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Inverroche Verdant Gin

Inverroche Verdant Gin

7.6 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 43%
Price: £40.50

Tasting Notes

Nose

Delicate floral aromas of elderflower and chamomile — top notes of elderflower, lemon verbena, and chamomile

Palate

Touch of spice, subtle juniper, zesty lemon rind and alluring liquorice — rosemary-like manna grass, earthy buchu and soft citrus over a silky mouthfeel

Finish

Aromatic floral with clean lingering piney juniper warmth and herbal freshness

Inverroche is a name that carries weight in the world of botanical-forward gin, and their Verdant expression is one that positions itself squarely within the London Dry category at a confident 43% ABV. It's a deliberate choice — London Dry is the most competitive space in gin, and any distillery entering it is making a statement about its technical credentials. Inverroche, to their credit, has the pedigree to back it up.

A Brand With Something to Prove

What strikes me about the Verdant is its intent. The name alone signals a green, herbaceous character — an emphasis on freshness and botanical vibrancy that suggests this isn't a juniper-and-nothing-else proposition. At £40.50, it sits in that increasingly crowded mid-premium bracket where you're competing against some very well-established names. The question any bottle at this price point has to answer is simple: why should a bartender reach for this over a reliable house pour?

The London Dry classification tells us something important about the production method — no post-distillation flavouring, everything earned in the still. That's a discipline I respect, and it suggests Inverroche are letting their botanical selection and distillation technique do the talking. The 43% ABV gives it just enough backbone to hold its own in a mixed drink without overwhelming more delicate ingredients.

I'd score this a 7.6 out of 10 — a solid, well-constructed gin that demonstrates real craft, though in a category this saturated, it needs to fight hard for shelf space against bottles with deeper brand recognition.

Best Served

A classic G&T with a premium Indian tonic and a sprig of fresh herbs would be the natural pairing here. The kind of serve that lets the botanical character breathe — exactly what bartenders want when a customer asks for something a step above the ordinary.

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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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