Aroma
Angelica
28 bottles with this note
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Gin Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for angelica and related notes.

Jensen's Old Tom London Gin
Jensen's
Christian Jensen spent years researching nineteenth-century recipes to reconstruct an authentic Old Tom profile. The result is not a novelty — it is a genuine revival, offering a window into what gin tasted like before London Dry became the dominant style. Essential for anyone building a historically informed Martinez or Tom Collins.

Craft Distillery Koval Dry Gin
Koval
Koval's dry gin is a study in midwestern directness — no gimmicks, no exotic botanicals chasing trends. The organic grain base is clean enough to let the botanicals do their work, and the distillation is precise enough to keep everything in balance. A gin for people who want gin to taste like gin.

Daffy's Gin
Daffy's
Daffy's is the rare gin that achieves intensity without volume. Every botanical is clearly articulated yet none dominates. The tension between the pine-forward juniper and the delicate floral-citrus backdrop makes this an excellent Martini gin that also holds its own in longer serves.

Hepple Gin
Hepple
Hepple's unique triple-technique juniper extraction — combining copper pot distillation, vacuum distillation, and supercritical CO2 extraction — produces a gin where juniper is explored in three dimensions rather than one. It's technically innovative without being gimmicky, delivering a deeply juniper-forward spirit that respects London Dry traditions while pushing them forward. Essential for gin enthusiasts seeking complexity.

Tanqueray Bloomsbury London Dry Gin
Tanqueray
A limited revival of an archival Tanqueray recipe that predates the modern London Dry style. Bloomsbury dials up the juniper and botanical complexity while keeping the trademark Tanqueray structure. It's an education in what London Dry can be at its most articulate.

Indlovu Gin
Indlovu
A gin shaped quite literally by environment and ecology — Indlovu translates the African bush into a glass with surprising elegance and balance. Distinctive without being gimmicky, it rewards drinkers who value provenance and terroir.

Brighton Gin Pavilion Strength
Brighton Gin
Brighton Gin's navy strength expression is unapologetically about juniper, and at 57% ABV it has the backbone to stand up in any cocktail without losing its identity. The chalk-filtered water from the South Downs aquifer gives it a clean, mineral quality that separates it from many navy strength competitors. This is structured gin with terroir you can taste.

Elephant Gin London Dry
Elephant Gin
Elephant Gin earns its place through sheer botanical conviction. The use of African-sourced botanicals — buchu, baobab, devil's claw — alongside classic London Dry staples creates a gin that feels rooted in the earth. It's a serious spirit that demands a thoughtful tonic or a well-built Martini. Fifteen percent of profits go to elephant conservation foundations, but this would stand on flavor alone.

Wolfrest Gin
Wolfrest
From the Italian Alps, Wolfrest is a gin that knows what it is: juniper-led, mountain-clean, and unapologetically classic. The alpine botanicals bring a crispness that feels almost mineral. It performs beautifully in a Martini but has enough personality to drink on ice with just a twist.

Kyrö Koskue Cask Aged Gin
Kyrö Distillery Company
A gin that wears its fermentation on its sleeve — the 100% Finnish rye base is unmistakable, and the brief cask rest amplifies rather than masks it. Essential for drinkers curious about what grain truly contributes to gin.

Lind & Lime Gin
Lind & Lime
Named for Dr. James Lind, who proved citrus could prevent scurvy in the 18th century, this gin lives up to its namesake's clarity of purpose. The botanical balance is precise, with juniper and lime in perfect tension. It's a gin built for the G&T but interesting enough for contemplation.

Anchor Old Tom Gin
Anchor Distilling
Anchor's Old Tom is a history lesson in a glass. It recalls the sweeter gin style that dominated before London Dry took over, but does so with restraint and craft. The botanicals are layered rather than loud, and the subtle sweetness acts as a bridge, not a crutch. Excellent in a Martinez.

Hayman's London Dry Gin
Hayman's
Hayman's London Dry is a gin that trusts its botanicals rather than burying them. Fifth-generation distiller Christopher Hayman keeps the recipe honest — ten botanicals, no gimmicks, no barrel resting. It's the kind of gin that makes you wonder why anyone needs twenty botanicals when ten, chosen well, do the job this effectively.

Sipsmith Lemon Drizzle Gin
Sipsmith
Sipsmith's Lemon Drizzle avoids the trap many flavored gins fall into—it never sacrifices its identity as a gin. The lemon is vibrant and natural, and the juniper stays firmly in the driver's seat. A versatile bottle that excels in both G&Ts and cocktails.

Rutte Celery Gin
Rutte
Rutte has been distilling in Dordrecht since 1872, and the Celery Gin — based on an original 19th-century recipe — remains their most distinctive expression. It's a reminder that botanical innovation in gin didn't start in the 2010s. The celery adds genuine complexity without gimmickry, making this an exceptional Dirty Martini gin.

Darnley's View London Dry Gin
Darnley's
Darnley's View is a gin that trusts its botanicals to speak at conversational volume. Where many London Drys lean on aggressive juniper or bold spice, this Scottish bottling opts for balance and transparency. It's an ideal gin for anyone who wants to taste every botanical rather than just the loudest one.

Hayman's Royal Dock Navy Strength Gin
Hayman's
Navy strength gins were originally proofed to ensure gunpowder would still ignite if rum rations spilled on it — a practical origin that yields an expressive spirit. Hayman's Royal Dock is a textbook example of how higher ABV amplifies botanical clarity. In cocktails, it refuses to be diluted into anonymity.

Copper Rivet Dockyard Gin
Copper Rivet
Copper Rivet is one of England's few grain-to-glass distilleries, milling their own wheat and distilling through a custom copper pot still named 'Janet.' The result is a gin of unusual textural depth with impeccable botanical integration. It rewards minimalist mixing — a well-made gin and tonic lets the copper's handiwork shine.

Isle of Harris Gin
Isle of Harris Distillers
Isle of Harris Gin is what happens when a community decides to bottle its home. The sugar kelp is not a novelty — it fundamentally changes the gin's texture and flavor profile, adding a savory richness and maritime minerality that no juniper-and-citrus combination can achieve alone. At 45% ABV, it has the strength to stand up in cocktails, but it's best sipped with just a splash of tonic to let the kelp and juniper shine. This is a gin that tastes like a place — wild, remote, and utterly distinctive. It's also a beautiful story: a distillery built to keep a community alive, making something no one else in the world can make. Cocktail — "The Harris G&T": Pour 2 oz Isle of Harris Gin over ice in a copa glass. Add 4 oz premium tonic water (Fever-Tree Mediterranean works beautifully). Garnish with a twist of grapefruit peel and a small piece of sugar kelp or a sprig of fresh rosemary. The maritime character of the gin deserves a garnish that echoes the sea.

Tarquin's Cornish Dry Gin
Southwestern Distillery (Independent)
Tarquin's is among the very few gins in Britain still distilled over naked flame — and you can taste the difference. Direct-fire distillation gives the distiller less control than steam-heated stills, but rewards the skilled hand with a richer, more textured spirit.

Tanqueray London Dry Gin
Diageo
Tanqueray London Dry is the benchmark against which other London Dry gins are measured. Charles Tanqueray's four-botanical formula, created in 1830, has endured because it works — bold juniper, balanced spice, and a higher proof that stands up in any cocktail.

Hayman's Old Tom Gin
Hayman Distillers Ltd
Old Tom gin was the taste of Victorian London — sweeter than London Dry, the bridge between Dutch genever and the bone-dry gins we know today. It vanished for nearly a century until the Hayman family resurrected it.

Citadelle Original Dry Gin
Maison Ferrand
Citadelle is a quiet genius of the gin world. Nineteen botanicals, each earning its place under Alexandre Gabriel’s direction.

Star of Bombay
Bacardi (Bombay Spirits Company)

No. 3 London Dry Gin
Berry Bros. & Rudd
No. 3 London Dry Gin is resilience through reduction. While the gin world races to add more botanicals, Berry Bros. asked: what if six botanicals are all you need?

Plymouth Gin
Pernod Ricard (Plymouth Gin Distillery, est. 1793)
Plymouth Gin holds one of only three geographic indications for a spirit in the UK: it can only be made in Plymouth. But the real terroir is in the water. Dartmoor’s extremely soft water creates a gin with a rounder, fuller mouthfeel than London Dry gins made with harder water — the low mineral content lets the botanicals express themselves without interference. The recipe uses only seven botanicals (compared to Monkey 47’s forty-seven), and the restraint is the point: each botanical is individually perceptible, and none dominates. This is the gin the Royal Navy chose for its officers’ daily ration, the gin that was specified in the original recipe for a Pink Gin, and the gin that appeared in the earliest known recipe for a dry martini. At 41.2% ABV, it’s slightly gentler than most gins — a conscious choice that lets the Dartmoor water’s softness come through.

Widges London Dry Gin
Widges
Widges is a throwback in the best sense — a London Dry that leans hard into juniper and classic botanicals without any modern gimmickry. It's structured for cocktails but rewarding neat, with enough backbone to stand up to tonic without disappearing.

Jeppson's Malört
Jeppson's
Malört is not a spirit you recommend lightly — it's a rite of passage, a loyalty test, and a cultural artifact of Chicago's bar scene rolled into one defiant bottle. It does exactly one thing and does it with absolute conviction: deliver the most aggressively bitter drinking experience commercially available. Whether that's a feature or a bug depends entirely on who you are, but there's no denying its singular identity in the spirits world.