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Hoxton Tropical Gin: Coconut and Grapefruit Steeped for Six Weeks in 150-Year-Old Copper Pot Stills

Hoxton Tropical Gin: Coconut and Grapefruit Steeped for Six Weeks in 150-Year-Old Copper Pot Stills

6 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: Hoxton Spirits
ABV: 40% ABV
Price: £36

Tasting Notes

Nose

Vanilla cream soda and desiccated coconut — lime cordial, a waft of eucalyptus, tropical and perfumed, unlike any traditional gin

Palate

Bitter grapefruit and ginger arriving first — pine notes from juniper developing late, coconut providing creamy sweetness, tarragon adding an unexpected herbal complexity

Finish

Bright tropical — refreshing citrus lingering with a touch of sweetness, coconut cream fading, ginger warmth

First Impressions

Gerry Calabrese — East London drinks maverick, operating from the Hoxton Pony bar — created this tropical gin before the flavoured gin boom made such experiments commonplace. The production method is distinctive: botanicals steep for up to six weeks to extract maximum flavour before distillation in 150-year-old copper pot stills. Six weeks of maceration is extraordinarily long by gin standards, and it shows in the intensity of the tropical character.

Tasting

Six botanicals: coconut, grapefruit, juniper, ginger, tarragon, and orris root. The nose is unapologetically tropical — vanilla cream soda, desiccated coconut, lime cordial, with a waft of eucalyptus. On the palate, bitter grapefruit and ginger arrive first, pine from juniper develops on the late palate, coconut provides creamy sweetness, and tarragon adds unexpected herbal complexity. The finish is bright and tropical with lingering citrus and ginger warmth.

The Bottom Line

Hoxton earns a 6 — a polarising gin that you will either love or dismiss. The six-week maceration produces genuine flavour intensity, and the combination of coconut and grapefruit is inspired: sweetness and bitterness in constant tension. But juniper takes a back seat, arriving late rather than leading, which will frustrate purists. Best in a Piña Colada riff or a tropical G&T with pineapple. At £36, a conversation piece that rewards the open-minded.

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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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