The Cocktail Lovers Magazine Issue 45 Summer 2023

Page 32

HOME-GROWN SPIRITS In praise of the producers capturing the spirit of the land in their bottles. By Clinton Cawood

T

erroir, that wonderfully ephemeral idea that speaks of the influence of place – whether that’s the soil, or the climate, or something more elusive... For too long it was mainly the preserve of wine, but spirits have always been just as capable, if not more, of literally distilling a sense of place. Various factors can influence the flavour of a spirit, of course, but for some distilleries, it’s their local surrounds, that inexpressible terroir unique to them, that comes first.

France

Cognac Frapin Cognac isn’t necessarily the first spirit you’d associate with terroir, with more importance usually placed on the influence of oak ageing and blending. But for some producers, such as Cognac Frapin, expressing the local region is a priority. Unlike most cognac houses that traditionally buy their grapes from growers in various regions, or crus, to create a blend, Frapin only uses grapes grown on its own estate, located in the most prestigious of crus, Grande Champagne. Taking this a step further, the house produces a singlevineyard cognac, made exclusively with grapes that are grown, distilled, aged and bottled at its Château Fontpinot.

Mexico Peru

Del Maguey Mezcal

The purest expression of grapes in distilled form, and by extension the place in which those grapes were grown, has to be pisco – Peruvian pisco, in particular. Regulations don’t allow pisco producers in Peru to add anything to their spirits, not even water. All you get is the grape, fermented and distilled once. BarSol Pisco produces all of its spirits from grapes grown in the country’s southern Ica Valley. Distillation and bottling all takes place at the historic Bodega San Isidro, using grape varieties such as Torontel and Quebranta.

Regionality and terroir are inextricably linked with Mexico’s agave spirits. In tequila, they speak of the differences between agave plants grown in the highlands or lowlands of Jalisco. Mezcal has an even more diverse region to draw from, not to mention an array of agave varieties. Throw in the traditional use of natural fermentation with wild yeasts, and you have the potential for each mezcal to be a snapshot of its local environment. Among the first brands to highlight this regionality in mezcal was Del Maguey, with its single-village bottlings, handcrafted by individual farmer-families and each gloriously distinct from the next.

BarSol Pisco

32 THE COCK TAIL LOVERS / ISSUE 45

United States

St. George Spirits Gin can have a tendency towards exotic botanicals sourced from the four corners of the globe, although in recent years there’s been a greater focus on local ingredients. One gin that’s particularly concerned with capturing a sense of place – the clue is in the name – is Terroir Gin, from California’s St. George Spirits. To transport you to the distillery’s local surrounds, the team there incorporate Douglas Fir tips and California bay laurel, both foraged locally.

Kenya

Procera Gin To produce Kenyan gin Procera, the team source a variety of juniper that’s native to the region and grown just 40 miles


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Articles inside

COMMUNITY MATTERS

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pages 66-67

Four of the 50 Best Restaurants

1min
page 65

FLAVOURS OF LIMA

5min
pages 62-64

Johnnie Walker Princes Street

2min
page 61

MAINS & MARTINIS

1min
page 60

LIQUID INTELLIGENCE

2min
page 59

THE COCKTAIL GUY IMAGINES…

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page 57

THE COCKTAIL GIRL SWOONS…

3min
pages 56-57

THE EXPERTS’ CHOICE

1min
page 55

RAISING A GLASS TO NEIGHBOURHOOD BARS

2min
pages 54-55

SEEK FIND DRINK

4min
pages 50-52

FARM TO GLASS BARS

6min
pages 40-49

Born in the UK

2min
pages 38-39

The American Bar, Gleneagles

1min
page 37

Le Syndicat, Paris

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page 37

Ugly CarbisButterfly, Bay

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pages 36-37

The Oxford Artisan Distillery

5min
pages 33-36

HOME-GROWN SPIRITS

2min
pages 32-33

HE CANNES

4min
pages 29-31

ANYONE FOR PORT?

2min
pages 26-28

snack like a local

1min
pages 24-25

H TSEAT IN THE

3min
page 23

FOUR

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pages 19-20

eleven Local reasons

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page 18

SIX QUESTIONS for…

1min
page 17

book club

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page 16

THE NEXT BIG THING?

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page 16

Theperson

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pages 14-15

Edinburgh

1min
page 13

CHILLI

1min
pages 10-13

The local ingredients bartenders love

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pages 9-10

The PLACE

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pages 8-9

hello cocktail lover!

5min
pages 3-6
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