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Lind and Lime Gin

Lind and Lime Gin

7.6 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 44%
Price: £37.25

Tasting Notes

Nose

Crisp fresh juniper and lime to the fore — peppery spice background, bright citrus with subtle floral notes

Palate

Smooth with fresh lime zest leading — balanced by earthy liquorice root and warmth of pink peppercorns, oily juniper subtly spicy with cardamom

Finish

Refreshing dryness — earthy juniper with lingering citrusy cardamom spice

There are gins that announce themselves with baroque complexity, and then there are those that arrive with the quiet confidence of a well-cut suit. Lind and Lime belongs firmly in the latter camp — a London Dry that carries itself with an understated elegance, its very name a nod to the citrus fruit that once saved sailors from scurvy on long ocean crossings.

A London Dry With Maritime Character

At 44% ABV, Lind and Lime sits at that sweet spot where a London Dry can express its juniper-forward backbone without overwhelming the palate. The name itself is a lovely piece of storytelling — evoking James Lind, the Scottish physician who discovered that citrus could cure scurvy, forever linking lime to life at sea. It's the kind of detail that makes you want to pour a measure and sit with the history of it.

As a London Dry, the style demands that juniper leads the conversation, and at this strength you'd expect that resinous, piney character to come through cleanly, with the lime influence weaving a bright citrus thread through the spirit. It's a gin that seems designed with purpose rather than novelty — no gimmicks, no unnecessary flourishes, just a well-constructed expression of the category.

At £37.25, it's fairly priced for a gin of this calibre. It doesn't try to be everything to everyone, and I respect that restraint. I'd score it a confident 7.6 out of 10 — a solid, well-made London Dry that knows exactly what it wants to be.

Best served on a breezy evening with a quality Indian tonic, a generous wheel of fresh lime, and perhaps the sound of water somewhere nearby — a harbour wall, a riverside pub. This is a gin that belongs close to the sea.

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Walter Graves
Walter Graves
Features & Culture Writer

Walter writes long-form features that explore the stories behind whiskey — the people, places, and landscapes that give each bottle its character. A former travel journalist, he has visited over two h...

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