Ever wondered where wine dregs go on a plane? Flight attendants mix them to make ‘crew juice’ cocktail to get drunk
Cabin crew collect the dregs at the bottom of wine bottles on flights and save them for after they’ve landed
EVERYONE loves the free booze on planes… even flight attendants.
Cabin crew collect the dregs at the bottom of wine bottles on flights and save them for after they’ve landed.
The practice is so widespread that they even have a name for it, “crew juice.”
A flight attendant revealed the secret on the aviation forum , after a passenger asked why crew member was seen pouring wine into a plastic water bottle.
The traveller, who goes by the name of Rlbmorton, said: “On a flight from Dulles to Dubai while everyone was sleeping, a flight attendant was pouring red wine from one of the bottles into a plastic water bottle and then putting it away in a pocket.
“I was shocked. Is there any reason why a flight attendant might be doing this for a good reason?”
“I have heard everyone's different recipe for ‘The Perfect Crew Juice’.
“I'm not a big fan of the liquor on the aircraft, so I stick to my stuff in my liquor cabinet at home,
but what's in the perfect Crew Juice?”
One crew member called Nws2002 said: “There's a recipe? I've always just dumped it all in together.”
Another called Qqflyboy added: “Oh gosh, there are so many possibilities.
“I like the sangria version of crew juice: some red wine, orange juice and amaretto, fresh fruit and maybe some Sprite – all you do us dump your favourite ingredients in a bottle and let it sit for a while on ice.
“I've had some great crew juice, blah crew juice and undrinkable crew juice. It just all depends. Some days it works, some days it doesn't.”