GREEN ANT GIN

Page 1

GREENTHE ANT GIN EDITION

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTOFCOUNTRY andpeopleTraditionalGinSocietyacknowledgestheOwnersofthelandonwhichweoperateourbusiness.TheGadigaloftheEoraNationarethetraditionalcustodiansofthisplacewenowcallSydney.WepayourrespectstoElderspast,presentemerging.WealsoextendourrespecttoalltheAboriginalandTorresStraitIslanderpeopleacrossallofcountryandcelebratetherichhistoryoftheworld’soldestlivingcultureandtheircontinuingconnectiontoland,waterandcommunity.

WELCOMEFOUNDER’S

While insects aren’t synonymous with the most common botanicals like coriander seed and angelica root, they have carved out their own niche in the spirits world.

Cheers!

Far and away the most successful, however, is this issue’s feature bottle: Green Ant Gin. The remarkable lemonlime flavour that Seven Seasons have managed to extract from the native green ant is, in a word, astonishing. We just know you’ll love mixing up a few citrusy cocktails with this drop. We also explore the other fascinating creations that Seven Seasons have crafted, each using wild-harvested ingredients from Larrakia country. Our Gin List showcases other gins being made by First Nations people. Then we take a deepdive into how other distilleries around the world are using their own indigenous insects to develop truly unique – yet still refined – craft gins. We have an interesting chat with this issue’s Ginsider, Leon Dalloway, to hear about why gin holds a special place in his heart, and Daniel Motlop, Founder of Seven Seasons, shares a few different ways you can mix up Green Ant Gin cocktails to impress your friends. As always, you can drop us a line at hello@ ginsociety.com. Sit back, pour yourself a few lemony drops of Green Ant Gin and enjoy the issue!

DANIEL SEVENFOUNDERMOTLOP,OFSEASONS

VISIT US WWW.GINSOCIETY.COMAT Andrew Founder,BurgeGinSociety

Welcome to another edition of the Gin Journal as we explore some of the finest craft gins on the planet. Following a Scandinavian sojourn that brought us a punchy juniper-led drop, we’re returning home to taste one of the most beguiling gins you’re ever likely to try.

2 The Gin Society team Founder: Andrew Burge Director: Jagdev Singh Creative Director: Annah Lansdown Head of IT: Chris Richardson Membership Relations: Emily Prunty Designer: Tori Gibson Editor: Simon Jones Contents MEETMAKERTHE Turning the humble green ant into a gin sensation 4 COCKTAIL HOUR with Seven Seasons’ spirits 22 TASTES OF WILD AUSTRALIA Green Ant might be Seven Seasons’ premier gin, but it’s not the only delicious drop that Daniel Motlop has crafted. 14

3 GotMembersaquestion or query about your membership? We’re here to help. Drop us a line –WeAdvertisinghello@ginsociety.comwelcomeenquiriesabout advertising and brand collaborations. Please contact sales –sales@ginsociety.com HostingEvents an event? Looking for unique gins or an organised tasting? Let’s talk – events@ LaunchingPartnershipsginsociety.comanew gin? Opening a new venue or distillery? Let us know partnerships@ginsociety.com–Get in touch | Gin Journal is the bi-monthly members’ magazine of the Gin Society. Contents ANTGREENGINEDITION THE GELATONEGRONIXPAPA Gin and Gelato - a match made in heaven 32 GINSIDERTHE with Gin Journey’s Leon Dalloway 28 INDIGENOUSTHEGINLIST 5 must-try gins from First producersNations 36 THE LIBRARYGIN Read all things gin 42A TRUE TASTE OF INSECTS Want to really entrench yourself in a bug’s life? 26

4 sensationhumblegreen SEVEN SEASONS’ GREEN ANT GIN Turningantthe

In a space as crowded as the gin market, you need to offer something truly spectacular in order to see customers return time and time again. That’s exactly what Daniel Motlop of Seven Seasons has achieved with his jaw-droppingly delicious Green Ant Gin. Daniel Motlop

5

“I grew up with the luxury of having native ingredients in the school playground,” Daniel remembers. “There was also a lot of time spent hunting and learning about the land around the Northern Territory.”

Larrakia Country

“That’s how all this started – getting into food and things. I knew a lot about native ingredients, but I really wanted to showcase them and teach other people about them. That led to buying Something Wild [an Indigenous-owned food and beverage company] and starting Seven Seasons.”

iningredientsNativetheschoolyard

6

At just 16, he upped sticks to live in Adelaide –a childhood dream that ended up lasting 10 years. But Larrakia country was never far from his mind, and soon he found himself moving back to Darwin to start a small Aboriginal harvesting business.

Spend just a few moments looking beyond the gin label and you’ll find a very clear thread that flows through everything Daniel does – in work and in life. His earliest memories are of time spent in Larrakia country.

His grandfather, a Torres Strait Islander from the top end of Queensland, moved to Darwin to start a family, and in doing so he unwittingly set Daniel on a path that would bring some of the most incredible native flora and fauna to a wider audience.

I grew up with the luxury of having native ingredients in the school playground,” Daniel remembers. “There was also a lot of time spent hunting and learning about the land around the Northern Territory.” “

Of people and place

Green ants have been a constant in Daniel’s story. His first commercial licence was to harvest green ants, and soon he’d spun his business nous to attract one of the biggest names in international cuisine: Rene Redzepi.

8

For us, it was more about the commercial side of getting Aboriginal people involved in the native food chain,” he says. “I knew that if we could come up with a product that supported a community to be able to harvest a certain amount every year, and if that product went well, then obviously long term it would allow us to put money back into the community.”

There’s no false altruism to Daniel’s story. Humbleness comes naturally, and he’s more interested in sharing stories about the people side of the business rather than the economic outcome. But as a business owner, he knew that if he was going to do something big, he needed to do it right.

Despite Daniel ramping up his supply of green ants to around 100 restaurants, he remained selective about who could get access to them. “We wanted to keep them to the high-end restaurants who could really showcase something unique. The last thing you want to do is give your green ants to a little corner store and end up with a bad reputation.”

9

Antourbusiness.toit’s100“Whenharvesting.consistentandfantasticproduction,Large-scaleidealseemedSobusinesslong-termventure.apivottoginlikethesolution.aproduct,amuchmorerateofyou’retalkinggramshereandthere,nevergoingtobeenoughcreateasustainableSonowmostofsupplygoestotheGreenGin.” SEVEN SEASONS’ GREEN ANT GIN

“We were lucky enough to supply Noma in Sydney for Rene’s 10-week pop-up. But we wanted to go even bigger with the green ants. For Aboriginal people harvesting the green ants, getting a popular product to go well would mean we could keep collecting them for the rest of our lives.”

But even with so many highend clients, the true scale of green ant production simply wasn’t viable as a

Despite needing a significant ramp-up in production once Seven Seasons got underway, Daniel says it’s not as simple as saying, “We need X amount of green ants for X amount of “Usingbottles.”these native ingredients means we’re guided by the seasons,” he explains. “None of this stuff is farmed, so if there are no green ants around, we obviously can’t harvest.”

Guided by the seasons

“Speargrass, Goose Egg, Knock‘em down season signifies the beginning of the end of the wet season.”

“When the dragonflies swarmthe sky, it’s in nature telling us the dry season is upon us.”

Daniel and the wider Seven Seasons family work extremely hard to protect their way of doing things. And in doing so, he says they are working to protect their based around the seasons, so in terms of sustainability, that’s right at the “Aboriginalforefront.people have been doing this for a long time. We harvest during the right season, and for green ants it’s no different. We’ve worked out that if we harvest during the Windy Season, which is what the Green Ant Gin is based around, we know that there will only be green ants in the nests. There are no queen ants, no black flies. So harvesting outside of those times can have a big effect on the next year.”

Teaching culture and respect through spirits

It should come as no surprise that Green Ant Gin is a well-awarded spirit in its own right. With gold medals from the San Francisco World Spirits Competition, the Australian Distilled Spirits Awards and many more, it’s a gin that is just as well regarded by experts and judges as it is by the average punter looking for something unique to try. And it’s hard to go past a bottle with actual green ants floating in the spirit. So, as Daniel puts it, he’s content for things to keep flowing along as they have been in recent years. I love the fact that we can sit in a bar and hear people talk about green ants, talk about the seasons. Our seasons don’t go by dates. We don’t say, ‘Oh, it’s summer on this date. That’s when the season changes.’ It’s a cycle; they go around as our seasons do in seven.

11

“We’re really happy with the way the brand is going in terms of how our story is being talked about. For me, it’s really about the brand – it’s about teaching mainstream Australia about our culture and respect. Obviously the gin has to taste good, but ultimately we really want to tell that story.” seven-seasons.com.au “

12 Botanicals While the full list of botanicals is kept firmly under wraps – much like the rest of the Seven Seasons selection – in your bottle of Green Ant Gin you’ll be able to smell and taste: JuniperStrawberry gum Boobialla (native juniper) Finger lime Lemon myrtle Australian green ants Pepperberry

13

(Kangaroo Island Spirits) The wildest gin imaginable. A contemporary Australian dry gin inspired by the wild landscapes of our island. Distilled with hand-harvested and locally grown ingredients: boobialla, eau-du-cologne mint, lime zest and pink peppercorns. This gin has sweet spice and citrus notes.

KIS Wild Gin Native Ground Gin Ginache(Seppeltsfield Road Distillers) SRD Native Ground Gin has been inspired by native botanicals found throughout this great land we call Australia. Botanicals include Juniper, Western Australian Wax Flower, Finger Lime, Tasmanian Pepperberry, Lemon Myrtle and Peppermint Box. (Never DistillingNeverCo.) Bursting with Flavour, Ginache Is The Spirit Of Wine Country. A Perfect Union Of Premium McLaren Vale Grenache Fruit And OurTripleAward-WinningJuniperGin.

What does the man with the golden palate enjoy in a gin? Here are some of Daniel’s favourite drops at the moment:

DANIEL’S DESERT ISLAND GINS

14 EXPLORE SEVEN SEASONS’ OTHER SPIRITS S

Green Ant Gin might be Seven Seasons’ premier gin, but it’s not the only delicious drop that Daniel Motlop has crafted. With big plans to create a spirit for all seven seasons, here’s a taste of what the team has achieved so far.

15 S

16

While its unique exterior and relative obscurity make it a potentially lucrative ingredient for high-end restaurants – similar to what Daniel achieved with his green ants – shipping it from Darwin to Sydney frozen meant there wasn’t much appetite for this humble native fruit. So it made sense to use the bush apples for a gin.

“For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, nature is our clock, the stars are our calendar, and changes in the winds, plants and animals tell us the new seasonarrived.”has — Seven Seasons Gin

BUSH APPLE GIN Bush Apple

Don’t be fooled by the name – the bush apple is in fact nothing like the apples you buy at the local supermarket. It’s more akin to a pomegranate or rhubarb in flavour, with a fluffy texture and a tart, tangy aftertaste.

“Our Bush Apple Gin represents the Monsoon Season, when we usually harvest all the fruit over December, January and February.”

“It’s actually nothing like an apple at all,” Daniel says. “ Bush apple is just the closestEnglish words they could come up with!”

What to expect: The addition of bush apples gives this gin floral, berry and eucalyptusflavours and their colour provides the blush hue for the gin. Boobialla, pepperberry, lemon myrtle and finger lime balance therequisite juniper with flavours of gently spicedorange blossom and jammy forest berries.

17

“Our Bush Apple Gin represents the Monsoon Season, when we usually harvest all the fruit over December, January and February.”

NATIVE YAM VODKAWhat

18

In much the same way as bush apples, Daniel says the native yams he uses for his Native Yam Vodka are unlike anything you’ve ever seen. Harvested during the rainy season, which can last from January through March, it’s a time when the dirt is soft so it’s easy for the Larrakia people to gather this fantastic vegetable.

to expect: Made from a base of wildharvested native yams from the Northern Territory, this vodka has balanced earthy flavours and creamy, nutty notes. Daniel suggests using it tomake a Dry Martini with a lemon twist.

Native Yam Vodka

“You’ve got to really wait for the rainy season,”Daniel says. “You’ll look out for a tiny littlebell flower to pop up, about the size of yourfingernail. You see it come out of the groundamong all other little weeds.”

BUSH HONEY COFFEEWATTLESEED&LIQUEUR

Representing the Bush Fruit Season, the utterly remarkable Bush Honey & Wattleseed Coffee Liqueur takes what should be a straightforward spirit to the very next level. The Larrakia bush honey is floral and sweet, plus the addition of native wattleseed infuses the coffee with hints of roasted hazelnut.

LiqueurCoffeeWattleseed&HoneyBush

19

What to expect: With its unforgettabletaste – chocolate on the front palate givingway to mocha, candied walnut that fills the mouth, and notes of honey and spiced chai on the finish – this liqueur is the perfect afterdinner drink, served neat or on the rocks. When paired with the Native Yam Vodka, it makes an exceptional espresso martini.

“Obviously whiskey tells you when it’s ready,” Daniel laughs. “At least that’s whateveryone tells me.”

The seven seasons

AND A WHOLE LOT MORE TO COME…

Monsoon RainyBuildWindyHeavyBushDownEggSpeargrass,SeasonGoose&Knock‘EmSeasonFruitSeasonDewSeasonSeasonUpSeasonSeason

While most of Seven Seasons’ research and development is held tightly under wraps – especially regarding the expressions of flavour and special native ingredients that will be used for the brand’s upcoming spirits – Daniel can share that a whiskey is well and truly on its way. If the angels are kind during maturation, you may even find yourself pouring a glass within 18 months.

“Obviously whiskey tells you when it’s ready,” Daniel laughs. “At least that’s what everyone tells me. But yes, we’re in early stages of tastings and it is already a pretty amazing product. We’re lucky enough to have George Campbell overseeing things as he really knows his whiskey. But it’s not just about the taste, it’s about the stories.”

If the name George Campbell rings a bell, it’s because he’s been brought over from the prestigious Glenfiddich Distillery in Scotland, where he headed up operations during a period of significant growth. Not a bad choice to manage your first whiskey production! We can’t wait to try the new drops that Daniel and his Seven Seasons team come up with.

WHATEVER YOUR GIN WE’VE GOT JUST THE . IF OF YOUR DRINK IS THE MIXER, MIX WITH THE BEST

f renc h 75

22

45mL Green Ant Gin, 15mL lemon juice, 1.5 bar spoons of sugar, 45mL Sparkling wine. Stir lemon juice and sugar, add gin and shake with ice. Strain over ice into flute & top with Sparkling wine. The elegance of such a enhancedcocktaildelicateisonlybythisbeautifulcitrusygin.

Ingredients

Seven Seasons founder Daniel Motlop conjures up his favourite cocktails to pair with two of his incredible gin creations.

23 30mL,60mLIngredients30mLCampari,40mLGreenAntGin,TheItalianAustralian Bitter Orange (78 Degrees Distillery). Stir down and pour over block ice. aus t ra l ian The delectable hit of lemonlime in Green Ant Gin takes this classic gin cocktail to the next level. Add a few green ants for a delightful garnish! negroni

24 White.Apple60mLIngredientsSevenSeasonsBushGin,30mLLemonJuice,15mLSugarSyrupand1EggAddtoashakerwithiceandshake,strainintoaglassandgarnishwithalemontwist. g in sour Not only does adding Bush Apple Gin pack a remarkable sour punch, but its vibrant red-pink hue really makes this Gin Sour shine.

na t ive g&t Ingredients 50mL Green Ant Gin, 150mL Tonic Water (Daniel recommends CAPI). Garnish with lemon myrtle leaf. Native Green Ants give this gin fresh lime and coriander flavours for an easy-drinking, refreshing G&T you can enjoy all year round.

basedpartnershipProducedshop300buganddistilled,gin.Thailand,inisgiantsounding-but-apparently-flavourfulnauseating-waterbug.TheLethocerusindicusanaquaticinsectthat’scommonSoutheastAsia,especiallyaroundwhereitwassourcedforthisTheyhaveafruityaromathat,whencomesoutastastingofpeargreenapple.Yes,thegiantwateritselfisedible–butwithonlyaroundbottlesproduced,youmighthavetoaround.by:TatsumiDistillery,inwithANTCICADA,aTokyo-insectrestaurant.

TRUE

If you actually manage to get your hands on a bottle of First Essence Tagame Gin, you’ll be one of just a handful of people who’ve experienced the

Handcrafted cocktail bitters made with roasted crickets. What could be better? Well, this collection – which began life on Kickstarter back in 2016 –actually comes in four different flavours: cacao, vanilla, toasted almonds and pure cricket. While it seems like the original founders are no longer producing Critter Bitters en masse, others have stepped in to fill the crickety void. You can purchase a four-ounce bottle at a number of different online stores, but good luck locating all four flavours. Add a few dashes to your favourite gin cocktail, or enjoy it with soda water to get the purest taste of toasted crickets. Yummo!

CRITTER BITTERS

FIRST ESSENCE TAGAME GIN

A TASTE OF INSECTS

Want to really entrench yourself in a bug’s life? Go beyond your bottle of Green Ant Gin and taste an array of gins infused with insects from around the world.

ANTY GIN

But can you EAT IT?

Produced by: Cambridge Distillery, in partnership with Nordic Food Lab.

Can’t get enough of ants in your gin? Well, there’s another one you can try if you’ve the stomach – and the disposable cash. At £220 (around A$380 plus shipping) you’d want to hope this is one of the best gins you’ve ever tried. Instead of native Australian green ants, this spirit revolves around the red wood ant, which is rich in formic acid and has a tangy, citrusy flavour among a variety of other carefully chosen botanicals. If you feel like making a game of things, there are exactly 62 ants in each bottle – never more, never less. Care to count them all?

Anty Gin by Cambridge Distillery Available www.hairydog.com.auat Tagine Gin https://shop.artintheage.comat

While we can’t speak for all insect-based spirits, we know for a fact that not only can you eat the ants in your bottle of Green Ant Gin, but you absolutely should! The delightful lemon-lime flavour will smack your tastebuds and have you coming back for seconds.

Available

Toasted Cricket Bitters First Essence

DallowayLeon – known in these parts as The Gin Boss thefounderandofcrowd-pleasing Gin Journey – sat down with us questions.importantanswertoafewvery

Our Ginsider for this issue is breathessomeonewholivesandourfavouritespirit.

Leon is the founder of the globally adored Gin Journey. His gin tour has hosted, educated and entertained more than 150,000 guests over the past nine years.

28 THE GINSIDER

Gin Journey was founded in 2013 in the UK and went on to launch in numerous cities around Great Britain. In 2018, Gin Journey launched in Singapore for the first international LEON DALLOWAY

29 I LOVE

WHAT MAKES GIN SUCH A SPECIAL SPIRIT FOR YOU?

I was first introduced to gin through the local Cuban bar, Dos Hermanos, which I worked at when I was 18 years old in Leicester, UK. It was decked in a seriously cool authentic fit-out, not your average cheesy spot. You’d be forgiven for thinking that the rum was flowing – it was – but the Tanqueray and tonics were too. We built them with as many limes squeezed in as physically possible (blame the crap tonic!) and garnished with a pack of posh crisps. Not a bad start for a young buck, I must say.

“CONTEXTHISTORICALTHEOFGINANDITSSTORY,WHICHSPANSCENTURIES.”

HOW WERE INTRODUCEDYOUTO GIN?

I love the historical context of gin and its story, which spans centuries. It rivals that of a great dramatic novel. I love a success story, and gin is certainly that –especially in the UK and Australia. Gin differs from other spirits in that it’s the balancing of botanicals which creates the flavour profile, rather than how it tastes directly off the still or how it’s aged in barrels. It shows the skill of the distiller in a different way. I’m a huge fan of botanical gardens and every sip of gin is like I’m taking a stroll through one of the world’s great gardens. Gin gives me a sense of place. edition and, in 2022, he brought his tour to Sydney to showcase the city’s unrivalled gin scene – to roaring success. Also known as the Gin Boss (on Instagram), Leon is a BBC gin expert, member of the Gin Guild and, previous to Gin Journey, an award-winning Hebartender.takeshis Martinis as a Gibson, so if you see him in a bar feel free to send one over!

I mean it’s a tough one because I work with so many great gins.

Gin Society is a special concept to showcase new gins to a gin-adoring public. The quality is much higher than any other subscription service out there, therefore the drinkers are sipping on better gins and reading a great magazine to go with it. I’ve discovered gins I’ve never had the pleasure of trying before and that’s got to be a good thing. Plus, Andrew and his team are superstars – it’s great to know you’re supporting good people by drinking quality gin. ginjourney.com

ways: – dry, with an onion or olive Classic Negroni with a sprig of rosemary or a lemon myrtle leaf.

HOW DO YOU DRINK YOUR GIN?

30

3. Four Pillars Fresh Yuzu , for my G&T

WHAT ARE SOME OF THE NEW GINS YOU’VE BEEN TRYING LATELY?

WHAT ARE YOUR THREE DESERT-ISLAND GINS?

I also love to explore a cocktail menu and see how the great bars of Sydney are showcasing their preferred gins.!)

1. Plymouth Dry , for my Martini and because I’m a proud Englishman 2. Poor Toms Sydney Dry , for my Negroni

Four Pillars Fresh Yuzu is an absolute banger. Audemus Umami is completely mad but insanely delicious – distilled with Parmigiano and capers. I love the new liquids coming out of Hickson House Distilling Co. and I’m super excited to try what Poor Toms have got coming up when they move to their new place ’round the corner from their original in Marrickville.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE ABOUT GIN SOCIETY?

The original. Our Sydney Dry Gin is unlike any other. You’ll notice a classic juniper backbone complimented by fresh green apple, native strawberry gum leaf, and chamomile. An easy drinking gin - delicate, fresh, and floral. For more delicious results, serve with a strawberry. https://poortoms.com/

PLYMOUTH DRY GIN

A bright, aromatic and (yes) fresh dry gin made with locally-grown yuzu and by their adventures making gin with Japanese friends. https://www.fourpillarsgin.com/

https://www.plymouthgin.com/ G&T.MYFOR

FORGINSMYMARTINIANDBECAUSEIAMAPROUDENGLISHMAN.FORMYNEGRONI.

Plymouth’s uniquely smooth taste is based on a recipe which dates back to 1793 - and specifies a unique blend of seven ingredients or botanicals, distilled in combination with pure grain alcohol and soft Dartmoor water. A great depth of flavour, with a wonderfully fresh juniper, lemony bite with deeper earthy notes. Plymouth has a slight sweetness and extraordinary concentration and complexity.

FOUR PILLARS FRESH YUZU GIN

31 LEON’S DESERT ISLAND

POOR TOMS SYDNEY DRY GIN

NegroniTheGelatoPapa X movie night treat

GELATO PAPA IS ONCE AGAIN PROUD TO BE COLLABORATING WITH GIN SOCIETY IN 2022. The Negroni is a favourite cocktail among the Gelato Papa team, so it made sense to create a Negroni Choc Top. The dry bitterness of the Negroni combined with the dark chocolate and creamy gelato makes the Negroni Choc Top a delectable adult Greattreat. for a movie night or just an indulgent treat anytime.

Established in 2017, Gelato Papa founder Lilly Stuckings studied at the International Culinary Institute in Italy where she learnt the techniques for developing her made-from-scratch gelato Allrecipes.ofGelato Papa’s products are handmade, which means they can turn any ingredient into gelato – and they’ve created some weird and wonderful flavours over the years, including Blue Cheese and Burger Sauce gelato! Negroni Choc Tops &GavinLilly

VISIT Gelato Papa for your Negroni Choc Top. Mention you are a Gin Society member for a DISCOUNT. 14A Gilbert Road, Preston, VIC and 72A Station Street, Fairfield, NSW.

34 Negroni cocktail GELATO PAPA X GIN SOCIETY

35 dippingChocNegroniTop Gelato extraction GIN AND GELATO A MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN

THE INDIGENOUS GIN LIST

ORGANIC KOALA GIN BEACHTREE DISTILLING CO. Our Organic Koala Gin was inspired by walks through the Australian bush. The fresh, crisp scent of eucalyptus evokes memories of exploring and marvelling amongst nature. As koalas would agree, eucalyptus makes for a refreshing and clean drink. And our Koala Gin is no exception. Traditional juniper berries are balanced with the tasting notes of the native lemon myrtle, marshmallow leaf, lime, cinnamon, and vanilla. Handcrafted in small batches at our distillery, Koala Gin perfectly complements a Sunday Sesh during a hot Aussie summer. 42% Alc/Vol https://beachtree.com.au/product/organic-koala-gin/

BronzeSanFrancisco World Spirits Competition 2022 Seven Seasons’ inspirational Green Ant Gin paved the way for other First Nations producers to craft their own fantastic spirits. So let’s take a journey together and explore these bush-to-bottle gin creations.

5 must try- gins

36

BEACHTREE DISTILLING CO.

Australian Contemporary Gin

37

2022

ORGANIC QUOKKA GIN

Best San Francisco World Spirits Competition

ORGANIC SKIPPY GIN BEACHTREE DISTILLING CO. Our signature native gin! Named after the iconic eastern grey kangaroo, this gin is as Aussie as it gets. Handcrafted in small batches at our Sunny Coast distillery, every sip will have your tastebuds hopping with happiness. It’s jam-packed with flavoursome native botanical favourites, including strawberry gum, lemon myrtle, finger lime, Kakadu plum, native pepperberries and quandong. Combined with our organically-grown sugar cane base spirit, Skippy evokes memories of being out bush. 42% Alc/Vol https://beachtree.com.au/product/organic-skippy-gin/

Inspired by the happiest animals on Earth—quokkas—the friendly and well-known locals who have made Western Australia’s Rottnest Island famous. This gin is for berry lovers. Handcrafted in small batches at our distillery, we’ve used organically grown juniper, bilberries, and mountain pepper berries, giving it a fruity berry front and warm finish. Balanced with native Australian botanicals, including lemon myrtle, you’re left with a sweet spiced flavour. Just like its namesake, Quokka Gin is bound to put a smile on your face! 42% Alc/Vol https://beachtree.com.au/product/organic-quokka-gin/

38 GUM GIN TAKA GIN CO. Spirit of Australia. Smooth First Nations’ native botanicals. Ingredients:Indigenous-owned.CraftedwithJuniper, Coriander, Angelica Root, Cassia Chips, Finger Lime, Orris Root, Native Lemongrass, Native Lemon Scented Gum Leaf, Dessert Limes. 40% Alc/Vol takagin700mllemongrasshttps://www.takaginco.com.au/shop-gin/p/ nativewithdistilledandIndigenous-ownedproducedandinNaarmFirstNationsbotanicals. NowOnSale Only $25

39 BUSH APPLE GIN SEVEN SEASON SPIRITS The addition of bush apples gives this gin floral, berry and eucalyptus flavours and their colour provides the blush hue for the gin. Boobialla, pepper berry, lemon myrtle and finger lime balance the requisite juniper with flavours of gently spiced orange blossom and jammy forest berries. 42% Alc/Vol apple-gin-700-ml/https://www.seven-seasons.com.au/product/bushBronzeSanFranciscoWorldSpiritsCompetition2022

What’s in our Gin Library?

40

THE GIN DRINKER’S YEAR: DRINKING AND OTHER THINGS TO DO WITH GIN by Tara (BooktopiaRichardson$18.85)

The Gin Drinker’s Year is a celebration of all things gin and is packed with cocktails, food and gin-fusion recipes. With everything from 150 gin cocktails and gin-infusions, plus 30 delectable gin-spiked food recipes such as Penne alla Gin or Minty G&T Lollies, to heartfelt tributes to Snoop Dogg’s ‘Gin and Juice’, the sozzled wit and wisdom of renowned gin soak Dorothy Parker and the rules of Gin Pong and Ten-Gin Bowling, there’s an entry for every day of the year. Read all about gin

The real GIN BOOK by Peter William Parker (Amazon $11.47) Most people instantly think of the everpopular Gin and Tonic—and if that’s you, then you are in for a big surprise because in reality it is so much more. This ultimate gin cocktail book focuses on following areas: history, production, nosing & tasting, Bar Equipment, Classic, Modern, Simple, Refreshing and exotic recipes.

by Harry Craddock (Amazon $31.85) Harry Craddock was a United States citizen who left during Prohibition and joined the American Bar at the Savoy Hotel, London, in 1920. Craddock was one of the most famous cocktail barmen of the 1920s and 1930s. Craddock’s “The Savoy Cocktail Book” was published in 1930. Craddock invented a number of classic cocktails, including the famous Corpse Reviver #2 and possibly including the White Lady, and popularised the Dry Martini.

41

r t i n i s

Distiller Philip Moore became the first Australian inducted into the Gin Magazine’s Hall of Fame in February 2022. He joins us for a wideranging interview about his career and the evolution of Australian gin. https://drinksadventures.com.au/S13E8

THE BOOK VERMOUTHOF by Shaun Byrne (Amazon $41.12) With over 100 classic and modern cocktail recipes, The Book of Vermouth explores every aspect of the drink and shows just how much you can do with it, on top of a delicious Martini or Negroni. making; the tools, equipment and ingredients needed for the different methods of producing gin.

THE COCKTAILSAVOYBOOK

Grab your G&T and have a listen to this great PODCAST

PHILIP MOORE, GIN HALLMAGAZINEOFFAMEINDUCTEE

BRINGSWWW.GINSOCIETY.COMTHEGINSOCIETYPROUDLYYOUTHE GIN JOURNAL .

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.