These are the top 10 gins perfect Christmas 2024, as chosen by us!
We’ve picked some of our favourite new gins and some classics to enjoy over Christmas with tips on how to enjoy them. So, whether you’re a Martini lover or adore a G&T, there will be something here for you.
The gin world does not stand still. Every week, we are inundated with great offerings from new producers and new offerings from great producers. It’s an exciting time to be a gin lover. But all that choice can be a bit daunting. So, we’ve rounded up some of our favourite gins both new and classic to enjoy in the sun this summer.
There’s everything here from vibrant Mediterranean-style gins to complex port cask-aged spirits; we’ve included tiny producers and global brands. If it’s delicious and contains juniper, then it’s a contender. All of them will make a great last-minute gift for a gin lover.
Top 10 gins perfect Christmas 2024
HYKE Gin
We loved everything from Foxhole Spirits. The team uses leftovers from wine production in their distinctive gins. This gives the base spirit an unmistakable floral character. Combine that with other botanicals including coriander, myrrh and rooibos and you have a gin of great elegance and smoothness that’s worth treating with a bit of care.
What does it taste like?
A well-rounded, luxurious spirit carries notes of delicate citrus, herbal tea, crisp juniper leading into warming cubeb and ginger spiciness. Perfect Martini gin.
Portobello Road Savoury Gin
If you like your gin to taste like gin, then you’ll love this latest release from London’s Portobello Road. It majors on the juniper which combined with Calabrian bergamot peel, Seville green gordal olives, rosemary and sea salt produces a deeply dry gin that positively reeks of Mediterranean. It’s the next best thing to going on holiday. Gorgeous bottle too.
What does it taste like?
Powerful juniper, pungent herbs and refreshingly bitter citrus notes. This might be the ultimate G&T gin but it’s a great all-rounder.
Cherry Gin (That Boutique-y Gin Company)
And now for something completely different. This was produced by That Boutique-y Gin Company, who created this Cherry Gin in the finest sloe gin tradition, both sweet and sour Marasca cherries. Works well with everything, including cola!
How does it taste?
Incredibly Christmassy: seriously fruity with plum and orange. Lovely sipped neat on ice or with fresh raspberries in a seriously fancy G&T.
Bathtub Gin
Alongside all the exciting new products in our Top 10 gins perfect Christmas 2024 line-up, we’ve included a few old favourites like the mighty Bathtub Gin. It’s made with a very high-quality copper pot-still spirit infused with ingredients including juniper, orange peel, coriander, cassia, cloves and cardamom to produce a powerful gin with a creamy viscous mouthfeel.
How does it taste?
The initial focus is juniper, but the earthier botanicals make themselves known in the initial palate too with the most gorgeously thick mouthfeel. Negroni time!
Crawshay Welsh Dry Gin
Crawshay Welsh Dry Gin is made using an old Welsh family recipe using 15 undisclosed botanicals. Housed in a pleasingly fancy bottle, the gin was produced in Hensol Castle, the name is a homage to William Crawshay II, who was also known as the Iron King of South Wales.
How does it taste?
Drying juniper and coriander spiciness, powerful pine notes with a touch of oiliness, and bright bursts of citrus keep it fresh and light.
Hernö Old Tom Gin
One of the original new-wave Old Toms on the market and is still up there with the best. Hernö uses the same botanical selection as its Hernö Dry Gin for this, but dials up the amount of meadowsweet used. After distillation, they add a touch of honey and sugar, giving it the classic sweetness you look for in a traditional Old Tom Gin.
How does it taste?
Full, rich and yes, sweet, but the lack of sugar here means you could use it in a Martini though it’s even better mixed with Italian vermouth in a Martinez or Hanky Panky.
Fords Gin
Created by bartender Simon Ford in conjunction with Thames Distillers in London to be the ultimate all-rounder gin. For the botanical selection, they use a varied selection from around the world, including grapefruit peel from Turkey, jasmine from China, angelica from Poland, lemon peel from Spain, as well as juniper from Italy.
What does it taste like?
Herbal rosemary and thyme meet floral heather and juniper, pink peppercorns, and grapefruit pith. Try it in a freezer door Martini.
Gin Mare
No, the name is not a reference to the bad dreams you have after a night on the sauce. It’s the Spanish word for sea, pronounced something like ‘mar re’, and it’s another Mediterranean stunner featuring rosemary, thyme, basil with lots of zest, and the start product, arbequina olive. This is the gin of Barcelona.
What does it taste like?
A fragrant, perfume-like gin majoring, very herbal and aromatic with notes of coriander, juniper and citrus zest.
Dingle Original Gin
It’s another ‘while we wait for the whiskey’ gin, but it’s no afterthought. Containing rowan berry, fuschia, bog myrtle, hawthorn and heather, this gin from the Dingle Distillery in Kerry won World’s Best Gin at the 2019 World Gin Awards. And when you taste it, you’ll understand why.
What does it taste like?
Juicy and sweet with authentic summer berry notes, followed by fresh herbs (think mint leaf and fennel).
Finders Fruits of the Forest Gin
Made by the Finders team just outside York in a town that rejoices in the name Barton-le-Willows, this Fruits of the Forest Gin provides a burst of berry sweetness alongside juniper, orange peel, lavender and sage. A fruity, floral treat, which should shine when paired with a Mediterranean tonic.
How does it taste?
Prominent violet and lavender florals, alongside summer berries and leafy sage. Could there be a more perfect gin to make a Bramble?