink Skies at Night at the Dunbar Room

This is a cocktail to be savored, as is pretty much everything at this bar, but we’ve started talking about my workload, which again leads us to:

11:09pm — Eighth drink: Maple Bourbon Old Fashioned

It has a freeze-dried kiwi in it? Or like a calcified pansy? Do rich people eat different fruits than I do?

12:01am — Home

The night ends with me googling “good lunch?” while my sister peels our cats apart and we listen to the samples a publicist emailed me of Molly Ringwald’s jazz album and eat a birthday cake-flavored ice cream sandwich.

I drank maybe two or three glasses of water throughout the night, which is less than half what I would have normally imbibed with that amount of alcohol.

9:37am — Home

I wake up and feel… fine? No headache, no nausea, but a little shaky and tired. Definitely no tangible hangover.

So I guess it works, which shits all over my initial thoughts. If it weren’t $23.99 for six bottles on Amazon, I would probably try it again. Now that I’m no longer college-age and my body has decided to lean in to hangover territory, I am tempted, but maybe I’ll save it for the holidays. You know, for when my dad tells me about his new hobby, Segway polo.

Kim Selling is the digital producer for The Stranger's streaming platform, as well as the ex-music calendar editor for Stranger EverOut, and The Stranger's lead critic of music industry sexism, flavored...