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Bombay Sapphire London Dry Gin

Bombay Sapphire London Dry Gin

7.4 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 40%
Price: £26.25

Tasting Notes

Nose

Juniper, lemon zest and lemon meringue pie filling — black and white pepper with Indian spice character

Palate

Initially delicate, light and slightly sweet — light juniper, lemon zest and coriander before strong peppery spice emerges with stewed vegetal notes

Finish

Piney juniper with faint lavender and mixed peppery spice — pleasing lavender emerging in the spicy close

There are gins that define a category, and then there are gins that become the category itself. Bombay Sapphire belongs firmly in the latter camp — a London Dry so ubiquitous, so universally recognised by that distinctive blue bottle, that it has become the gateway through which millions of drinkers first discover what gin can be.

A Modern Icon of London Dry

Bombay Sapphire sits at 40% ABV, the threshold where a London Dry begins to speak clearly. It is a gin built on balance and accessibility rather than provocation, and that is both its great strength and its quiet limitation. The botanical bill — kept deliberately under wraps in its specifics — delivers the kind of composed, elegant juniper-forward character you expect from a well-made London Dry, with enough aromatic complexity to hold your attention without demanding it.

I have encountered this bottle in hotel bars from Marrakech to Melbourne, in airport lounges and in the hands of bartenders who reach for it the way a painter reaches for white — as a foundation upon which anything can be built. That versatility is no small achievement. A gin that plays well with everything from a classic tonic serve to the architecture of a Negroni has earned its place on the shelf.

At around £26, Bombay Sapphire occupies a sensible middle ground — neither bargain nor indulgence, but reliable. It does not attempt to rewrite the London Dry playbook, and nor should it. What it offers is consistency and approachability, a 7.4 out of 10 that reflects genuine craftsmanship in service of broad appeal rather than the sharp edges of ambition.

Best served long with a premium Indian tonic and a generous squeeze of lemon, on an unhurried afternoon where the drink is the accompaniment, not the event.

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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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