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Blind Tiger Imperial Secrets Gin: Belgian Craft with Hidden Botanicals and a Speakeasy Spirit

Blind Tiger Imperial Secrets Gin: Belgian Craft with Hidden Botanicals and a Speakeasy Spirit

7 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: Blind Tiger Distillery
ABV: 45% ABV
Price: £37

Tasting Notes

Nose

Bold juniper — exotic pepper spice, cardamom warmth, citrus peel brightness, the 45% announcing strength with aromatic intensity

Palate

Spice-forward and complex — cubeb and Tellicherry peppers providing layered heat, ginger warmth, cardamom sweetness, bold juniper maintaining authority, citrus adding brightness

Finish

Peppery and warming — long and spice-accented, the exotic peppers lingering, dry juniper, the imperial secrets remaining secret but delivering on their promise

First Impressions

A 'blind tiger' was a Prohibition-era establishment that sold illegal liquor under the guise of displaying an exotic animal — pay to see the blind tiger, get a 'complimentary' drink. The Belgian Blind Tiger gin honours this speakeasy spirit with its Imperial Secrets expression: the full botanical bill is deliberately hidden, with only the key players revealed. At 45%, this is a gin with the confidence to keep secrets.

Tasting

The revealed botanicals include juniper, cubeb pepper, Tellicherry pepper, cardamom, ginger, coriander, citrus peel, and angelica — with additional secrets undisclosed. The nose is bold juniper with exotic pepper spice and cardamom warmth. On the palate at 45%, spice-forward and complex: cubeb and Tellicherry peppers provide layered heat, ginger adds warmth, cardamom contributes sweetness, and bold juniper maintains authority. The finish is peppery, warming, and long.

The Bottom Line

Blind Tiger Imperial Secrets earns a 7 — a spice-forward Belgian gin where the exotic pepper combination (cubeb and Tellicherry) creates a heat profile more interesting than simple black pepper. The speakeasy concept extends to the botanical secrecy, which is a charming conceit. Best in a spicy G&T with ginger ale, or in a cocktail where the pepper warmth adds dimension. At £37, Belgian craft gin with genuine mystery.

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Edward Forwood
Edward Forwood
Senior Gin Reviewer

Edward has spent two decades judging spirits at competitions from the IWSC to the San Francisco World Spirits Competition, developing a palate that prizes balance above novelty. A holder of the WSET D...

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