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Black Powder English Raspberry Gin: Peak-Ripeness Fruit from the Fylde Countryside, No Artificial Anything

Black Powder English Raspberry Gin: Peak-Ripeness Fruit from the Fylde Countryside, No Artificial Anything

6 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: Black Powder Distillery
ABV: 37.5% ABV
Price: £30

Tasting Notes

Nose

Intensely fruity — fresh ripe raspberry dominating, natural and unadorned, the long infusion process evident in the depth of fruit character

Palate

Juicy and smooth — raspberry sweetness perfectly balanced, the London Dry base providing juniper structure, no artificial notes, just pure fruit and gin in harmony

Finish

Clean raspberry — gentle juniper dryness, the natural fruit persisting without artificial aftertaste, refreshing

First Impressions

Black Powder sits in the Fylde countryside, overlooking Lancashire's coastal peninsula. This family-run distillery uses meticulous methods in traditional copper pot stills with absolutely no artificial flavours, colourings, or preservatives. The raspberries are selected at peak ripeness — from their own orchards or sourced from the best producers — and long-infused to extract maximum natural flavour.

Tasting

The nose is intensely fruity — fresh ripe raspberry dominating, natural and honest. On the palate at 37.5%, juicy and smooth with raspberry sweetness balanced by the London Dry base's juniper structure. No artificial notes — just pure fruit and gin. The finish is clean raspberry with gentle juniper dryness and natural fruit persistence.

The Bottom Line

Black Powder English Raspberry earns a 6 — an honest fruit gin where the 'no artificial anything' promise is evident in the taste. The long infusion and peak-ripeness selection produce genuine raspberry character. At 37.5%, juniper is gentle rather than assertive. Best in a G&T with Indian tonic, or with prosecco for a natural fruit fizz. At £30, well-priced Lancashire craft.

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Amelie Farnham
Amelie Farnham
Gin & Botanicals Editor

Amelie came to gin via botany — she studied plant sciences at Edinburgh before realising her real interest lay in what happened to botanicals after they reached the still. She has visited over a hundr...

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