Gin
Gin is a clear spirit defined by the dominant flavor of juniper berries, combined with a wide array of botanicals that give each expression its unique character. Originating in the Netherlands in the 17th century as genever, gin evolved into the London Dry style in England during the 18th century, establishing the template for the spirit's modern form. Today, gin is produced worldwide, from traditional London distilleries to contemporary craft operations in the United States, Spain, and Japan, each bringing regional botanicals and production philosophies to the category.
The spirit's versatility comes from its production method: neutral grain spirit is redistilled with botanicals, either through vapor infusion or direct maceration. While juniper must be present and perceptible, distillers add coriander, citrus peel, angelica root, orris root, cardamom, and dozens of other ingredients to create flavor profiles ranging from austere and piney to floral, citrus-forward, or vegetal. This botanical flexibility has allowed gin to remain relevant across centuries, adapting to changing tastes while maintaining its essential identity as a juniper-forward spirit.
Gin is a clear spirit defined by the dominant flavor of juniper berries, combined with a wide array of botanicals that give each expression its unique character.
Read more about Gin
Gin is a clear spirit defined by the dominant flavor of juniper berries, combined with a wide array of botanicals that give each expression its unique character. Originating in the Netherlands in the 17th century as genever, gin evolved into the London Dry style in England during the 18th century, establishing the template for the spirit's modern form. Today, gin is produced worldwide, from traditional London distilleries to contemporary craft operations in the United States, Spain, and Japan, each bringing regional botanicals and production philosophies to the category.
The spirit's versatility comes from its production method: neutral grain spirit is redistilled with botanicals, either through vapor infusion or direct maceration. While juniper must be present and perceptible, distillers add coriander, citrus peel, angelica root, orris root, cardamom, and dozens of other ingredients to create flavor profiles ranging from austere and piney to floral, citrus-forward, or vegetal. This botanical flexibility has allowed gin to remain relevant across centuries, adapting to changing tastes while maintaining its essential identity as a juniper-forward spirit.
Production Methods and Style Categories
London Dry gin, despite its geographic name, is a production standard rather than a protected origin designation. It requires that all botanicals be added during distillation, with no artificial flavors or colors and minimal sugar content allowed. This method produces a clean, dry spirit where juniper and supporting botanicals are in sharp focus. The style originated in England during the 19th century when column stills enabled the production of higher-proof, more neutral base spirits, allowing botanical flavors to shine without competing against heavy grain character.
Plymouth gin holds Protected Geographical Indication status and must be produced in Plymouth, England. Historically, it featured a slightly sweeter, more earthy profile than London Dry, though modern production has narrowed the distinction. Old Tom gin represents a sweeter, fuller-bodied style popular in the 19th century, often sweetened with sugar or licorice. Contemporary gin, sometimes called New Western or New American, takes a more liberal approach to botanical balance, often featuring juniper as a supporting rather than dominant note. These gins emphasize unusual botanicals like rose, cucumber, tea, or regional flora, reflecting modern distillers' experimental approach to the category.
Botanical Selection and Flavor Architecture
Juniper berries provide gin's signature piney, resinous backbone, but the spirit's complexity comes from the interplay of supporting botanicals. Coriander seed adds citrus and spice notes, while angelica root and orris root contribute earthy, floral undertones and help bind other flavors together. Citrus peels—lemon, orange, grapefruit—provide brightness and lift. Cardamom, grains of paradise, and cubeb berries add warm spice, while more unusual additions like lavender, rose petals, or cucumber create distinctive regional signatures.
The selection and proportion of botanicals define a distillery's house style. Some producers use fewer than ten botanicals, allowing each to be clearly perceived. Others employ twenty or more ingredients, creating layered complexity where individual elements are harder to isolate. Distillers often separate botanicals into groups based on their extraction characteristics: hardy spices and roots may be macerated in the base spirit before distillation, while delicate florals and citrus are suspended in vapor baskets to extract volatile aromatics without harsh oils. This technical approach to botanical balance distinguishes serious gin production from simple flavoring.
How to Evaluate and Select Gin
When evaluating gin, start by assessing juniper presence. In traditional London Dry expressions, juniper should be immediately apparent on the nose and palate, with a piney, slightly resinous quality. Supporting botanicals should be distinct but balanced, not overwhelming the juniper core. Contemporary gins may present juniper more subtly, with other botanicals taking lead roles—this is a stylistic choice rather than a flaw, but the juniper should still be perceptible to qualify as gin under most regulations.
Proof is a significant variable. Most gins are bottled between 80 and 94 proof, with higher-proof expressions offering more intense botanical flavor and better performance in cocktails where dilution occurs. Navy Strength gins, typically bottled at 114 proof or higher, deliver concentrated botanical character and historical authenticity—the term originates from British Royal Navy requirements that spirits be provable as genuine even after gunpowder contamination. For mixing, higher-proof gins maintain flavor presence when combined with tonic, vermouth, or citrus. For sipping, lower-proof expressions may offer more approachable balance, though this is largely a matter of preference and context.
Regional Production and Terroir
While gin can be produced anywhere, certain regions have developed distinctive approaches. English distilleries, particularly in London, maintain close ties to traditional London Dry methods, producing gins with clear juniper focus and restrained botanical complexity. Scotland has emerged as a significant gin producer, with distilleries often incorporating local botanicals like heather, thistle, or Scottish juniper. Spanish gin production has grown dramatically, with producers favoring Mediterranean botanicals like olive, citrus, and herbs, often presented in ornate bottles marketed for premium service.
American craft distilleries have embraced gin as a category that allows for immediate revenue while whiskey ages, but many have developed serious gin programs featuring regional botanicals. West Coast producers incorporate Douglas fir, sage, or citrus reflecting local terroir. Midwestern distillers use grain neutral spirits from local sources, sometimes emphasizing the base spirit's character alongside botanicals. This regional variation, combined with the category's technical accessibility and rapid production cycle, has made gin a focal point for craft distilling innovation, though quality varies widely and established producers still dominate the category in terms of technique and consistency.
Gin in Context of the Spirits Category
Within the broader spirits landscape, gin occupies a unique position as a flavored neutral spirit that relies on botanical complexity rather than barrel aging or base material character. Unlike whiskey, which develops flavor through grain selection, fermentation, distillation cuts, and wood maturation, gin achieves complexity through botanical selection and infusion technique. This makes it more comparable to vodka in production method, though gin's requirement for perceptible botanical flavor places it in a distinct category. The spirit's clear, unaged nature also aligns it with white rum and blanco tequila, though gin's botanical focus versus terroir-driven agave or sugarcane character creates different flavor expectations.
Gin's cocktail versatility has ensured its relevance through changing drinking trends. The martini, Negroni, gin and tonic, and Tom Collins are foundational cocktails that have remained in constant rotation since their creation, providing a stable market for quality gin regardless of spirits fashion. This differs from categories like Cognac, which have experienced more cyclical popularity. The recent gin renaissance, driven by craft distilling and premium tonic waters, has elevated the category beyond its mid-20th-century image, though it remains to be seen whether contemporary high-proof, botanically complex expressions will achieve the lasting market presence of established London Dry producers.

