Bold prediction: In 2015, we won鈥檛 drink our liquor. We鈥檒l inhale it.
Julie Palmer got the idea for the 鈥攁 device that vaporizes spirits鈥攚hile traveling in Helsinki. A friend introduced her to the Finnish tradition of dumping vodka over the coals of a sauna, and she found the effect intoxicating. So Palmer decided to bring the tradition back to the United States, but in a way that involved less awkward sauna nudity.
With the help of her father, a retired engineer, Palmer designed and patented the Vaportini, a pint-glass-like base with an orb perched on top.

Drinkers, or inhalers, pour up to an ounce and a half of liquor (anything 60 proof or higher will work) into the glass globe and then light a tea candle beneath it. As the liquid warms, the alcohol vaporizes, letting you 鈥渟ip鈥 the fumes through the glass straw.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very social,鈥 says Dustin Carpenter, the general manager of , a Chicago restaurant that offers Vaportinis at both of its locations. 鈥淧eople order it with dessert and pass it around. It鈥檚 a conversation piece.鈥
According to Carpenter, the technique lets the liquor鈥檚 flavors shine; he recommends using it with infused vodkas or nuanced scotches. Palmer likes to mix dried cherries with whiskey and let both flavors mist into her mouth.
If heating alcohol over an open flame sounds dangerous, Palmer says she and her father did extensive safety testing. 鈥淯nless you used something like Everclear, something that鈥檚 like 100 proof, it was really hard to get it to catch on fire.鈥
The Vaportini does have one other benefit: Sipping air has almost no calories. But it also has the drawback of metabolizing very fast. 鈥淚t hits you quickly, but you鈥檙e not drunk for very long,鈥 Palmer says. 鈥淭he biggest complaint we鈥檝e had has been that you don鈥檛 get drunk enough.鈥