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Feckin Irish Gin: Five Botanicals and Sherbet Lemons from Echlinville Distillery on Strangford Lough

Feckin Irish Gin: Five Botanicals and Sherbet Lemons from Echlinville Distillery on Strangford Lough

7 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: Echlinville Distillery
ABV: 40% ABV
Price: £35

Tasting Notes

Nose

Herbaceous opening — sherbet lemon brightness, savoury juniper, inviting and uncomplicated

Palate

Juniper ever-present — bitterness of lemon coming to the fore, dancing a duet with sweeter coriander flavours, slightly buttery delivery adding richness, cassia bark warmth

Finish

Long and lemony — almost a sherbet feel, clean and refreshing, the five botanicals each earning their place

First Impressions

Feckin Irish Gin is produced at Echlinville Distillery in Kircubbin, County Down — on the shores of Strangford Lough in Northern Ireland. The name works on two levels: 'feck' is the Irish verb meaning to steal, to throw, or to leave in a hurry; it is also a version of St Fechin, who founded several monasteries on the island. Five botanicals — no more, no less — and a gin that makes every one count.

Tasting

Five botanicals: juniper, angelica root, cassia bark, coriander, and lemon. The nose is herbaceous with sherbet lemon brightness and savoury juniper. On the palate, juniper is ever-present while the bitterness of lemon comes to the fore, dancing a duet with the sweeter flavours of coriander. A slightly buttery delivery adds richness, and cassia bark provides warmth. The finish is long and lemony with almost a sherbet feel — clean and refreshing.

The Bottom Line

Feckin earns a 7 — proof that five botanicals handled well can outperform twenty handled carelessly. The sherbet-lemon character is distinctive and genuinely delightful, and the Echlinville Distillery on Strangford Lough is a producer of real credibility. Best in a G&T with premium tonic and a slice of lemon to amplify those sherbet notes, or in a Tom Collins where the lemon character shines. At £35, a well-priced Irish gin with serious charm and a name you won't forget.

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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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