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Oxley Gin

Oxley Gin

7.8 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 47%
Price: £47.75

Tasting Notes

Nose

Bright juniper with nutty coriander, liquorice, grapefruit zest — slightly spicy with lavender, almond, marshmallow and soft citrus

Palate

Assertive juniper and citrus early, vanilla and meadowsweet in mid-notes, nutty cacao and nutmeg quality developing, baking chocolate hints

Finish

Juniper holding through with warming cinnamon wave, grains of paradise adding gentle pepperiness — fresh and persistent

Oxley Gin occupies a rather distinctive position within the London Dry category. At 47% ABV, it sits comfortably above the legal minimum of 37.5%, lending it the kind of backbone that serious gin enthusiasts — and serious cocktails — demand. This is a gin that announces its intent before you've even poured it.

A Cold Distillation Pioneer

What sets Oxley apart from the vast majority of its London Dry peers is its method of production. This is one of very few gins on the market produced using cold vacuum distillation, a technique that operates at sub-zero temperatures rather than the conventional copper pot approach. The result, in principle, is a spirit that preserves the freshest, most delicate characteristics of its botanical charge — compounds that would ordinarily be altered or lost under the intense heat of traditional distillation. It is an approach rooted in precision rather than tradition, and I find it genuinely compelling.

Style and Character

In the glass, Oxley delivers a London Dry that feels modern in its execution whilst respecting the structural expectations of the category. The 47% ABV provides a firm, clean chassis — there is nothing shy about this gin. It carries itself with a quiet confidence that rewards attention. Having spent time with it, I would place it as a gin that bridges the classical juniper-forward profile with a lighter, more aromatic sensibility. It earns a rating of 7.8 out of 10: a well-crafted spirit with genuine technical distinction, though the lack of transparency around its full botanical bill and distillery provenance leaves a few questions unanswered for the more inquisitive drinker.

Best served: In a Martini — dry, with a twist of lemon. The cold distillation character truly comes alive when the gin is allowed to speak without competition.

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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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