Assuming you mean pure alcohol, there are approximately 164.1 calories in a US fluid ounce. However, even assuming you could obtain it, you should never drink pure alcohol as the danger of poisoning is very great. Alcohol can kill.
120 calories in 1 ounce of gin regargless of proof.
100-200 calories depending on the proof of the scotch. Pure alcohol is 154 calories per ounce.
It depends on the proof of the vodka. For a 1.5 ounce shot here are the calories: 70 proof: 85 calories 80 proof: 100 calories 90 proof: 115 calories 100 proof: 130 calories
For 80 proof whiskey, there are 64 calories per ounce. You can find the calories and nutritional values of any and all foods at the website below. Scotch won't work as a keyword; use whiskey or alcohol. Alcohol will bring up dozens of results including whiskey, beer, wines, and some mixed drinks.
It depends on the proof of the vodka. For a 1.5 ounce shot here are the calories: 70 proof: 85 calories 80 proof: 100 calories 90 proof: 115 calories 100 proof: 130 calories
1.5 ounce shot of vodka (or other liquor i.e. tequila, rum) at 80 proof has 100 calories. At 100 proof a shot has 124 calories 80 proof vodka contains 40% alcohol 1 gram of alcohol has 7 calories (7 calories per gram) 1 shot is about 45 milliliters by volume A shot of 80 proof vodka would consist of 18 milliliters of alcohol (40%) and 27 milliliters of water (60%) 1 ml of alcohol weighs .8 grams 1 shot would contain about 14.4 grams of alcohol (18 X 0.8) by weight 14.4 grams X 7 calories per gram =100.8 calories in one shot of 80 proof vodka So lets just say 100 CALORIES per SHOT
Do the calories in vodkareally mess up your diet?Well, they're not that bad actually. A normal 1.5 fluid ounce shot of 80 proof vodka contains around 98 calories. About the same as a 4 fluid ounce glass of white wine.The problem with vodka is that you usually drink it with a tonic or coke and they pile on the calories. A tonic adds about 80 calories, a coke about 50 calories and a bitter lemon about 80 calories.If you really want to pile on the calories try a vodka Martini. 3 fluid ounces of vodka and a splash of Martini will rack up 210 calories, including the olive of course.1 oz of vodka contains 64 calories
from 65 to 75 calories depending on the proof
Grain Alcohol has 190 kcal per 1 ounce serving. http://www.drinksmixer.com/desc494.html
like most distilled spirits it varies between 80 and 150 calories per ounce {shot}. *Note: a jigger (shot glass) is 1 1/2 ounces, there is often a line etched into it at the 1 ounce mark.
It depends on the proof of the vodka. For a 1.5 ounce shot here are the calories: 70 proof: 85 calories 80 proof: 100 calories 90 proof: 115 calories 100 proof: 130 calories 80 proof vodka contains 40% alcohol 1 gram of alcohol has 7 calories (7 calories per gram) 1 shot is about 45 milliliters by volume A shot of 80 proof vodka would consist of 18 milliliters of alcohol (40%) and 27 milliliters of water (60%) 1 ml of alcohol weighs .8 grams 1 shot would contain about 14.4 grams of alcohol (18 X 0.8) by weight 14.4 grams X 7 calories per gram =100.8 calories in one shot of 80 proof vodka So lets just say 100 CALORIES per SHOT
Generally your high-proof drinks will provide the most calories on an ounce-for-ounce basis.Calories are derived from the grams of fat, protein, carbohydrate and alcohol present in a particular food. The following table provides the calories associated with each food component:Calories Component9 Fat7 Alcohol4 Protein4 CarbohydrateSo, if we are looking at just calories derived from alcohol on an ounce-for-ounce basis, then everclear or corn liquor (generally around 95% alcohol by volume) would have the most (about 190 calories).To compare, an ounce of sugar (or bread) has about 110 calories and an ounce of oil has about 250 calories.At room temperature, a little over two ounces of sugar may be dissolved in one ounce of water (making 240 calories), so one would think that a high-alcohol and high-sugar drink would have the most calories; however, the more alcohol in the drink, the less sugar can be dissolved, reducing the impact (on both counts).