The Still & The VineSchool of Wine & Spirits

School of Wine & Spirits

Gin

95 reviews

Berliner Brandstifter Berlin Dry Gin
Gin

Berliner Brandstifter Berlin Dry Gin

Berliner Brandstifter

Berliner Brandstifter uses an all-organic wheat base and a restrained botanical bill that favors Berlin's urban terroir — elderflower and woodruff among them. The result is a gin that's both classical in structure and distinctly Central European in personality. It rewards drinking neat as much as it does in a well-made Martini.

86.6 proof
Nikka Coffey Gin
Gin

Nikka Coffey Gin

Nikka

Nikka applied their whisky-making precision to gin and the result is unmistakably Japanese — restrained, balanced, and texturally stunning. The Coffey column still gives this gin a richness most London Drys can't touch. It's a gin that demands attention neat before you ever put it in a cocktail.

$5094 proof
Hayman's Exotic Citrus Gin
Gin

Hayman's Exotic Citrus Gin

Hayman's

Hayman's manages the trick of bold citrus character without abandoning the juniper core. The exotic citrus peels are integrated so fully that they feel like a natural extension of a classic London Dry rather than an overlay. Versatile in cocktails, satisfying neat.

82 proof
Silent Pool Gin
Gin

Silent Pool Gin

Silent Pool

Silent Pool's 24-botanical recipe could easily become a mess, but it doesn't. The distillers achieve a rare thing: complexity that reads as coherence rather than clutter. Each botanical contributes without shouting, and the overall impression is one of carefully orchestrated agreement. The bottle's as striking as the liquid, but the gin earns attention on its own terms.

86 proof
Citadelle Gin de Charentes Réserve
Gin

Citadelle Gin de Charentes Réserve

Citadelle

Citadelle Réserve starts as a well-made 19-botanical gin and then does something unusual — it rests in small Cognac barrels at Château de Bonbonnet. The result is a gin that bridges worlds, carrying the aromatic complexity of a classic London Dry into territory more familiar to aged-spirit drinkers. Best enjoyed neat or in a stirred cocktail where the oak can sing.

89.8 proof
Archie Rose Distiller's Strength Gin
Gin

Archie Rose Distiller's Strength Gin

Archie Rose

Archie Rose's distiller's strength bottling demonstrates why proof matters in gin—every botanical rings louder, and the juniper backbone can support more complexity without losing definition. It's a gin that invites both sipping neat and anchoring a stirred drink.

104.4 proof
Filliers Dry Gin 28 Pine Blossom
Gin

Filliers Dry Gin 28 Pine Blossom

Filliers

Filliers brings five generations of Belgian distilling expertise to a gin that is both traditional and distinctive. The pine blossom addition sets it apart without turning it into a novelty — the backbone is pure London Dry rigor. Excellent in a Martini.

85.6 proof
Hernö Navy Strength Gin
Gin

Hernö Navy Strength Gin

Hernö

Jon Hillgren built Hernö as Sweden's first dedicated gin distillery, and his navy strength expression demonstrates what happens when a perfectionist increases proof without sacrificing balance. Every botanical is amplified in proportion, making this a gin that punches through tonic or citrus in cocktails while remaining supremely drinkable on its own.

114 proof
Ransom Old Tom Gin
Gin

Ransom Old Tom Gin

Ransom

Ransom Old Tom is a gin that reminds you the category has history — maltier, richer, and more texturally complex than modern dry styles. David Enrich's recipe is modeled on pre-Prohibition approaches, and the barrel resting integrates the botanicals into something almost whiskey-adjacent. It makes a Martinez that will change your mind about gin cocktails.

88 proof
Boodles British London Dry Gin
Gin

Boodles British London Dry Gin

Boodles

Boodles is a gin that draws its charcoal line by what it leaves out. No citrus peel in the botanical mix means the juniper and spice backbone is laid bare. At 45.2% ABV, it has the spine for a proper Martini and the discipline to let vermouth do the talking. Exceptional value.

90.4 proof
Hayman's London Dry Gin
Gin

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.

82 proof
Napue Gin by Kyrö Distillery
Gin

Napue Gin by Kyrö Distillery

Kyrö

Napue won the world's best gin for a gin and tonic at the International Wine and Spirit Competition and it's easy to understand why. The rye base provides a structure most London Drys can't match, and the Nordic botanicals — birch leaf, meadowsweet, cranberry — root this gin firmly in the Finnish landscape.

92.6 proof
Caledonia Spirits Barr Hill Reserve Tom Cat Gin
Gin

Caledonia Spirits Barr Hill Reserve Tom Cat Gin

Barr Hill

Tom Cat proves that barrel-aged gin can be more than a novelty. The interplay between raw northern honey, juniper, and new American oak creates something genuinely distinctive — part gin, part whiskey-adjacent sipper, wholly itself. Vermont's cold winters slow the aging, building complexity without sacrificing botanical clarity.

86 proof
Citadelle Jardin d'Été Gin
Gin

Citadelle Jardin d'Été Gin

Citadelle

Citadelle's summer garden expression takes the 19-botanical base recipe and infuses it with lemon verbena, yuzu, and chamomile flowers. It works because the foundation is sound — the juniper and angelica core is strong enough to hold the floral additions in check. This is a gin that rewards a simple tonic serve where the botanicals can speak clearly.

82.6 proof
Sipsmith Lemon Drizzle Gin
Gin

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.

83.2 proof
Procera Red Dot Gin
Gin

Procera Red Dot Gin

Procera

Procera proves terroir isn't a concept limited to wine. The wild-harvested Juniperus procera from Kenya's highlands gives this gin a character unlike anything from the London or European tradition. It's juniper-forward, but a different juniper — and that distinction is worth exploring.

88 proof
Rutte Celery Gin
Gin

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.

86 proof
Darnley's View London Dry Gin
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.

80 proof
Uncle Val's Botanical Gin
Gin

Uncle Val's Botanical Gin

Uncle Val's

Uncle Val's takes its inspiration from an Italian immigrant's garden, and that provenance shows. This is a gin that prioritizes freshness and balance over juniper muscle. It performs beautifully in a gin and tonic but is nuanced enough for a contemplative Martini.

90 proof
Oxley Classic English Dry Gin
Gin

Oxley Classic English Dry Gin

Oxley

Oxley's cold vacuum distillation captures botanicals with startling clarity — each ingredient arrives intact, as if preserved in amber. This is a gin for people who want to understand exactly what juniper, citrus, and spice can do when handled with surgical care. Outstanding in a Martini.

94 proof
Brockman's Orange Kiss Gin
Gin

Brockman's Orange Kiss Gin

Brockmans

Brockmans Orange Kiss takes the brand's fruit-forward philosophy and sharpens it around a single citrus theme. It's a gin that works brilliantly in a spritz but has enough botanical structure to stand up in a Martini variation. The lower proof keeps it sessionable without diluting the aromatics.

76 proof
Tanqueray Malacca Gin
Gin

Tanqueray Malacca Gin

Tanqueray

Originally released in 1997 and then discontinued, Malacca was revived due to bartender demand. Named for the Strait of Malacca — the historic spice trade route — it represents a gentler, more aromatic approach to gin that sits beautifully between Old Tom sweetness and London Dry austerity. Ideal for those who find classic Tanqueray too bracing.

82.6 proof
Empirical Spirits Helena Gin
Gin

Empirical Spirits Helena Gin

Empirical

Empirical's approach — treating spirits like a culinary lab experiment — could easily produce gimmicks. Helena Gin avoids that trap entirely. It is structurally rigorous: juniper-forward enough for purists, texturally inventive enough for modernists. The chamomile integration is the quiet stroke of genius that separates this from dozens of competent Nordic gins.

88 proof
Greenhook Ginsmiths American Dry Gin
Gin

Greenhook Ginsmiths American Dry Gin

Greenhook Ginsmiths

Greenhook's vacuum-distilled gin captures botanical freshness with unusual precision. The chamomile note is the distinguishing feature — it softens the juniper without diluting it, creating a gin that works beautifully in a Martini but also holds its own in more complex cocktails. Craft American gin at its most thoughtful.

94 proof