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Beefeater London Dry Gin — The Kennington Classic That Defined a Category

Beefeater London Dry Gin — The Kennington Classic That Defined a Category

7 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: James Burrough / Pernod Ricard
ABV: 40% ABV
Price: £20

Tasting Notes

Nose

Clean and immediate juniper leads, followed by a bright citrus lift of Seville orange and lemon zest. There is a restrained earthiness beneath — angelica root lending a quiet, mineral-dry backbone. A faint sweetness of ground almond hovers at the edges, though it never intrudes.

Palate

Medium-bodied and crisp. The juniper is assertive without being aggressive, flanked by coriander seed warmth and a gentle liquorice sweetness that rounds the mid-palate. Citrus oils emerge more clearly here than on the nose — bitter orange particularly — and there is a pleasant, peppery dryness that keeps everything in motion.

Finish

Moderate in length, drying steadily with lingering juniper resin and a whisper of orris root powder. The citrus fades first, leaving behind a clean, almost chalky dryness that invites the next sip.

There are gins that chase trends, and there are gins that set the standard by which all others are measured. Beefeater London Dry belongs emphatically to the latter camp. Distilled at the James Burrough distillery — one of the last remaining gin distilleries within London itself, nestled in Kennington on the south bank of the Thames — this is a spirit whose roots run deep into the clay and commerce of the capital. To pour a measure of Beefeater is to hold a small piece of London's distilling heritage in your glass.

A Botanical Blueprint

What has always struck me about Beefeater is the quiet confidence of its botanical bill. Nine ingredients — juniper, angelica root, angelica seeds, coriander seeds, liquorice, almond, orris root, Seville orange peel, and lemon peel — and not a single one reaching for novelty. This is a recipe that has endured because it works, each botanical earning its place through balance rather than spectacle. The juniper leads, as it must in any London Dry worth the designation, but it is the interplay of citrus, spice, and earthy root that gives Beefeater its particular character. The Seville orange peel, with its bitter marmalade edge, has always felt like a nod to the city itself — something robust, a little sharp, unmistakably urban.

The Kennington Legacy

I have visited distilleries perched on Scottish cliff edges and tucked into Andalusian hillsides, but there is something singularly compelling about a gin made in the shadow of the Oval cricket ground. The James Burrough distillery, now under the stewardship of Pernod Ricard, continues to steep its botanicals for a full twenty-four hours before distillation — a patient method that coaxes depth from those nine carefully chosen ingredients. At 40% ABV and sitting comfortably around the £20 mark, Beefeater occupies that rare position: a gin of genuine quality that remains genuinely accessible.

A Dependable Standard-Bearer

If I have a reservation, it is only that Beefeater's very ubiquity can work against it. We overlook what is always available. But return to it after a season of chasing single-estate oddities and pink-hued curiosities, and you are reminded why this gin defined the London Dry category in the first place. It does not dazzle — it delivers. A solid 7 out of 10, and a bottle I would never be without.

Best served long, with a quality Indian tonic and a generous peel of Seville orange, on a late afternoon when the sun catches the rooftops of South London and the evening stretches out ahead of you with no particular place to be.

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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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