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Thomas Dakin Small Batch Gin

Thomas Dakin Small Batch Gin

7.7 /10
EDITOR
ABV: 42%
Price: £31.95

Tasting Notes

Nose

Pungent musky angelica root — nutty damp wood notes with hop-like freshly chopped celery from angelica seeds, generous coriander, underlying piney juniper and orange zest

Palate

Bone dry with generous coriander and assertive peppery heat — the red cole (horseradish) building a slow savoury burn, green apple and crisp not-quite-ripe pear, almost a spiced gin in its intensity

Finish

Very long — the horseradish heat lingering with peppery spice and earthy root complexity, the 1761 heritage distillery showing its craft in the sustained depth

Thomas Dakin is a name that carries weight in gin history — widely credited as one of the earliest commercial gin distillers in England, predating even the most storied London houses. That this small batch expression trades on that heritage is no accident. It's a calculated play in an increasingly crowded premium London Dry market, and at £31.95, it sits squarely in the mid-shelf sweet spot where casual buyers trade up and enthusiasts stock their home bars.

Style & Category

Positioned as a London Dry at 42% ABV, Thomas Dakin Small Batch Gin lands at a strength that's become something of an industry standard for versatility — robust enough to hold its own in a Negroni, approachable enough for a simple G&T. The 'small batch' designation signals craft intent, though it's worth noting that term remains gloriously unregulated. What matters more is execution, and Thomas Dakin has carved out a respectable niche among bartenders who want a reliable, well-structured juniper-forward gin without the price premium of more fashionable labels.

Market Position

In a landscape where every new release seems to chase novelty — pink gins, obscure botanicals, celebrity endorsements — there's something quietly admirable about a gin that leans into tradition. Thomas Dakin doesn't need a gimmick. It competes on pedigree and consistency, two qualities the on-trade values enormously. I'd rate this a solid 7.7 out of 10: a dependable, well-made London Dry that does exactly what it sets out to do without overreaching.

Best served: In a classic gin and tonic with a grapefruit peel garnish — it's the kind of pour that moves quickly behind any decent bar, and for good reason.

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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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