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Jindea Single Estate Tea Gin

Jindea Single Estate Tea Gin

7.7 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 40%
Price: £35.95

Tasting Notes

Nose

Piney mountain juniper — zesty grapefruit and warming ginger entwined, the Darjeeling tea adding a subtle aromatic lift

Palate

Delicate peach and juicy apricot — tart grapefruit dancing in harmony, ginger and spices leading with tea tannin undertone, pine and citrus zest layering, the first flush Darjeeling providing stone fruit sweetness

Finish

Crescendo of Darjeeling's floral muscatel — wrapped in gentle cardamom and ginger warmth, clean and dry, lingering spiced chai essence, the single estate tea having the final word

There's something genuinely exciting about a gin that declares its point of difference right there on the label. Jindea Single Estate Tea Gin is built around a concept that immediately piques my curiosity — the marriage of single estate tea with the botanical backbone of a London Dry. At 40% ABV and £35.95, it sits in that sweet spot where you expect craft and intention, and the "single estate" descriptor suggests a producer who cares deeply about provenance and terroir.

Style & Character

What fascinates me about tea-forward gins is the way tea leaves interact with juniper during distillation. Tea brings tannin structure — that gentle, drying grip you get on the palate — alongside a spectrum of floral and vegetal notes that can range from delicate jasmine-like aromatics to deeper, more oxidised maltiness, depending on the variety used. The fact that Jindea specifies "single estate" tells me they're treating the tea component with the same reverence a single malt distillery treats its barley. That's craftsmanship I can get behind.

As a London Dry, the juniper must still lead, but I'd expect the tea to weave through beautifully, adding complexity and a lovely textural quality that sets it apart from more conventional expressions. It's a gin that rewards attention — one to sip slowly and consider.

Best Served

I'd reach for this in a Bee's Knees — the honey syrup would complement the tea's natural sweetness while the lemon juice lifts those lighter aromatics. Use two parts gin, one part fresh lemon, three-quarters part honey syrup, shake hard over plenty of ice, and fine-strain into a chilled coupe. A lemon twist expressed over the surface is all the garnish you need.

At 7.7 out of 10, Jindea earns its score through sheer concept and ambition. A tea gin done with this level of single-estate focus deserves your attention.

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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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