Gin Flashcards

1
Q

Gin

A

Starts with a clear spirit distilled from grain or malt (neutral spirit; vodka) as it’s base that is flavored with juniper berries, and other botanicals.

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2
Q

Gin countries

A

Origin: Holland England and US

Known to produce:

UK
US
Spain
France
Holland
Belgium
Germany
Australia
New Zealand 
South Africa
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3
Q

US Gin

A

Derives it’s main characteristic flavor from juniper berries

Minimum 80 proof (40 ABV)

Must be produced via original distillation or redistillation

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4
Q

European Gin

A

Must be juniper flavored of agricultural origin

Minimum 75 proof (37.5 ABV)

Must be produced using a spirit distilled at a minimum of 192 proof (96 ABV)

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5
Q

Gin History

A

Invented by Dutch physician Franciscus Sylvius Known in holland as Genever in the mid-seventeenth century

Dutch Courage was a gin given to British troops during the 1600’s

Gin Acts were required in England due to public drunkenness.

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6
Q

Gin production

A

Produced by adding the flavor of juniper berries to a base spirit.

Other flavors may be used as well but juniper must be the dominant flavor

Most common mash is cereal grains but sugar cane, potatoes, sugar beets can be used

Usually unaged

Pot or column distilled

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7
Q

Distilled gin original/direct

A

Fermented mash placed into a special still that contains a mesh tray (gin head)

Gin head filled with juniper berries and other botanical

During distillation, alcohol vapors pass through the gin head becoming impregnated with the aromatic oils of the botanicals

Vapors come off the gin still at high proof and then condense into gin

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8
Q

Distilled gin - redistillation

A

Mash is distilled into neutral spirit before being flavored

Neutral spirit is cut with water and placed in a still containing a gin head

Cut spirit is distilled a second time in the presence of juniper berries and other botanicals

As the vapors come off the still, only the heart is used to condense into gin

Subcategories of redistillation are cold distillation and vacuum distillation

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9
Q

Compound Gin

A

Process where gin is flavored by mixing neutral spirits with naturally produced extracts and flavorings of juniper berries and other botanicals without redistillation

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10
Q

Compound gin - Cold Compounding

A

3 methods:

  • Batch of crushed botanicals added to a base of neutral spirits and left to soak for a week or more
  • batch of crushed botanicals in a mesh bag added to a base of neutral spirits and left to soak for a week or more
  • mesh tray of botanicals is suspended in the top of a large tank containing the base spirit and pumping the alcohol repeatedly over the botanicals until the desired flavor is achieved

After any of these methods, the spirit will be filtered and reduced to bottling strength

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11
Q

Compound Gin - Essential Oils

A

Also called compounding essence procedure

Recipe of essential oils is added to a neutral spirit and blended

Mixture rests for a week before it is filtered and reduced to bottling strength

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12
Q

Gin Styles

A

London dry

Plymouth

Old Tom

New American

Sloe

Genever

Flavored/Botanical

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13
Q

Iconic gin brands

A

Tanqueray
- arrived in London in 1830 where Charles Tanqueray perfected his gin recipe

Bombay Sapphire

  • triple distilled and produced through vapor infusion distillation
  • lighter floral-style of gin

Plymouth

  • distilled in Plymouth England
  • less dry than common London style of gin

Hendricks

  • produced by William Grant & Sons in Giovanni, Scotland 1999
  • Infused with Juniper, Bulgarian rose petal and cucumber
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14
Q

London dry

A

crisp with juniper flavor

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15
Q

Plymouth

A

Produced in city of Plymouth aromatic with juniper berry flavor

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16
Q

Old Tom

A
  • popular in mid 1800’s
  • Slightly sweet taste due to the addition of sugar post-distillation
  • Some Old Tom gins can be aged
17
Q

New American

A

Gins that have pushed the boundaries of the definition that relies on the dominance of juniper

18
Q

Sloe

A
  • made with gin and sloe drupes, small fruit relative of the plum
  • Produced by soaking sloes in gin and sugar
  • Sweet taste
19
Q

Genever

A
  • produced using malted grain spirits flavored with juniper berry and other botanicals.
  • awarded a Protected Geographical Indication by the EU in 2008 limits production to the Netherlands, Belgium, tow departments of France, and some areas in Germany
  • often produced at lower proofs so referred to as juniper-flavored spirit drink, flavored grain spirit or flavored neutral spirit
  • subcategories; Oude “old” original style minimum 15% malt and Jonge “young” modern style no more than 15% malt
20
Q

Flavored/Botanical

A
  • US Federal regulations for flavored gin:
    * Neutral flavoring materials
    * Sugar may be added
    * Must be minimum 60 proof (30 ABV)
    * May be barrel aged
  • popular flavors: grapefruit, tarragon, ginger, coconut and saffron