School of Wine & Spirits
Gin
42 reviews

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.

Nordés Atlantic Galician Gin
Nordés
Nordés upends London Dry expectations by leading with Galician florals and Atlantic botanicals rather than juniper. Its Albariño grape base spirit lends a vinous roundness that sets it apart. Best explored in a simple gin and tonic with a grapefruit twist to let the terroir sing.

Whitley Neill Original London Dry Gin
Whitley Neill
Whitley Neill built this gin around two African botanicals — baobab and Cape gooseberry — alongside a classic London Dry backbone. The result is a gin that reads as traditional on the surface but has a rounder, more textured mid-palate than expected. The blend of twelve botanicals works because each earns its place in the ratio.

Hernö Old Tom Gin
Hernö
Hernö's Old Tom bridges the gap between dry and sweet with the precision of a watchmaker. Jon Hillgren's commitment to organic botanicals and small-batch copper-pot distillation results in a gin that feels both historical and thoroughly modern. Outstanding in a Martinez or simply on its own.

Perfume Trees Gin
Perfume Trees
Named for the Aglaia trees that once blanketed Hong Kong's hillsides, Perfume Trees Gin channels East Asian botanicals through an unmistakably London Dry framework. The result is precise, aromatic, and deeply refreshing. It bridges traditions without losing identity.

Dorothy Parker American Gin
New York Distilling Company
Named for the sharp-tongued literary wit, Dorothy Parker gin has the same quality: nothing wasted, everything deliberate. It bridges London dry structure with American botanical creativity, and at this price point, it over-delivers consistently.

Dingle Original Gin
Dingle
Dingle's gin captures the wild Atlantic hedgerows of Kerry without relying on novelty botanicals. The balance between classic juniper structure and softer floral elements makes it versatile — equally at home in a Martini or a G&T with a sprig of rosemary.

Ableforth's Bathtub Gin
Ableforth's
Ableforth's Bathtub Gin is made by cold-compounding — infusing botanicals directly in the spirit rather than redistilling. The result is a gin with more body and color than typical London Drys, and an aromatic complexity that reveals itself slowly. It looks modest in its brown paper wrapper, but there's real craft underneath.

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.

Hernö Juniper Cask Gin
Hernö
Hernö's Juniper Cask is a gin that uses wood to amplify rather than mask its botanicals. The juniper wood barrels concentrate the spirit's core identity instead of pulling it toward whisky territory. It's a masterclass in restraint, and the best argument for cask-rested gin this side of genever.

Conker Spirit Dorset Dry Gin
Conker Spirit
Conker Spirit is a one-man operation that became a Dorset institution. Rupert Holloway distills in small batches using locally foraged and hand-selected botanicals. This gin has a sense of place — coastal, clean, unhurried — that makes it ideal for sipping with minimal intervention or in a gin and tonic that you actually taste.

Sipsmith V.J.O.P. (Very Junipery Over Proof)
Sipsmith Distillery (Beam Suntory)
Sipsmith V.J.O.P. triples the juniper bill of the standard Sipsmith London Dry and introduces juniper at three distinct stages of distillation. The most uncompromising London Dry under fifty dollars.

Junípero Gin
Hotaling & Co. (formerly Anchor Distilling)

Ferdinand’s Saar Dry Gin
Avadis Distillery GmbH
Ferdinand’s Saar Dry Gin is the rare bottle whose catalyst is literally an ingredient no one else has thought to add. The Riesling infusion does not make this a wine-flavored gin — it is subtler and more structural than that. The wine contributes acidity, a floral lift, and a mineral backbone that unifies over thirty disparate botanicals into a coherent whole. Juniper leads as it should, but the Riesling gives the gin a vinous complexity that makes it equally compelling neat, in a Martini, or in a G&T. At under forty-five dollars, Ferdinand’s offers something unlike anything else on the gin shelf — and that novelty is backed by impeccable distilling craft.

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.

Malfy Con Limone
Biggar and Leith (Pernod Ricard)
Malfy Con Limone is the proving ground for Italian gin as a category. When Torino Distillati released it, the idea that Italy — a country defined by wine, amaro, and grappa — could produce a world-class gin built around Amalfi lemons seemed audacious. It proved not only possible but wildly successful, opening the door for an entire generation of Mediterranean-inspired gins. The vacuum distillation preserves the sfusato lemon's delicate oils with remarkable fidelity, and the result is a gin that tastes like the Amalfi Coast smells. At under thirty-five dollars, it has nothing left to prove. Cocktail — The Amalfi Spritz: 2 oz Malfy Con Limone, 1 oz Aperol, 0.75 oz fresh lemon juice, top with prosecco. Build in a wine glass over ice. Garnish with a lemon wheel and a sprig of basil. The gin's bright citrus lifts the Aperol's bittersweet warmth into something effervescent and Mediterranean.

Brockmans Intensely Smooth Premium Gin
Brockmans Gin Ltd.
Brockmans asked a question the gin world wasn't asking: what happens when you build a botanical bill around dark berries instead of amplifying juniper? The answer divided purists — some argued it wasn't really gin — but the market voted with its wallet. The blueberries and blackberries create a textural smoothness and a berry-forward aromatic profile that no other gin had attempted at this scale. Critically, it still works as gin: the juniper is there, the botanical complexity is there, the spirit is dry. Brockmans proved you could expand the definition without breaking it.

Barr Hill Gin
Caledonia Spirits
Barr Hill proves that complexity doesn't require a botanical bill as long as your arm. Two ingredients — juniper and raw honey — sound impossibly simple, until you realize that Vermont's raw wildflower honey is itself a symphony of over a hundred pollen sources.

St. George Terroir Gin
St. George Spirits
St. George Terroir Gin is unlike any other gin in the world. While most gins lead with juniper and citrus, Terroir leads with Douglas fir, California bay laurel, and coastal sage — botanicals wildcrafted from the hills around San Francisco Bay.

Ki No Bi Kyoto Dry Gin
The Kyoto Distillery (Pernod Ricard)
Ki No Bi is what happens when the London dry gin tradition migrates to Kyoto and is rebuilt from the ground up with Japanese materials and philosophy.

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.

Nolet's Silver Dry Gin
Nolet Distillery (Nolet family, 11th generation)
Cocktail — The Rose Garden Martini: 2.5 oz Nolet's Silver · 1/2 oz dry vermouth · 1 dash rose water · Stir over ice, strain into a frozen coupe, garnish with a single rose petal.

Caorunn Small Batch Scottish Gin
International Beverage Holdings (ThaiBev)
Caorunn is what happens when gin grows up in the Scottish Highlands instead of London.

Gin Mare
Vantguard / Brown-Forman
Gin Mare is botanical architecture at its most deliberate. Where most gins start with juniper and build outward, Mare's designers flipped the blueprint: they began with the flavors of a Mediterranean table — olive, thyme, rosemary, basil — and built juniper around them as structural support rather than the main event. Each botanical is distilled individually to capture its purest expression, then blended with the precision of a perfumer. The result is a gin that tastes like the Catalan coast on a warm evening — savory, herbal, bright, utterly unlike anything from London.