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Tanqueray No. Ten — The Citrus-Led Evolution of a London Icon

Tanqueray No. Ten — The Citrus-Led Evolution of a London Icon

8 /10
EDITOR
Distillery: Charles Tanqueray & Co / Diageo
ABV: 47.3% ABV
Price: £33

Tasting Notes

Nose

A striking departure from the original. Fresh grapefruit peel dominates the opening — vivid, zesty, almost effervescent. Behind it, orange and lime lend a rounded citrus complexity, while chamomile introduces a delicate, hay-like floral note. The juniper is present but softened, sitting in a supporting role for perhaps the first time in Tanqueray history.

Palate

Silky and elegant, with the same full-bodied weight one expects from the 47.3% ABV. The fresh citrus fruits — grapefruit most prominently — bring a juicy, almost succulent quality to the mid-palate. Juniper reasserts itself here, providing necessary structure, while chamomile adds a gentle bitterness reminiscent of dried flowers. The coriander and angelica from the base recipe remain, lending warmth and dry earthiness respectively.

Finish

Medium-long, with lingering grapefruit zest and a gentle chamomile bitterness. The juniper emerges more clearly in the fade, reclaiming its place as the final note. There is an almost tea-like dryness at the very end — subtle, sophisticated, and thoroughly satisfying.

There are bottles that earn their place through heritage alone, and then there are those that take a legacy and push it somewhere genuinely interesting. Tanqueray No. Ten falls squarely into the second camp. Built on the bones of one of the most recognised London Dry recipes in the world, No. Ten strips back the armour and lets fresh citrus do the talking — and it does so at a confident 47.3% ABV that gives the botanicals real authority in the glass.

A Modern Classic from a Historic House

Distilled by Charles Tanqueray & Co, now under the Diageo umbrella, No. Ten takes its name from the tiny No. Ten still at the Cameronbridge distillery. What sets it apart from the standard green bottle is the use of whole, fresh citrus fruits — grapefruit, orange, and lime — rather than dried peels. That distinction matters. It pulls the gin away from the austere, juniper-forward profile of a traditional London Dry and into something brighter, more aromatic, more immediately appealing.

The botanical bill reads like a well-balanced cocktail in itself. Juniper is present as the backbone — this is still a London Dry, after all — but it shares the stage with coriander seed, angelica root, and liquorice, all of which add depth and a subtle earthiness. The real star turn, though, comes from that trio of fresh citrus backed by chamomile, a botanical I always appreciate for the gentle, honeyed softness it lends. It reminds me of the yuzu and chamomile tisanes I used to drink in Tokyo — that same delicate floral quality that rounds off sharper edges without dulling them.

Who Is This For?

If you find classic London Dry gins a touch too austere or piney, No. Ten is a superb gateway. It retains the structural integrity and clean distillation character that the style demands, but the fresh fruit gives it a lift that feels contemporary. At the same time, serious gin drinkers will find enough complexity here to reward slow sipping. The interplay between the citrus brightness and the quieter herbal and root notes is genuinely well-judged. At around £33, it sits in the sweet spot between everyday pour and considered purchase — good enough to justify reaching past the standard bottle, accessible enough to use freely.

I would rate Tanqueray No. Ten an 8 out of 10. It does not attempt to reinvent London Dry, and it does not need to. What it does is take a proven template and add just enough personality to stand apart. That restraint is harder than it sounds, and Tanqueray nails it.

Best Served

Try this in a Highball with premium tonic, a wheel of pink grapefruit, and a sprig of fresh shiso leaf — the herb's peppery anise quality plays beautifully against the chamomile and citrus. For something more ambitious, it makes a stunning White Negroni, where the fresh grapefruit notes amplify the Suze and dry vermouth into something electric.

Where to Buy

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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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