Great Beginners Gin Recipe
Posted: Thu Jul 06, 2023 8:12 am
Thought I would share my experience with my first gin, in case there are others out there also beginning their journey into gin making. This turned out way better than expected, and was really quite easy. Highly recommended.
I made extra wash in the batch I fermented for my sacrificial spirit runs, using TFFV, so I could do an initial small batch of vodka or gin. Had about 20 extra litres at 10% to play with, so I ran it through my boka. After cuts and proofing down I had 1.95L at 54%. Wasn't thrilled with a slight butterscotch undertone (and I did do a diacytal rest) so decided to turn it all into gin.(I was wondering if the knob of butter I put into the boiler to control foaming was the culprit).
Decided to use Jessies basic recipe, it is so simple and easy. For my 1.95L at 54% neutral I scaled his recipe up as:
42g crushed juniper
42g uncrushed juniper
8g lightly crunched coriander seed
2g angelica root
22g lemon peel
As per Jessie's video, I heated up the neutral in my Airstill to 50 degrees, and macerated everything other than the lemon for 2 hours. Then stuffed the lemon peel into the gin basket (funny, it's the only gin basket that I have seen that actually looks like a basket ;-) ). Ran it, took off the first 20ml, kept going until it was coming off at just under 50% with very little taste. Ended up with about 1.2 - 1.3 L at 75%. There was still a bit of butterscotch aroma lurking, was slightly disappointed at that stage...
Started proofing down, wanted to get to about 43%. Added 800ml water, got to 47.6%, then added another 50ml, and it louched! Went cloudy, but let off a huge lemon aroma. Butterscotch disappeared as did my slight disappointment. Added another 200mm to get to 42.2%, it smelt beautiful, and tasted fantastic.
Decided for fun to try and remove the cloudiness, so threw a litre of Smirnoff into the airstill and ran it, got 420ml at 73%, which I added to my cloudy stuff, it cleared up instantly and I now have just under 1.6L of gin-clear gin at 48.2%.
Well, not quite 1.6L anymore, left it in a warmish space for a couple of days, and we tried it last night. Wife declared that it was better than a lot of the commercial stuff we get. It has a really nice London Dry taste and aroma (I like strong flavours). Really, really pleased with it and pleasantly surprised at how well it turned out (and how easy it was), especially given it was only meant to be a quick and dirty first go with some left-over wash. (Main aim is to make some with the sacks of wheat I now have in the garage).
So if you are thinking of getting into gin, I highly recommend this recipe!
Full video at Jessie's channel below, he does both this recipe and a seaweed one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-E5dOVMInOA
Have fun!
PS why are there separate gin discussion channels in the 'Gin Yummy Community' for every state other than Far East Australia? :razz:
I made extra wash in the batch I fermented for my sacrificial spirit runs, using TFFV, so I could do an initial small batch of vodka or gin. Had about 20 extra litres at 10% to play with, so I ran it through my boka. After cuts and proofing down I had 1.95L at 54%. Wasn't thrilled with a slight butterscotch undertone (and I did do a diacytal rest) so decided to turn it all into gin.(I was wondering if the knob of butter I put into the boiler to control foaming was the culprit).
Decided to use Jessies basic recipe, it is so simple and easy. For my 1.95L at 54% neutral I scaled his recipe up as:
42g crushed juniper
42g uncrushed juniper
8g lightly crunched coriander seed
2g angelica root
22g lemon peel
As per Jessie's video, I heated up the neutral in my Airstill to 50 degrees, and macerated everything other than the lemon for 2 hours. Then stuffed the lemon peel into the gin basket (funny, it's the only gin basket that I have seen that actually looks like a basket ;-) ). Ran it, took off the first 20ml, kept going until it was coming off at just under 50% with very little taste. Ended up with about 1.2 - 1.3 L at 75%. There was still a bit of butterscotch aroma lurking, was slightly disappointed at that stage...
Started proofing down, wanted to get to about 43%. Added 800ml water, got to 47.6%, then added another 50ml, and it louched! Went cloudy, but let off a huge lemon aroma. Butterscotch disappeared as did my slight disappointment. Added another 200mm to get to 42.2%, it smelt beautiful, and tasted fantastic.
Decided for fun to try and remove the cloudiness, so threw a litre of Smirnoff into the airstill and ran it, got 420ml at 73%, which I added to my cloudy stuff, it cleared up instantly and I now have just under 1.6L of gin-clear gin at 48.2%.
Well, not quite 1.6L anymore, left it in a warmish space for a couple of days, and we tried it last night. Wife declared that it was better than a lot of the commercial stuff we get. It has a really nice London Dry taste and aroma (I like strong flavours). Really, really pleased with it and pleasantly surprised at how well it turned out (and how easy it was), especially given it was only meant to be a quick and dirty first go with some left-over wash. (Main aim is to make some with the sacks of wheat I now have in the garage).
So if you are thinking of getting into gin, I highly recommend this recipe!
Full video at Jessie's channel below, he does both this recipe and a seaweed one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-E5dOVMInOA
Have fun!
PS why are there separate gin discussion channels in the 'Gin Yummy Community' for every state other than Far East Australia? :razz: