Gin distillers find inspiration from the most amazing places these days, and for Jon and Nicole Durdin from Seppeltsfield Road Distillers, the amazing team behind our February 2021 Gin of the Month, the winemaking heritage of their home in South Australia’s Barossa Valley was too brilliant to ignore.
Their Barossa Shiraz Gin pays tribute to their home’s rich history of winemaking, and it’s just one of many gins on the market that take wine as an inspiration.
But how are wine gins made, and what can you expect from this exciting subcategory? Find out all the answers and more - including how to drink them! - below, but be warned, this feature may make you very thirsty!
What exactly is a wine gin?
‘Wine gin’ isn’t an official category yet, but it is a helpful way to describe a growing group of juniper-led spirits that are inspired by fine wines.
Some, as in the case of Seppeltsfield Road Distillers’ Barossa Shiraz Gin or Four Pillars Bloody Shiraz Gin, which is made in the Yarra Valley outside of Melbourne, are both inspired by red wine and use actual wine grapes as ingredients in the gin.
Others, like Salcombe Gin Rosé Sainte Marie, take a style of wine as a starting point — in Salcombe’s case, the fruity and dry palate of a Provencal rosé wine — and translate it into a gin by choosing botanicals that echo the flavours in fine wine.
And then there are gins aged in barrels once used for wine, like One Gin Port Barrel Aged Gin, which is created by resting the gin in reclaimed barrels once used to store port after it has been distilled.
So why would a distiller make a wine gin?
Every distiller has their own ‘aha’ moment when it comes to the expressions they choose to create.
For Nicole and Jon, being steeped in the winemaking culture of the Barossa Valley — which is one of the world’s most renowned wine regions — put wine at the forefront of their minds.
Four Pillars Bloody Shiraz Gin was born when, as Co-founders Stuart Gregor and Cameron MacKenzie told Ginned! Magazine back in 2016, the team ‘discovered’ (read: stole) 250kg of Shiraz grapes from one of their friends, a winemaker in the Yarra Valley.
The team at Salcombe Distilling Co., on the other hand, were inspired by the adventure and joy of life in the South of France, encapsulated by the elegant-yet-joyful pink wines made there. They were inspired to capture this joie de vivre in their speciality spirit, gin, while also exploring how to create a pink gin without adding artificial colours, flavours or sugar.
How are wine gins made?
Every distiller will have his or her own method of making a wine gin, depending on their equipment, skill level, the botanicals available to them and their vision of what the final product will be.
For barrel-aged gins like One Gin Port Barrel Aged Gin, it’s as simple as leaving the gin to age in a barrel until it has taken on the flavours of the fortified wine that the barrel used to hold. For others, the process is a little more complex.
The team at Four Pillars make their Bloody Shiraz Gin by soaking Shiraz grapes in their Rare Dry Gin; at Seppeltsfield Road Distillery, Nicole and Jon use their House Gin, distilled with local botanicals, as a starting point and use the same process, topping up the final product with water or spirit used as an alcohol base to adjust the ABV as needed.
Not only are the gin botanicals and the grapes local, but even the process captures a piece of Barossa Valley’s heritage.
Over at Salcombe Distilling Co. on the south coast of England, meanwhile, the wine gin on their roster is made using more traditional distilling techniques. Aiming to capture the dry fruitiness of rosé wines, the team distils carefully selected botanicals, among them strawberries, lemon verbena, orange blossom, rose petals and pink peppercorn They then macerate fresh strawberries in the London Dry Gin, achieving the pale pink colour.
How should I drink a wine gin?
The answer to this question depends entirely on the style of the gin, although a wine gin and tonic will always be a safe bet.
Richly flavoured gins like Seppeltsfield Road Distillers’ Barossa Shiraz Gin, Four Pillars Bloody Shiraz Gin and One Gin Port Barrel Aged Gin, which have used maceration or soaking as a technique, often mimic the palate of a sloe gin. This means that serves that work with the latter will likely work with the former. Try them with ginger ale or ginger beer as a mixer, or in cocktails developed for sloe gin — Jon and Nicole are big fans of the Deep Negroni.
Deep Negroni
Ingredients
30ml Seppeltsfield Road Distillers’ Barossa Shiraz Gin
30ml Campari
30ml dry vermouth
Orange rind, to garnish
Method
Fill a mixing glass and a tumbler with ice. Add your ingredients to the mixing glass and stir gently for 30 seconds, until the spirits have integrated and chilled down. Strain the cocktail into your tumbler, twist the rind over the cocktail and drop it in the drink to serve.
Salcombe Gin’s Rosé Sainte Marie, on the other hand, is much more along the lines of a pink gin or more classic expression. Serve it as a G&T, as you would a pink gin, or a spritz, as you would a rosé wine, to get the best out of this wine-inspired spirit; Angus also loves it in a French 75, with lemon juice and pink Champagne or other sparkling wine. However you drink it, Angus recommends serving his delicate and nuanced rosé gin in a wine glass, to echo the libation that inspired it.
Southern Sky
This unique and utterly impressive cocktail from the Salcombe Distilling Co. marries their Salcombe Gin Rosé Sainte Marie with thyme-infused Chambord and champagne. We can not get enough!
Ingredients
25ml Salcombe Gin Rosé Sainte Marie
15ml Knightor Winery Rosé Vermouth
15ml thyme-infused Chambord
Champagne, to top
Method
For the thyme-infused Chambord: Leave a handful of thyme sprigs in half a bottle of Chambord overnight and then sift before use.
In a shaker or mixing jug, stir the Chambord, gin and vermouth with lots of ice. Strain the liquid into your champagne glass and top with champagne. Enjoy!