Hmm I am just now discovering this site: The Gin is In ...another reminder to myself of how long I've been out of the loop
The site is the creation of Aaron Knoll, author of two books on the subject.
In particular, on the botanicals page they catalog botanicals used and in what amounts by various brands: https://theginisin.com/botanicals" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow ... click any botanical to see relevant gins.
Pardon my post if this site was mentioned previously; I didn't see it in any of my searches here.
Slainte!
The Gin is In: a reference for gins and their botanicals
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Re: The Gin is In: a reference for gins and their botanicals
Hmmmmm…...Moon Rock, Pine Resin, Sumac, Oh my! Thanks for providing this info. This will provide many hours of investigation I am sure. Nice find
Re: The Gin is In: a reference for gins and their botanicals
oops, I hemmed and/or hawed over this going into Resources/Reviews vs Recipe Development but I was thinking more along the lines of usage of botanicals specifically, so I thought...recipes? my bad!
thx for the fixup, mods!
thx for the fixup, mods!
Re: The Gin is In: a reference for gins and their botanicals
yeah, right, Sumac?? Interesting stuff. One of our many local distilleries taking a riff on classic dry gin is using local wild sage and bay laurel: http://www.stgeorgespirits.com/spirits/ ... erroir-gin" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollowWIski wrote:Hmmmmm…...Moon Rock, Pine Resin, Sumac, Oh my! Thanks for providing this info. This will provide many hours of investigation I am sure. Nice find
So I guess it figures...if you have a local aromatic, try it out
Re: The Gin is In: a reference for gins and their botanicals
That's it! I need meteorite pieces to put in my gin!