olddog wrote:
Jenever (also known as junever, genievre, genever, jeniever, peket or in England as Holland gin), is the juniper-flavored and strongly alcoholic traditional liquor of the Netherlands, Belgium and Northern France (Nord département), from which gin evolved.[1] Believed to have been invented by a Dutch chemist and alchemist named Sylvius de Bouve (in Latin: Franciscus Sylvius), it was first sold as a medicine in the late 16th century [2]. In the 17th century it became more popular for its flavor. Traditional jenever is still very popular in the Netherlands and Belgium. European Union regulations specify that only liquor made in these two countries, two French provinces and two German federal states can use the name jenever. [3]
Jenever was originally produced by distilling maltwine (moutwijn in Dutch) to 50% ABV. Because the resulting spirit wasn't palatable due to the lack of refined distilling techniques (only the pot still was available), herbs were added to mask the flavour [2]. The juniper berry (Jeneverbes in Dutch, which comes in its turn from the French genievre) was chosen for its alleged medicinal effects[2], hence the name jenever (and the English name Gin).
Hey, thats just wiki, I sent you that one!
The Maltwine is the difference. Whereas gin uses grain neutral spirit from a column as the starting point, Jenever uses maltwine like a whisky, and pot stills to 50%, resulting in a different product.
Dnderhead wrote:Jenever is quite sweet tasting and may be aged in casks for up to three years.
Another difference, gin isn't aged in casks.
Jonge Jenever translates as ’young jenever’, though it refers more precisely to the newer ’style’ of jenever (post-WW2). Jonge Jenever can only contain a maximum of 15% malt wine, while at the same time having a limit of 10 grams of sugar per litre. This means that Jonge jenever is less pronounced, with regards to the taste of ’moutwijn’, while at the same time being less sweet compared with its older style counterpart.
Oude Jenever translates as ’old jenever’, though it refers more precisely to the older ’style’ of jenever (pre-WW2). Oude jenever must contain a minimum of 15% malt wine, while at the same time having a greater sugar allowance of 20 grams per litre. This means that Oude jenever is more pronounced in its ’moutwijn’ taste, and at the same time being doubly sweet.
http://web.archive.org/web/200707151731 ... enever.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
These sugar allowances are also different to gin - a london dry gin is not permitted to contain sugar.