The Tao of Gin 2.0

Notice something different about the gin section lately?

by Mary Bailey

gin tao

Not only is it much bigger, it’s filled with brash new bottlings, in almost every shade of the rainbow. No longer does the UK have hegemony over gin. You’ll notice gins from all over the world now, Italy, Spain, the US, Canada. Especially Canada.

See The Tao of Gin 1.0.

“There are tons of good Canadian gins,” says Tara Smith of Hicks Fine Wines in St. Albert. “You can feel the passion of the distillers, always quality over quantity, and it’s supporting the smaller guys.”

“We have several customers who say they collect gin,” says Juanita Roos of Color de Vino. “We find that people want to try different things,” says Kelsey Roos. “They no longer come in and buy the same thing every time.”

This burgeoning interest from the gin loving public who are not afraid of flavour has created an explosion in gins made at artisan distillers.

“Local is coming on strong”’ says Dave Gordon of the Whisky Drop, “in beer, in whisky and in gin. The local flair, the story behind the gin, the botanicals picked locally in Alberta, BC, people are into that—something born and raised in Edmonton or surrounding areas. Our number one is Strathcona Seaberry. It’s a London Dry style with good flavour components and a less bitter finish.”

You can’t get much more local than Strathcona Spirits. The tiny distillery in the pink building on 81 Avenue opened in 2018. “We wanted to make a hardy gin, using unique ingredients from the Prairies like Badlands’ juniper along with other standard botanicals like cubeb pepper and angelica,” says Adam Smith, owner and head distiller. “We experimented with yarrow and a few other berries. Then the guy who led me to the juniper on the Red Deer River suggested sea buckthorn. ‘There’s more than enough in Edmonton,’ he said.”

Making small batches of gin comes with differences in flavour. “We’re proud of the fact that there is some variability in batches,” says Adam. “We have seasonal differences and wild foraged ingredients, grains directly from farmers, that’s our terroir. We are also letting the gin rest for longer than we did in the beginning. At the same time, we do walk a pretty consistent line, it doesn’t wander that much. When we stack up numerous batches, I think what emerges is the element of the seasoning of the pot, and the longer seasoning time—a bit more elegant, a bit more complex.”

Caitlin Quinn, head distiller at Eau Claire Distillery in Turner Valley knows all about the seasonal differences. “The time of year influences flavour and we have huge temperature swings, -30 to +30 to deal with. Alcohol expands and contracts. And it’s much drier here than in Scotland. The angel share (what’s lost to evaporation) is about 12 per cent. Big distillers strive for consistency to guarantee a flavour. We’re more touchy feely. For us it’s batch to batch.”

Caitlin, a graduate of Harriet Watt, the only English-speaking distilling school in the world, was born in Winnipeg and grew up in Scotland. She did her Masters at Edinburgh Gin, and came to Eau Claire right after. “Scottish people are more aware of distilling as a career and many learn on the job,” she says. “Going to school gives you the scientific background. I did an honours in chemistry; knowing the science makes for safer choices.

“The Christmas Gin was the very first recipe I created with Eau Claire. It has the three gifts from the Wise Men —gold, frankincense and myrrh. It’s still one of my favourites for a savoury cocktail, in a martini.”

Flourish is the newest gin offering from Eau Claire (see page 18). Its look is a departure from the core offerings with their fantastical social animals chatting or playing cards. Rather, it’s in a tall slim bottle with a label covered in hand drawn flowers and berries, no dancing bears in sight.

“We wanted something very different from our classic Parlour Gin, a cocktail gin mixer with floral and fruity notes,” says Caitlin.

“Our atmosphere is based on innovation;” she says; “playing around is encouraged. I have an idea, other staff have an idea, it’s very collaborative.” During Covid, that has taken on a different form. “Every day is different, we are taking it as it comes,” says Caitlin. “There are fewer people around, not as many people on site, more video conferencing. We’re working on different barrel types for the whiskies and playing around with the different gins that came out of Flourish. I’ve been at home playing around with flavours, with cocktails.

Caitlin’s Bramble

“This is my favourite way to drink Flourish right now.”

2 oz Flourish and a ½ oz St-Germain (elderflower liqueur) topped with lemonade over ice.

The Gin Revolution
We can trace the renewed appreciation of gin to 1999, when Hendrick’s Gin came into being. The bottle shape, the label, the taste, the roses—there was nothing like it. The host of botanicals, including an infusion of Bulgarian roses and cucumber, created a heady experience.

Hendrick’s set off a revolution still being felt in the world of gin. Gins infused with flowers, gold, vegetables. Gins with colour. “A lot of people just love the colour,” says Dave Gordon. “Take a shelf with 15 gins, 12 are clear and then there is a yellow one or a pink one or a purple one. The oak-aged gins have a slight colour tinge too.”

Victoria Spirits Empress 1908 is a great example: it is infused after distillation with an Empress Hotel tea blend and butterfly pea flowers. The colour changes from blue to violet to pink, depending on what you mix it with (due to the pea flower meeting citric acid).

I asked Tara Smith about this new wave of gin. “Why do people like them? Because they’re interesting,” she says. “We been drinking London Dry for a couple of hundred years. If you don’t want to make a cocktail you don’t have to, but it’s still super fun because your drink is purple. It could be as simple as putting a couple of cherries in Midsummer Solstice. It doesn’t always have to be complicated.”

Eau Claire makes a seasonal gin with honey and saskatoons from nearby farms (Chinook Arch Meadery and The Saskatoon Farm). “Local ingredients, perfect product,” says Caitlin. “Saskatoons are not a sweet berry and they are hard to work with, seedy. Honey brings the sweetness.”

Then there is the barrel aged gin. More controversial; people either love it or hate it. Victoria makes the Oaken Gin; Strathcona makes two, the White Oak Pinot and the Barrel Aged. “I love smoke and oak in spirit and cocktails,” says Adam. “I was reading about botanical spirits and which gins work best in barrel and discovered it’s gins like ours, with their heavy botanical load. We use quarter cask virgin American white oak for the Barrel Aged Gin and small barrels from SpearHead Winery in the Okanagan for the Pinot. It was going to be a limited release, but it was so popular we decided to keep making it. The Japanese love the Barrel Aged Gin, there is the uniqueness of bold gin in virgin oak.”

Gin is even coming in non-alcoholic versions. The British Seedlip was the first of the gin alternatives, creating a distillate with botanicals then de-alcoholizing the spirit. Seedlip has since been bought by global drinks company Diageo. The Swedish Ceder’s is the newest of the alt gins.

Notes on some notable gins

Click images to zoom

Yukon Small Batch Artisan Gin
Yukon Small Batch

Yukon Small Batch Artisan Gin, Whitehorse, Yukon
Yukon Brewing started distilling gin while waiting for their whiskey to age. We’re glad they did. This gin is lovely, with balanced aromas and flavours of pine, juniper, citrus with a slightly spicy finish. Great mouth feel. If you can find a bottle of the Yukon Spruce Tip Gin, grab it, it’s delicious—piney, herbaceous and fresh, in a good way, ‘like a fresh trout stream,’ says Juanita Roos, Color de Vino.

Strathcona Spirits Seaberry
Strathcona Spirits Seaberry

Strathcona Spirits Seaberry Gin, Edmonton, AB
Strathcona uses 10 botanicals in their mix, headlined by the foraged Badlands’ juniper. The sea buckthorn, hand-picked from Edmonton’s river valley, shows up in the attractive citrusy notes of this gin. This is a full throttle drink, round in the mouth and slightly spicy, with a pronounced aftertaste. That healthy looking coyote on the label? “He’s roaming, connecting all the other things,” says Adam Smith.

Eau Claire Distillery Flourish
Eau Claire Flourish

Eau Claire Distillery Flourish Gin, Turner Valley, AB
Floral and citrusy, fresh and bright. It’s juniper forward, yet well integrated, with a long finish. Warm, not spiritous. A fine gin, and delicious in cocktails or with tonic.

Koval Gin, Chicago, USA
The couple behind Koval (Robert and Sonat Birnecker) are responsible for a lot of good things— theirs was the first distillery to open in Chicago since the 1880’s; their work paved the way to changes in Illinois law to welcome other craft distilleries, and, for the use of grain from Midwest farmers to make their white rye spirit, the base of the gin. The spirit and the mix of 13 botanicals create a characterful gin. It’s spicy and bold, ideal for a gin Manhattan. “Great transition for a whiskey lover,” says Juanita..
Sheringham Seaside
Sheringham Seaside

Sheringham Seaside Gin, Sooke, BC
A beautiful gin, full-flavoured, savoury with a tangy salinity. The distillery could not be more rooted in its island home, using all BC ingredients and sending spent grains to local farmers. The base spirit is BC wheat and barley, dill and caraway are two of the botanicals as well as hand-harvested winged kelp. Yup, kelp.

Cirka Gin Sauvage
Cirka Sauvage

Cirka Gin Sauvage, Montreal, QC
We tasted candied orange, tangerine, geranium leaf, sweet sage, white pepper and sweet spice in this well-integrated gin. Cirka uses botanicals of the Northern boreal forest (including red pine and larch tip) in its mix of 30 and distills in a pot still named Homer near the Lachine Canal.

Astobiza Dry
Astobiza Dry

Astobiza Dry Gin, Txakoli de Alava, Basque region, Spain
The Astobiza Winery makes this amazing gin with botanicals from around the vineyard—wild strawberries, mulberries, leaves and tendrils, lemon, grapefruit, juniper berries. They also use what they call the esencia de vendimia; ‘the carbon dioxide given off by the must, around -60º C, results in a broth that concentrates the aromatic essence that we identify in the harvests.’ It’s exceptionally fragrant, with savoury, fruity and juniper notes, which carry through to the finish in a delightful way.

Poli Marconi
Poli Marconi

Poli Marconi 46, Veneto, Italy
The Poli family, best known for their impeccable grappa distill the Marconi 46 gin in their vacuum bain-marie pot still called the Crysopea. It’s a smooth and flavourful gin—with intense and harmonious aromas of roses, juniper, white flower, spicy anise and caraway with a depth of flavour that other gins envy. Savoury, a little spicy, gentle on the palate, with gorgeous lemon and orange zest flavours and a crazy long finish. Many of the botanicals (the juniper, mint, mountain and cembra pine) are native to the Asiago plateau. It is so aromatically pleasing I hope they consider the aftershave business. Bar Bricco uses this gin in their delicious Negroni cocktails.

Dorothy Parker
Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Parker, New York Distilling Company, NYC, USA
This gin, named after a confirmed gin lover, has a lovely mouth feel. The juniper makes a solid contribution, it’s a bit spicy, and there is tangy, well-balanced citrus on the soft finish. Delicious on the rocks and in a G&T. Take this to your next book club. Be careful though, it is 88 proof. Good value too.

Saskatoon Honey Gin, Turner Valley, AB
Distiller Caitlin Quinn describes this gin as an Alberta-style sloe gin using Saskatoon berries from Saskatoon Farm and honey from Chinook Honey Company, instead of sloe berries and sugar. “It’s the perfect balance of tart and sweet,” she says. Drink on the rocks, with sparkling water or with lemon ginger iced tea.
Victoria Distillers Empress 1908
Victoria Empress 1908

Victoria Distillers Empress 1908 Gin, Sidney, BC
The original Victoria Gin was one of the first Canadian artisan gins to hit the market in 2008. The new Empress 1908 the latest innovative offering from this distillery. This is a fun gin. Purists may be put off by the colour change, caused by the infused butterfly pea blossoms, but the classic flavours will bring them right back—juniper, coriander and citrus on the nose, with floral notes, a spicy hit of ginger and cinnamon with a citrus finish.

Bryan and Valerie Murray started Victoria Spirits in a farmyard with a wood-burning still; now it’s in a shiny new building on the Sidney wharf and just five minutes from the airport. They sold in 2015, their son Peter Hunt carries on as master distiller.

Collective Arts Rhubarb and Haskap
Collective Arts Rhubarb and Haskap

Collective Arts Rhubarb and Hibiscus Gin, Hamilton, ON
Collective Arts merges their love of art and music with their love of brewing, and now, distilling. This gin is made with rhubarb, hibiscus, juniper and citrus peel. It’s an attractive pale pink, with sweet red fruit aromas, zesty flavours and some pithy bitterness on the finish. They also make an Artisanal Dry Gin, a Plum and Blackthorn Gin and some nifty gin-based cocktails in a can.

Hendricks Midsummer Solstice
Hendricks Midsummer Solstice

Hendricks Midsummer Solstice Gin, Ayrshire, Scotland
The flavours are alive and playful, with Hendrick’s rose and cucumber overlaid with delightful red fruit and floral flavours. It smells and tastes like a meadow of wildflowers. Pretty darn delish. Note: it’s the bottle that is coloured, not the gin.

Strathcona Spirits Pinot
Strathcona Spirits Pinot

Strathcona Spirits Pinot Gin, Edmonton, AB
The second use French oak barrels from SpearHead lend a pinkish colour and an appealing sweet red fruit note to the gin. The wood is mellow and not obtrusive, the flavours are complex, with personality, floral, citrus and spicy with a long finish. Not as bold or as woody as the full-on Barrel Aged Gin beloved in Japan. A good choice for your first foray into barrel aged gin. On the front of the bottle is the Market Dog. You may have seen him wearing sunglasses and being pushed around the 104 Street Farmers Market in a stroller.

Yukon Brewing G&T
Yukon Brewing G&T

Yukon Brewing Gin and Tonic, Whitehorse, Yukon
Yukon joins Eau Claire in making a portable G&T, handy for golf, picnics, camping. Yukon’s is dry and juniper forward, tasty!

Ceder’s Alt
Ceder’s Alt Gin

Ceder’s Alt Gin, Sweden
Ceder’s is a new distilled non-alcoholic libation from Sweden in three styles: Classic, with juniper, rose, geranium, and coriander botanicals; Crisps, with juniper, cucumber, camomile and citrus and the Wild with juniper, clove, ginger and South African roiboos. They are dry, with good flavour concentration and finesse and they make delicious non-alcoholic cocktails. Ceder’s will be available at all Italian Centre Shops mid-August .

Ceders Valley Spritz
Ceders Valley Spritz

Valley Spritz

65 ml Ceder’s Crisp
50 ml cloudy apple juice
50 ml cucumber juice
7.5 ml lavender syrup

Top with tonic and garnish with red apple and line wheel and sprig lavender.

Tomato editor Mary Bailey was willing to taste all of these gins for you, all in the name of research.