Texas air traveler goes viral when he brings his own alcohol through TSA
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Texas air traveler goes viral when he brings his own alcohol through TSA

A recent travel trend sees people drinking an alcoholic cocktail before boarding but not paying for it at the bar.

Social media creators seem to be turning into airport mixologists, mixing their own espresso martinis before boarding the plane.

Some travelers promote themselves using a variety of shooters, mostly vodka and coffee liqueur. They added it to the espresso they bought from Starbucks at the airport.

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Alexis Olive, who lives in Texas, is one of the users who shared her video showing her homemade cocktail tip on Instagram. The footage has been viewed more than 10 million times.

Texas woman makes espresso martini at the airport

Alexis Olive went viral on social media for showing users a travel hack to create cocktails at the airport using your own shooters. (Alexis Olive/@alexis.eats.texas)

“Espresso martini under $10 – mini vodka, Baileys or Kahlua or both. This is the airport, there are no rules. So I ordered two shots of iced espresso from the stars,” Olive captioned her video.

Speaking to Fox News Digital, Olive said that she was inspired by her mother while shooting this video and that her mother “has been using the same method for a long time.”

Olive said she is an avid traveler and even met with various TSA agents, who confirmed that you can bring small, shooter bottles through TSA as long as they all fit into a one-liter plastic bag.

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Many social media users saw the hack as something they wanted to try, but others questioned how Olive was able to obtain the hitmen through the TSA and whether she could bring the spiked coffee. in his flight.

Woman adds Bailey's to airport coffee

Travelers add vodka and coffee liqueur to the espresso they purchase at the airport to make an espresso martini. (Alexis Olive/@alexis.eats.texas)

The amount of alcohol in a shooter or pinch bottle is 1.7 oz; This is less than the amount allowed in a carry-on bag containing less than 24% alcohol by volume (ABV), or 48 proof, per TSA rules.

The TSA’s website also says you can keep anything from 24-70% ABV in your carry-on, as long as it’s 3.4 oz or less.

“The 311 rule applies, and that’s 3.4 ounces in a one-quart bag, and that’s the liquids rule. As long as it meets the liquids rule security requirements, it can definitely pass through the checkpoint,” a TSA spokesperson told Fox News. Digital.

“A lot of airlines ban outside alcohol, and that’s due to the trend of unruly passengers, which unfortunately has really kind of gone away.”

“Airlines, and indeed all of us (in the transport sector), have worked hard to curb the unruly passenger element,” the spokesman added.

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If TSA agents allow passengers to bring a shooter-sized gun a bottle of alcohol According to many users asking questions on social media through security, the question is: “Where can you drink?”

Air passenger spiked his coffee with vodka at the airport viral hack

The debate on the internet is whether you’re allowed to wander around the airport terminal with your homemade cocktails. (Alexis Olive/@alexis.eats.texas)

“After receiving a lot of comments and discussion about the video, I did extensive research and nowhere does it say you’re not allowed to drink alcohol in the airport. You’re now allowed to drink alcohol on the plane. It’s illegal,” Olive said.

Thrillist, an online media site covering travel, reported in 2018 that there is no “master database of all airports” where you can grab a drink or make your own and then wander around freely.

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“But our research shows that Nashville International, Midway and O’Hare in Chicago, George Bush Intercontinental and William P Hobby in Houston, Fort Lauderdale International, Las Vegas McCarran International, Miami International and Tampa International allow you to purchase a drink. “Enjoy it wherever you are, even at your door,” he said.

woman suggests airport cocktail hack

TSA allows flyers to bring alcohol in carry-on luggage if the alcohol is less than 24 percent and up to 70 percent ABV, but the liquid must be under 3.4 oz. (Alexis Olive/@alexis.eats.texas)

“But generally, airports have marked areas where people can enjoy adult beverages purchased from one of the small kiosks or poured into a plastic cup at a bar,” the site continued.

There doesn’t seem to be a universal policy followed by all airports regarding where you can drink in the airport an alcoholic beverage, and some people believe it may be due to open container laws in the state.

While being able to drink freely at the airport is debatable, it is universally known that you cannot consume your own alcohol during your flight.

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“Note: It is only illegal to consume alcohol on the plane, not while waiting at the gate,” Olive said. his viral video.

The TSA’s website urges travelers to leave drinking alcohol while flying to professionals.

“Our airline partners and the FAA ask that you not drink your own alcohol while flying,” the government website reads.

The Code of Federal Regulations states, “No person may drink alcoholic beverages on board an aircraft unless the certificate holder operating the aircraft offers the beverage to him/her.”

airport mixed espresso martini

Airport terminals appear to be the newest hotspot for mixologists, who concoct their own cocktails from nips they bring with them through the TSA and coffee drinks purchased from an airport café. (Alexis Olive/@alexis.eats.texas)

While many social media users agreed that you should finish a cocktail before boarding, others took a risk by bringing one with them. drunk coffee on board.

However, passengers can be fined for illegally drinking their own alcohol during the flight.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has levied charges ranging from approximately $8,000 to $40,000, with surcharges, against pilots found to have illegally consumed their own alcohol on a flight in 2021, according to the FAA’s website.

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“I think the reason this video was so successful and went viral was because a lot of people didn’t know that you could bring these mini bottles of alcohol with you to the airport, but I wanted to make that clear for yourself on the plane. Alcohol is illegal,” said Olive.

“Just one or two (shots) before a flight probably won’t get most people overly intoxicated, so if you need it to relax or calm your nerves (it will help). there is anxiety while flying.”

“It’s not really that much of a hack, but I still think people don’t know about it,” he added.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the FAA for comment.