Skip to content
the GIN is IN, since 2009
  • Search by flavor
  • 2023 Awards Winners
    • 2022 Awards Winners
    • 2021 Award Winners
    • 2020 Awards Winners
    • 2019 Award Winners
    • 2018 Award Winners
    • 2017 Award Winners
    • 2016 Award Winners
    • 2015 Award Winners
  • Gin Reviews
    • All 800+ Gin Reviews (filterable)
    • All 800+ Gin Reviews (in order)
    • Gins by base spirit
      • Gins distilled from Wheat
      • Gins distilled from Potato
      • Gins distilled from sugarcane
      • Gins distilled from Corn
      • Gins distilled from Grape
      • Gins distilled from Rye
    • Gins by style
      • Juniper-forward Classic gin
      • Contemporary style gins
      • Barrel rested gins
      • Old Tom style gins
      • Navy Strength Gins
      • Flavored and Pink Gins
    • Gins by region/place
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
      • England
      • Canada
      • Japan
      • Australia
    • Gins by Botanicals
  • Other Reviews
    • Tonic Water Reviews
    • Ready to Drink Reviews
    • Aquavit Reviews
    • Non-Alcoholic Gin Reviews
  • Articles
  • Cocktails
  • Contact Us

Base: Grape

The base spirit of a gin refers to the distillate to which botanicals were added. It’s helpful to think about the base spirit as a vodka-like spirit that the distiller used as a starting point— a blank canvas upon which the gin was designed.But choice of base alone doesn’t mean that you’ll be able to taste it. Depending on choices the distiller makes, such as how many times the base is distilled, or to what strength it is distilled to— there might be no character at all coming from the base spirit.

Grape Base

Grape Base is particularly complicated, because there are great deal of specific categories that refer to different parts/ways that grape is treated during the distillation process. Gins which feature a grape base could fall into any one of these categories.Grape Pomace (the leftovers of the wine making process) is the process which creates Grappa, Zivania, or Grozdova. Burnt wines— b.k.a. Brandy— use wine as the base. This category also includes Armagnac, Cognac and Pisco. But furthermore, grape alone can  be used as a base. This would be something akin to a grape eau-de-vie. Though like any other base, grape can be distilled to a point of nearly pure neutrality leaving absolutely zero grape character.

Gin 1495 Verbatim

Blade Gin

Seneca Drums Gin

Post navigation
Newer posts
← Previous Page1 Page2
+ Load More

Search by Flavor

Flavor search
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclosure
  • Contact Us
© 2023 the GIN is IN
  • Search by flavor
  • 2023 Awards Winners
    • 2022 Awards Winners
    • 2021 Award Winners
    • 2020 Awards Winners
    • 2019 Award Winners
    • 2018 Award Winners
    • 2017 Award Winners
    • 2016 Award Winners
    • 2015 Award Winners
  • Gin Reviews
    • All 800+ Gin Reviews (filterable)
    • All 800+ Gin Reviews (in order)
    • Gins by base spirit
      • Gins distilled from Wheat
      • Gins distilled from Potato
      • Gins distilled from sugarcane
      • Gins distilled from Corn
      • Gins distilled from Grape
      • Gins distilled from Rye
    • Gins by style
      • Juniper-forward Classic gin
      • Contemporary style gins
      • Barrel rested gins
      • Old Tom style gins
      • Navy Strength Gins
      • Flavored and Pink Gins
    • Gins by region/place
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
      • England
      • Canada
      • Japan
      • Australia
    • Gins by Botanicals
  • Other Reviews
    • Tonic Water Reviews
    • Ready to Drink Reviews
    • Aquavit Reviews
    • Non-Alcoholic Gin Reviews
  • Articles
  • Cocktails
  • Contact Us