Aroma
Orris Root
3 bottles with this note
Train this aroma
Gin Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for orris root and related notes.

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.

Drumshanbo Gunpowder Irish Gin
The Shed Distillery
The Gunpowder tea botanical is the masterstroke here — it binds the citrus and juniper elements into something cohesive and unmistakably different from any London Dry. Drumshanbo Gunpowder is the gin that makes craft spirit sceptics take a second look. The distinctive spherical bottle is famous in Irish bars, but the real story is inside it: a carefully developed recipe, an unexpected Chinese tea leaf, and a distillery that chose character over convention at every turn. Serve in a copa glass over ice with tonic, sliced pink grapefruit, and a twist of lime.

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.