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An Dulaman Irish Maritime Gin

An Dulaman Irish Maritime Gin

7.5 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 43.2%
Price: £33.75

Tasting Notes

Nose

Maritime complexity — soft piney juniper with seaweed herbaceous-savoury character from five different sea plants

Palate

Incredibly bright soft juniper subsiding to reveal rich umami — brisk salt then buttery oyster smoothness with chestnut hints, firm tannin, then sweet Turkish delight ebbing to comforting warmth from the cassia

Finish

Cassia warmth with white pepper — the five seaweeds creating a maritime complexity that tonic amplifies rather than diminishes, each 600-bottle batch hand-filled and wax-sealed

The name alone tells you everything about the ambition here. An Dulaman — Irish for seaweed — is a gin that wears its maritime identity not as a gimmick but as a genuine point of differentiation in an increasingly crowded London Dry category. At 43.2% ABV, it sits comfortably above the legal minimum, suggesting a distiller confident enough to let the spirit carry its botanical payload without hiding behind excessive proof.

A Maritime London Dry With Something to Prove

What interests me about An Dulaman is the positioning. Irish gin has undergone a remarkable renaissance over the past decade, and the coastal expressions have carved out a distinctive sub-category that genuinely stands apart from the English juniper-forward tradition. The maritime tag here is not mere marketing — it signals a botanical direction that leans into the saline, the vegetal, the distinctly littoral character that Ireland's Atlantic coastline can offer a distiller willing to forage for it.

As a London Dry, An Dulaman must meet the category's exacting standards: juniper-led, no artificial additions post-distillation, nothing to hide behind. That discipline, married to a coastal botanical profile, creates an interesting tension — the structured backbone of a classic dry gin pulling against the wilder, briny notes that maritime botanicals tend to impart. It is precisely this kind of creative friction that produces memorable gins.

At £33.75, it occupies sensible territory — premium enough to signal quality, accessible enough to justify a place on a back bar rather than gathering dust as a curiosity. A solid 7.5 out of 10: a well-conceived proposition in a competitive field, priced to move.

Best served: In a G&T with a light tonic and a twist of grapefruit peel — something that complements the coastal character without overwhelming it. This is one bartenders can comfortably recommend to customers looking beyond the usual suspects.

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Joe Whitfield
Joe Whitfield
Editor-in-Chief

Joe has spent over fifteen years immersed in the whiskey industry, beginning his career at a Speyside distillery before moving into drinks journalism. As Editor-in-Chief at Whiskeyful.com, he oversees...

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