top of page

Available Now in our Store

The Paranormal Reserve is a collection of 666 bottles. Each was rested in the Occult Museum in Monroe, Connecticut, which holds the personal collection of Ed and Lorraine Warren – renowned demonologists and paranormal investigators.

The Museum is now closed to the public, but was opened for this limited edition Reserve.

Among the artifacts in the museum are a human skull said to be used for black magic rituals, psychic photographs, and most famously, the original, infamous Annabelle Doll that was inhabited in the 1970s by a demonic entity that came in the guise of the spirit of a young, deceased girl. After a string of sinister and terrifying occurrences with the doll’s original owner, the Warrens took her into their care. While she has remained sealed in a protective case since, her confines were opened over the course of the Paranormal Reserve’s time in the Museum.

Each bottle includes gloves for handling and protection, an authenticity card, as well as a bespoke wooden case. The case lid functions as a Ouija board, with a Ouija planchette also included. If you do not wish to store the Paranormal Reserve in your home and are interested in a complimentary storage solution, please contact our Paranormal Reserve Concierge at info@harridanvodka.com.

This limited edition collection of Harridan Vodka was rested for one month in two of America’s most haunted hotels: the Anderson Hotel in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky and the Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Arkansas.

Consisting of 350 hand-numbered bottles split evenly between the two locations, this Reserve will not return once it is sold out.

Each Paranormal Reserve set includes:
• A bottle of 88-proof Harridan Vodka hand-numbered with the location in which it rested
• A bespoke wood case carved by a local NY woodworker
• Exclusive hotel accessories for the bottle’s corresponding location (keychain, pen, and hotel pad)
• Gloves for safe handling
• An authenticity card


About the Anderson Hotel:
Built in the 1930’s on the site of its predecessor, the Central Hotel, which burnt down around the turn of the 19th century, the Anderson has a grisly history. At least 13 deaths have occurred on the premises from 1965 until the late 80's when it closed its doors as a hotel. It has had such violent paranormal activity that it was even closed to investigators after a cameraman on Paranormal Lockdown was mysteriously bitten by an unidentified entity.

We don’t have any products to show here right now.

bottom of page