Skip to content
the GIN is IN, since 2009
the GIN is IN
  • Search Gins by Flavor
  • Gin Reviews
  • All Gin Reviews (sortable)
  • Search all of The GIN is IN
  • Articles and Gin News
  • Award Winning Gins (by year)
  • 2026 Awards Winners
  • 2022 Awards Winners
  • 2021 Awards Winners
  • 2020 Awards Winners
  • Gins by region, base or botanical
  • Gins distilled from Wheat
  • Gins distilled from Potato
  • Gins distilled from Cane
  • 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
  • Gins by Botanicals
  • Canned Cocktail Reviews
  • Aquavit Reviews
  • Search Gins by Flavor
  • Gin Reviews
  • All Gin Reviews (sortable)
  • Search all of The GIN is IN
  • Articles and Gin News
  • Award Winning Gins (by year)
  • 2026 Awards Winners
  • 2022 Awards Winners
  • 2021 Awards Winners
  • 2020 Awards Winners
  • Gins by region, base or botanical
  • Gins distilled from Wheat
  • Gins distilled from Potato
  • Gins distilled from Cane
  • 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
  • Gins by Botanicals
  • Canned Cocktail Reviews
  • Aquavit Reviews

Botanical: Licorice

Licorice (alternatively spelled liquorice) comes from the root of a perennial plant native to a large swath of Eurasia. It takes nearly three years for a licorice root to be ready for harvesting, requiring several years of growth. It’s popular in its native regions as both a sweetener and component of natural medicine.It’s particularly of interest in gin, because the root itself is thought to have been widely used as a sweetening agent in early gins, including some Old Tom styles. Licorice has a distinctive flavor, similar to anise or fennel, but with a pronounced additional sweetness. It’s used in gins for both its flavor and for the sweetening effect.

Gins Featuring Licorice

Tanqueray Malacca

Sometimes

Bombay Sapphire

Perhaps

Broker’s Gin

Broker’s

Colorado Gold Gin

Colorado

Dancing Pines Gin

Dancing

Knockeen Hills Elderflower Gin

Knockeen

Port of Dragons 100% Floral

Port

Bonfire Gin

Sipsmith

Southern Gin

Thirteenth

Port of Dragons 100% Pure

All

Ish Gin

I

G’vine Nouaison (2012 recipe)

We’ll

Greenall’s Gin

There

Martin Miller’s 10th Anniversary Gin

Special

Tub Gin

“We

Magellan Gin

Given

Martin Miller’s Westbourne Strength London Dry Gin

Martin

Beefeater Summer

Beefeater

Newer posts
← Previous Page1 … Page6 Page7
  • Press
  • Contact
© 2026 the GIN is IN
  • Search Gins by Flavor
  • Gin Reviews
  • All Gin Reviews (sortable)
  • Search all of The GIN is IN
  • Articles and Gin News
  • Award Winning Gins (by year)
  • 2026 Awards Winners
  • 2022 Awards Winners
  • 2021 Awards Winners
  • 2020 Awards Winners
  • Gins by region, base or botanical
  • Gins distilled from Wheat
  • Gins distilled from Potato
  • Gins distilled from Cane
  • 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
  • Gins by Botanicals
  • Canned Cocktail Reviews
  • Aquavit Reviews