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Gin

Gin is produced by redistilling alcohol that has been infused with juniper berries and other botanicals. There are different techniques for infusing the botanicals, with the main methods being to place them directly in the still during distillation, to steep them in alcohol before redistilling, or to suspend them in a basket above the still. The exact botanicals and amounts used are usually proprietary secrets, but juniper berries are a required ingredient in gin. Home distillers experiment with different botanical combinations and infusion methods to produce gins with varying flavor profiles.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views

Gin

Gin is produced by redistilling alcohol that has been infused with juniper berries and other botanicals. There are different techniques for infusing the botanicals, with the main methods being to place them directly in the still during distillation, to steep them in alcohol before redistilling, or to suspend them in a basket above the still. The exact botanicals and amounts used are usually proprietary secrets, but juniper berries are a required ingredient in gin. Home distillers experiment with different botanical combinations and infusion methods to produce gins with varying flavor profiles.

Uploaded by

Ander Scotch
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Gin

The exact types and amounts of botanticals used in gins are usually a closely guarded secret.
However, by law, gin must contain juniper berries. Juniper berries & coriander seed typically
constitute 90% of the total botanicals used. Typical botanicals used include :
juniper berries,
coriander seed,
angelica root,
orris root,
sweet orange peel, and
licorice powder (root)
Commercially they are sometimes made by charging a pot still with a whisky base at 63%. The
botanicals are packed in clean cotton bags, and immersed in the liquid. The still is rapidly bought up
to temperature, then the heat input reduced. A small fraction is first collected at 83C, then the gin
portion, which forms the central fraction, is collected from 83C up to 86-89C. The rest is then
collected as tails. In determining the cut to tails, a smelling test of the distillate is the deciding
arbiter, while the overhead vapour temperature serves only as a guide.

Wal writes ...


re .. the Carterhead Still used to produce Bombay Sapphire Gin. I thought the botanicals were in
the actual still, which is a type of reflux column, but this is not so. The botanicals are held in a
separate 'basket' which resembles a moonshine 'doubler' Diagram from 'Classic Spirits of the
World', Gordon Brown, 1995.

John V has built a small basket that sits in the top of his distillation column to hold the
berries and herbs ...
herewith my simple attempt at a 'gin head'. My desire has been to produce gin in the
classic manner, i.e. by letting the alcohol vapour pass through/over a package of herbs
& spices suspended in the column. I was not interested in essences or such. Happily, it
works.

Three aspects made it possible.


1) My reflux column is of the 2" diam. variety. Thus there is ample space for a packet
of herbs & spices.
2) the column is packed with large s.s.scrubbers. By removing the top one, I can simply
set my herb packet in its place.
3) The head of the column is not soldered onto the column, and is easily removed,
exposing the top of the column.

The packet itself is made out of a square of plastic (?) window screen (8"x8"). I first
tested its resistance to ethanol, by boiling it in ethanol. Whatever it is made of, it is
indestructable. I simply rolled it into a tube about 1 1/2"diam, and folded over and
stapled the bottom end. Also a couple of staples along the seam and at the top.

Spices and herbs are measured out, and poured into the packet. Drop the whole works
into the top of the reflux column, and replace the column head. The pouch is located
just below the T formed by the column and the short horizontal lyne arm. In the
pictures below, the botanicals probably sit at the level of the white Teflon tape.

Gin botanicals for 20L turbo-sugar wash/ Reflux column


juniper berry - flat Tbsp
coriander - flat tsp
cloves - dozen
anise - tsp
fennell - flat tsp
cardamom - tsp
lemon - 1" rind
lime - 1" rind
cassia / cinnamon stick - 3/4" fragment

Method: I put the whole amount into the small pouch, which seems to be enough for one distillation
run of approx. 20L of Turbo-sugarwash. This seems a very small amount, but it gives me enough
taste. Be cautious with adding anymore - the juniper berries can be VERY dominant. Also, keep the
cassia/cinnamon to a min. It can really give a burning sensation. What I have here is about right for
me. The lemon and lime rinds are actually v. thin peels, not including the white fibrous stuff on their
underside. Anis and fennel are approximately the same in taste. I did not crush any of these -
simply put them into the pouch whole. When wiith Turbo-sugar wash, I put the botanicals into the
column with the first (and only) distillation. As the ethanol is coming off at 94-96%abv I see no
reason to run it through separately to get the botanicals in.

You can either do it this method yourself, or it is easier just to make a simple gin essence, and add
this to some 40% neutral alcohol.

I use a small essence still to make gin essence in. It is a 1L glass coffee pot, with a large cork in the
top, through which a condensor sits. Total cost < NZ$20. I gently crush up approx 50g of juniper
berries, and a couple of coriander and fennel seeds, and soak these in alcohol of 75-95% strength,
for a week or so. Sometimes add a wee strip of orange peel too. I put this into the potstill, and add
a little water too. I distill off the essence, up to about 90C, or when the flavours stop. This essence
is then added to neutral vodka at 40% - each litre only needing around 10 mL of essence to get the
right flavour.

If your gin goes cloudy, it means that you have too much oil present for the % alcohol - either up
the % alcohol until it dissolves again, use less oil, or just drink it cloudy.

Alan writes:
I have found that cloudiness problem caused by excessive oil content in gin essence can be solved
by simply filtering the gin. The oil particles appear to be relatively large and get caught up by the
filter, while the flavours are not affected.
Jack writes ...
All the empirical data you need in regards to gin distilling has already been researched for you- by
the gin distilleries themselves. Soaking the botanicals in the mash, and then running them through
the still along with the mash (more likely an already distilled spirit) produces what is considered the
heaviest gin flavors (I couldn't find a commercial distillert that does this). Some distilleries soak
the botanicals for 24 to 48 hours in the base spirit, filter them out, then redistill (Gordon's and
Plymouth soak for less than 24 hours, Beefeater for a full 24 hours) producing a slightly lighter
style of gin. The lightest style of all is produced by a "gin head" still- the botanicals are suspended
in a basket above the spirit in the still (This is how Bombay makes their gin). Each company argues
that their method is best- Bombay says their method (gin-head still) results in a more delicate gin,
Beefeater says that a long steeping time gives a gentler extraction, but builds complexity, and fixes
the aroma in the spirit more solidly. Plymouth and Gordon's say a long steep can allow harsher
flavors to come out, and allow certain flavors to dominate. The first bottle of gin extract that I
made was too heavy in citrus for my taste- I gave it to a fan of Bombay Sapphire. My second gin
concentrate consisted only of juniper - it turns out I like Schlichte brand Steinhaeger dry gin- very
aromatic, but simple. You could always make a juniper extract, along with an extract of every other
herb you can find, and add them 1/4 teaspoon at a time to a bottle of vodka, until you get what you
want.

Mikrobios describes his technique ...


Intinct
60 g dried juniper berries,
1 g cardamom seeds,
1 g coriander seeds,
0.5 g dried cinnamon, and
0.5g dried rosemary
in 200mLs high proof distillate (95%) for 3 weeks in a sealed jar. The mixture becomes a murky
brown. Don't worry if it smells unpleasant and medicinal. Then add 100 mLs filtered water, remove
the cinnamon and either pot-still without reflux, or, as I do, use a simple 'internal alembic' made
from kitchen utensils:

This method is very well known, and may be the best for essence distillations where one is starting
with good spirit and where methanol/fusels are not a problem. I place two vessels in the pan: the
collecting vessel is thus insulated against the heat of the boiling tincture and at the same time is
kept below its own boiling point by the drops of distillate. When the cooling water is hand-warm
(trial and error) I turn the gas off. About 100mLs of clear distillate is obtained; I bring this to 150
mL with cold filtered water. It immediately becomes opalescent. About 4 mLs of this will flavour a
litre of 40% spirit to make a clear and flavourful gin. Calibrating a batch is a delightful way to
spend an evening.
As a alternative method, UPS writes ...
You can order juniper berries at www.penzeys.com It's an American company out of
Wisconsin. I have ordered from them. They have good products, prices and fast service.
I use juniper berries by simmering them in 50% vodka for ten minutes (with the lid on), then
letting it cool overnight on it's own. The next day I filter this mess through a couple of
coffee filters to get a homemade (and better quality) gin essence. I use about 35 grams of
juniper berries (crushed) and 350ml of vodka - 5ml (one teaspoon) will turn a bottle of vodka
into a light flavored gin. 10ml make a more traditional, strong flavored gin. You can add other
spices like cardamom, coriander, and lemon peel (about one gram of each) for a more complex
flavor in your gin. Using 10ml makes a straw yellow colored drink.Regarding other sources of
Juniper berriers, Dick advises ..
I hope that was a mistake when you said you haven't got a yew bush for juniper berries. If what you
are calling yew is the taxus baccata then the seeds in the berries (bright red with an obvious seed
visible at the end - like a cocktail olive !!) are VERY VERY poisonous and should not be eaten under
any circumstances (unless you're a bird, in which case the seeds go right through & out the other
end !!)

The juniper you want is juniperus communis, the berries are green at first but if left on the bush
for a year turn blue/black & have that wonderful juniper smell when crushed. Juniper is fairly slow
growing so you're probably better off going to a health food shop, herbalist or good cook shop for
supplies - the berries are great for use in cooking & pickling. However if you're ever in Scotland
talk to me 'cos I know where they grow wild !!

Another source might be aromatherapy juniper oil, it'll be very concentrated but it's supposed to
be a pure extract. Don't know if anyone else in the group has had experience of using juniper in this
form.
For more on juniper (Juniperus communis), see http://wiscinfo.doit.wisc.edu/moved/herbarium.htm

From http://www.ddgi.es/ ...


Juniper (Juniperus communis)

Plant that grows in the upper mountain areas of Catalonia, normally between 500 and 1,600 m.
Although it can develop into a small tree of up to 7 m, it is usually found in bush form, less
than 2 m in height. Its more characteristic features are its needle-like leaves, with a white
band on the upper face, encircling the stem in groups of three. The fruit matures in the
autumn after a two-year period on the plant. This fruit is pea-sized, round, purplish-blue in
colour and surrounded by an aromatic pulp.

Matt writes ...


In Bob Emmons' _The Book of Gin & Vodkas_ he describes gin manufacture to some
extent, even delineating the "cold compunding" method into three sub categories. Cold
compounding is using neutral spirit and basically soaking the botanicals in it, which is
what I see on the amateur sites we frequent. The other methods are of course
distillation of botanicals into oils and then their addition to neutral spirit and
traditional pot distilling of spirit through botanicals via the gin head.

He says the basic compounding includes crushing the botanicals used, a week of
steeping in neutral spirit, and a week of resting. Followed by filtering, dilution, and
bottling. It is clear that the filtering is for particulate matter since neutral spirit is
used up front.

re: botanical amounts, he gives a complete listing of the common to the more obscure
(rosemary, savory, etc.) botanicals used. Here's his section on a basic gin botanical
ratio:

Here's a simple recipe utilized for making a basic gin. To 2,000 liters of 100 proof alcohol,
add 45.4 kg of juniper berries, 22.7 kg of coriander seeds, 4.5 kg of cinnamon bark, 4.5 kg of
angelica root, 0.45 kg of lemon peel, and 0.45 kg of cardamom. The end result will be
immediately recognizable as gin.
Well that's good news ;-) He doesn't mention the method used for the above "recipe" but it
would appear to be a cold compounding method.

notes on botanicals: North American cinnamon of commerce is actually the bark of the cassia
tree. True cinnamon is not as easily obtained but it would seem his basic gin is using the
cassia bark. Cardamom in this case would be cardamom seeds themselves and not the whole
pods. Remember to remove as much pith (the white part) from the lemon peel; it is bitter.Wal
writes ...
For the history of gin (1650) see:
http://cocktails.about.com/library/weekly/aa080899.htm

The Household Cyclopedia (1881) gives a Dutch and an English recipe: "To Prepare Gin
as in Holland" using a proof spirit distilled from a rye, barley malt mash. Scaled down
and converted to metric it consists of macerating 17.5g of juniper berries and 0.75ml
(15drops) of juniper oil in 1 litre of proof spirit and redistilling. "English Genever" is
made by macerating 35g of juniper berries in 1 litre of proof spirit with added water
and redistilling.

Some distillers have the alcohol vapor pass through the botanicals (in a gin head),
others macerate together and redistill while others distill various botanicals
separately, and then blend, because different oils have different boiling points. I
suspect some modern gins add essential oils to a neutral spirit instead of redistilling
with botanicals.

Dutch gin (genever) is based on a heavier spirit made from a mash of wheat, rye and
malted barley distilled in pot stills.It is often stated wrongly that genever uses only
juniper. Other botanicals are used. It's the method used which gives genever its
distinctive style. Bols, passes the vapor in a 4th distillation over the juniper berries.
Triple distillation is common, and juniper is normally introduced in the second
distillation, with the other botanicals being added to the 3rd (or sometimes 4th)
distillation. Notaris redistills with juniper, while a 3rd blending component is distilled
with other botanicals separately. The end result of combining a richer spirit and a
higher percentage of juniper is a spirit which is more powerfully textured than London
gin.

Old genevers were straw-colored and pungently sweet. Early English gin was also a
juniper-laden drink flavored with glycerine and sugar syrup (Old Tom). Plymouth gin
claims to be the first distillery to produce a dry, crystal-clear gin in the late 18th
century. Gin was a perfect medium for bitters (to prevent stomach problems), lime
juice (to prevent scurvy), and Schweppe's Tonic Water cotaining quinine (to prevent
malaria).

There are 2 main ways to make gin: redistilling a neutral spirit which has had botanicals
added to it (Distilled Gin); or adding essential oils (cold compounding). Distilled Gin (on
label) is superior.

The pot stills used have high necks for more reflux than the usual whisky stills.

All distilleries have their secret rcipe of botanicals and how they put them in varies.
Some put the botanicals in for only a short time before redistilling, others steep them
for 24 hours before distilling, others pass vapor through a basket holding the
botanicals. Not all botanical aromas appear at the same time. After a quick foreshots
run, the volatile citrus notes appear, then come juniper and coriander, then the roots
such as orris, angelica and liquorice. The length of the run is important. The alcohol
concentration of the final product is also important as citric notes are the most
volatile, and should be greater than 40%abv. Some duty-free gins are 50%abv.

All brands use juniper and coriander, but Gordons uses ginger, cassia oil and nutmeg.
Beefeater uses bitter orange peel as well as angelica root and seed. Plymouth's 7
botanicals include sweet orange peel and cardamon. Sapphire uses the now rarely seen
cubeb berries (India) and grains of paradise (Ghana).

For convenience I have scaled down and rounded the quantities for the recipes for
Dutch Geneva, Cordial gin and dry London Gins from 'Muspratt Chemistry'. I have
assumed that the botanicals will be macerated in 1 litre of 50%abv and then
redistilled. 42%abv is the original strength of Plymouth Gin. I have also doubled the
quantity for bitter almonds as the original used pressed bitter almond cake and
almonds contain about 50% oil. For the cordial gins, double the quantity of botanicals
and then dilute to 22% abv. I have omitted the 'West Country Gin' as it contains only
2g of juniper/litre and a total of about 35g/litre of botanicals seems to be an optimal
quantity.

Recipe 1 (from 'The Book of Gin & Vodkas', Bob Emmons)


BASIC GIN
juniper 22.5g
coriander 11.5g
cassia 2.5g
angelica root 2.5g
lemon peel 0.25g
cardamon 0.25g

Recipe 2
BRITISH GIN
juniper 15g
coriander 15g
bitter almonds 12g
angelica root 0.25g
liquorice root 1g

Recipe 3
CORDIAL GIN
juniper 10g
coriander 7.5g
bitter almonds 1.5g
orris root 0.25g
angelica root 0.25g
cardamon 0.06g
liquorice root 1g

Recipe 4
CORDIAL GIN
juniper 10g
coriander 7.5g
orris root 0.25g
angelica root 0.125g
calamus root 0.25g
cardamon 0.05g

Recipe 5
FINE GIN
juniper 10g
coriander 0.5g
grains of paradise 0.5g
angelica root 0.5g
orris root 0.25g
calamus root 0.25g
orange peel 0.25g
liquorice root 10g (optional)

Recipe 6
LONDON GIN
juniper 10g
coriander 10g
bitter almonds 1g
angelica root 0.25g
liquorice root 1g

Recipe 7
BASIC GENEVA
juniper 10g
coriander 12g
cassia 0.6g
angelica root 0.5g
calamus root 0.6g
bitter almonds 1.2g
cardamon 0.05g

Recipe 8
PLAIN GENEVA
juniper 10g
coriander 10g
calamus root 0.25g
bitter almonds 0.5g
orris root 0.25g

Recipe 9
FINE GENEVA (highly recommended)
juniper 20g
coriander 8g
angelica root 1g
calamus root 0.25g
bitter almonds 3g
cardamon 0.125g
grains of paradise 1g

Recipe 10 (from 'The Household Encyclopedia')


ENGLISH GENEVA
juniper 35g

With the aim of formulating a standard model for gin botanical quantities for the
homedistiller, here is a table of the botanicals used in 8 modern gins:
1) Tiger Gin
2) Gordon's Distilled London Dry Gin
3) Beefeater London Distilled Dry Gin
4) Plymouth Gin
5) Bombay Distilled London Dry Gin
6) Bombay Sapphire Distilled London Dry Gin
7) Mercury Gin
8) Juniper Green London Dry Gin

Botanicals used-------Gin Brand (see above)


-----------------------1-----2-----3-----4-----5-----6-----7-----8
Juniper---------------yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes
Coriander-------------yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes
Angelica root---------yes---------yes---yes---yes---yes---yes---yes
Cassia----------------yes---yes---yes---------yes---yes---yes
Cinnamon--------------yes------------------------------------------
Liquorice-------------yes---------yes---------yes---yes---yes------
Bitter almonds--------------------------------yes---yes---yes------
Grains of Paradise----------------------------------yes------------
Cubeb berries---------------------------------------yes------------
Bitter orange peel----------------yes------------------------------
Sweet orange peel-----yes---------------yes---------------yes------
Lemon peel------------yes---------yes---yes---yes---yes---yes------
Ginger----------------------yes------------------------------------
Orris root------------yes---------------yes---yes---yes---yes------
Cardamon--------------yes---------------yes------------------------
Nutmeg----------------yes---yes------------------------------------
Savory----------------------------------------------------------yes
Calamus (sweet flag)-----------------------------------------------
Chamomile (?)------------------------------------------------------

The total amount of botanicals used is about 20-35 grams/litre. If we take the
dominant botanical juniper as 'x', the proportions of the botanicals used is:
x = juniper
x/2 = coriander
x/10 = angelica, cassia, cinnamon, liquorice, bitter almonds, grains of paradise, cubeb
berries
x/100 = bitter & sweet orange peel, lemon peel, ginger, orris root, cardamon, nutmeg,
savory, calamus, chamomile.
If we use x = 20g then x/2 = 10g, x/10 = 2g, x/100 = 0.2g (200mg)

Some current gins do not have a pronounced juniper character as they are used for
cocktails and are more of a flavored vodka - for this type of gin for 'x' use equal
quantities for juniper & coriander (i.e. x = 20g composed of 10g of juniper & 10g of
coriander)

The botanical are macerated in 45%abv neutral alcohol (usuallyfor 24 hours),


redistilled and then diluted to 42%abv which is an optimal strength for holding the
flavour of the botanicals. Only the middle run (80-85%abv) is used to produce a high
quality gin. Plymouth Gin also comes in a 57%abv 'Navy Strength' and which is also the
British 100 proof strength.

All gins include juniper as an ingredient along with other botanicals. Typically a fine gin
contains 6-10 botanicals, although the Dutch Damask Gin has 17 and the French
Citadelle Gin has 19 but this could be more for marketing reasons and has been
criticised for lacking direction.

Botanical names:
juniper - juniperus communis
coriander - coriandrum sativum
angelica - archangelica officinalis
cassia - cinnamomum cassia
cinnamon - cinnamomum zeylanicum
liquorice - glycyrrihiza sp.
bitter almond - prunus dulcis, amara
grains of paradise - afromumum melegueta
cubeb berries - piper cubeba
bitter orange - citrus aurantium
sweet orange - citrus sinensis
lemon - citrus limon
ginger - zingiber officinale
orris root - iris florentina
cardamon - elletaria cardamomum
nutmeg - myristica fragrans
savory - satureja hortensis
calamus - acorus calamus
chamomile - matricaria chamomilla

The usual mash for English gin is 75% maize, 15% barley malt and 10% other grains,
although rectified spirit from molasses is also used. Dutch gin originally was made from
1/3 malted barley and 2/3 rye meal, although these days the proportions given is 1/3
malted barley, 1/3 rye, 1/3 maize.

The Dutch figure prominently in the history of distilling. With their business acumen,
they were quick to make a guilder when the opportunity arose. The first recorded
distillation of gin (eau de vie de genievre)is in 1572 by Franciscus Sylvius a physic of
Leiden, and it was meant as a health tonic based on juniper berries. Lucas Bols, the
father of commercial gin production, built his first distillery in 1575 near Amsterdam.
The first recorded commercial liqueur was Lucas Bol's Kummel. It was meant as an aid
for digestion i.e. as a digestive. It's based on caraway seeds which are believed to aid
digestion and prevent flatulence.

The use of caraway flavored spirits are still common from Holland to Latvia. Caraway
has a yield of essential oils from about 3-7%, therefore you would need to macerate
about 100 grams of crushed seeds in 40%abv and then to redistill to get a caraway
flavored spirit. This would have about a teaspoon (5ml or 100 drops) of caraway
essential oil. Using a commercial essential oil is another alternative. Here is a basic
recipe for those with a flatulence problem:

Kummel
750ml (3 metric cups) of caraway flavored alcohol 40%vol (5ml essential oil/litre i.e.
redistill 100g crushed seeds in 1L 40%abv)
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
Make a simple syrup and add to the alcohol
You could also make a caraway flavored vodka by maceration:
1 litre vodka 40%abv
60g (2oz) lightly crushed caraway seeds (4tbsp)
60g (2oz) sugar (1/2 cup), or to taste.
Macerate for 10 days and strain.

Pacharan (Patxaran) is a Spanish Basque specialty made by macerating sloe berries


(blackthorn, prunus spinosa)in a dry anise flavored alcohol with other herbs and
spices.Sloe Gin is made by macerating sloe berries in gin. Here are two recipes from
"Wine Making & Home Brewing" S. Beedell (1970):

Sloe Gin 1
1 gallon (4.5L) gin
3 and 1/2 (1.6 kg) lb white sugar
3 oz (85 g) bitter almonds
3 quarts (3L) sloes
Put all the ingredients into a 2 gallon (9L) jar and shake 2-3 times a week. Strain and
bottle at the end of 2 months.

Sloe Gin 2
Put 3 pints (1.7L) of sloes in a gallon jar (4.5L) with
1 oz (30g) of sweet almonds and
1 and 1/2 lb (700g) of white sugar.
Pour in 2 quarts (2l) of gin and cover.
Shake the jar every third day for 3 months. Strain, bottle and seal. The gin improves
with keeping.

I have a Ukrainian recipe .. for a 'Ternivka' or Sloe Vodka. It relies on wild yeasts to
weakly ferment the sloes.

Ternivka (Sloe Vodka)


Fill a large jar with ripe sloe (blackthorn) berries that have been pricked in several
places. Sprinkle with sugar. Cover neck and let it stand in the sun for 6 weeks. When
fermentation has ceased add to every 10 kg (20 lb) of berries 500 ml (1 pt) of vodka.
Let it stand for several months. Strain. Add more vodka (quantity not given, but going
by sloe gin recipe it could be up to 10 litres or 20 pts).

The English make a Plum Gin from Damson plums, which are related to the French
Mirabelle plum, from which the well-known eau-de-vie de Mirabelle is made. Here are
two recipes for Damson Gin from "Winemaking and Home Brewing", S. Beedell (1970).

Damson Gin (Fortified) 1


1 lb (500 g) damsons
1 and 1/2 pts (850 ml) gin
3/4 lb (350 g) sugar
Mix all together, and shake well two or three times a day till the sugar is dissolved.
Store for at least a year before using.

Damson Gin (Fortified) 2


Damsons
Cloves
Essence of almonds
Unsweetened gin
Sugar candy
Wipe the damsons, removing stalks, and prick each one in several places with a pin.
Prepare some dry quart (litre) bottles, and half fill them with the fruit. To each bottle
add 1 clove, 2 oz (60 g) of crushed sugar candy and a few drops of essence of almonds.
Then fill up with unsweetened gin. Cork securely, and keep in a warmish place for 3
months, shaking occasionally. Strain the gin until it is clear then rebottle and cork well,
and store until wanted.

Pacharan is a Spanish liqueur.


1 litre dry aniseed flavored alcohol (e.g. arak,raki,ouzo or you could add 4tsp aniseed to
1litre of vodka)
250 g sloe berries (blackthorn, prunus spinosa)
2 tbsp sugar
stick of cinnamon
6 coffee beans
camomile flowers (say 1 tsp)
dry orange peel
Macerate the sloe berries in the alcohol until it becomes a characteristic intense red, then add
sugar, coffee beans,camomile flowers,cinnamon, orange peel. Macerate for at least 30 days. Strain.
Variations of the above exist. The use of sloe beries is reminiscent of English sloe gin.

Baker quotes from "The Alcohol Textbook" by Jacques,Lyons & Kelsall :


Production of gin

The BATF definition of gin is a product obtained by original distillation from mash, or by redistillation of distilled
spirits, or by mixing neutral spirits with or over juniper berries and other aromatics, or with or over other extracts derived
from infusions, percolations, or maceration of such materials, and includes mixtures of gin and neutral spirits. It shall
derive its main characteristic flavor from juniper berries and be bottled at not less that 80 proof (40 %). Gin produced
exclusively by original distillation or redistillation may be further designated as distilled. The regulation also states that
dry gin (London dry gin), Geneva gin (Hollands gin) and Old Tom gin (Tom gin) are types of gin known under such
designations.

This regulation means that gin may be produced by


1) distilling spirit with juniper berries and other botanicals, or
2) mixing spirit with a distilled gin concentrate, or
3) mixing spirit with a blend of essences of juniper and other flavorings.

The spirit used in gin production is usually neutral, but in the production of Geneva gin, which is
popular in the Netherlands and Quebec, it is a heavily flavored distillate referred to as malt wine.
Distilled gin is normally produced in batch operations using pot stills. The pot still is usually filled
with neutral spirit diluted to 45-60 %, and then the juniper berries and other botanicals are added.
The berries and botanicals may be added directly to the spirit either in loose form or contained in a
cotton sack. Alternatively, the mixed botanicals may be suspended above the liquid surface either in
a cotton sack or in a wire mesh rack. In the gin distilling process the pot still is heated by steam
indirectly through a calandria in the bottom of the pot.

The distillate coming over in the first few minutes of flow is normally discarded as heads for
reprocessing. The main bulk of the distillate is then taken as product, and the final portion distilling
below a predetermined proof (of about 45 oGL) is discarded as tails for reprocessing. The pot still
product is then sent to the bottling department for dilution and bottling. There is usually no
storage or blending of different gin batches.

In the preparation of gin concentrate the distillation process is much the same as for distilled gin,
but a much greater quantity of botanicals is added in the pot still. The gin concentrate is then
simply blended with neutral spirit prior to bottling. Gin essences are prepared by blending essential
oils and other extracts derived from juniper berries and botanicals. With the introduction of highly
concentrated gin essences, it is possible to use as little as 0.01% by volume of the essence in a
blend with neutral spirit.

Some internationally known brands of gin are produced by all three methods (i.e. distilling,
concentrate blending, and essence blending) indifferent countries without appreciable variance in
taste and odor when normal quality control procedures are used.

The quality and type of juniper berries and the mix of other botanicals largely determines the
nature of the end product. For example, the flavor of London dry gin is strongly influenced by large
amounts of coriander seeds in the botanical mix. Simpson (1966; 1977) and Clutton(1979) have
listed several botanicals commonly used in gin production (Table 2). Another frequently used
botanical is the chamomile flower (Chamaemelum nobile).

Table 2. Botanicals used in production of gin.1


Common name Botanical name
Juniper berries Juniperis communis
Coriander seed Coriandrum sativum
Liquorice root Glycyrrhiza spp.
Fennel seed Foeniculum vulgare
Cubeb berries Piper cubeb
Cinnamon bark Cinnamonum zeylanicum
Nutmeg Myristica fragrans
Aniseed Pimpinella anisum
Grains of paradise Afromomum melegueta
Cassia bark Cinnamomum cassia
Sweet orange peel Citrus sinensis
Bitter orange peel Citrus aurantium
Cardamom seeds Elettaria cardamomum
Angelica root Archangelica officinalis
Lemon peel Citrus limon
Orris root Iris pallida
Callamus root Acorus calamus
Caraway seed Corum carvi
Adapted from Simpson (1966, 1977) and Clutton(1979).

As with vodka, great care should be taken in handling and bottling gin. Unlike vodka, however, the
problem is not picking up flavors from other products. The risk is contamination of other products
with gin. If it is not possible to use a dedicated set of tanks and bottling equipment, everything
coming in contact with gin should be thoroughly washed before use on any other beverage.

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