All Spirits & Wine, One Place
Gabriel Boudier Saffron Gin: A Colonial-Era Recipe Rediscovered in the Dijon Archives, Infused with the World's Most Expensive Spice

Gabriel Boudier Saffron Gin: A Colonial-Era Recipe Rediscovered in the Dijon Archives, Infused with the World's Most Expensive Spice

7 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: Gabriel Boudier
ABV: 40% ABV
Price: £38

Tasting Notes

Nose

Juniper and fennel leading — citrus peel brightness, saffron surprisingly subtle on the nose, more earthy warmth than floral sweetness

Palate

Smooth and finely spiced — the saffron adds a honeyed, musky warmth rather than dominating, fennel providing an anise backbone, juniper staying present throughout, distinguished and characteristic

Finish

Persistent woody juniper — the saffron emerging in a lingering way after all the other botanicals have left, warm and earthy, distinctive

First Impressions

The colour alone stops you: a deep coppery orange, entirely natural, from genuine Crocus sativus saffron filaments — the world's most expensive spice, worth more per gram than gold. Gabriel Boudier has been making liqueurs in Dijon since the house was founded as Fontbonne, with Gabriel Boudier himself acquiring it in 1909. Chairman Jean Battault launched Saffron Gin in 2008 after rediscovering the recipe in the Boudier archives — dating from a time when France and England had established trade outposts in India and exotic spices flowed back to European distillers.

Tasting

Seven botanicals — juniper, coriander, lemon peel, orange peel, angelica, iris, and fennel — are distilled simultaneously in Boudier's copper still using French summer wheat as the base spirit. The resulting botanical alcoholate is then combined with a saffron infusion and left for at least a month. On the nose, juniper and fennel lead with citrus brightness, saffron surprisingly subtle. The palate is smooth and finely spiced: saffron adds honeyed, musky warmth rather than dominating, fennel provides an anise backbone, juniper stays present. The finish is where saffron reveals itself — emerging after the other botanicals fade, woody and persistent.

The Bottom Line

Gabriel Boudier Saffron Gin earns a 7 — a genuinely unique spirit where the saffron infusion creates something no other gin offers. Trophy for Best Liqueur Producer at the 2024 International Spirits Challenge confirms Boudier's credentials. The visual impact is extraordinary in a G&T, turning the drink a pale golden amber. Best with a light Mediterranean tonic and an orange twist, or in a Bee's Knees where the honey and saffron create something magical. At £38, you are paying for the real thing — not saffron flavouring, but the actual spice.

Where to Buy

As an affiliate, we may earn from qualifying purchases.
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...

Community Reviews

No community reviews yet. Be the first!

Log in to write a review.