Full Review

Tom’s Town

Tom’s Town
Gin

Category: Gin

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 45%
88 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$32

Tom’s Town
Gin

Category: Gin

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 45%
Clear color. Aromas and flavors of roses and violets, ginger and button mushroom, coriander and pickling spices, and fennel and calimus root with an oily, vibrant, dry medium-to-full body and a warming, amusing, medium-length finish manifesting notes of juniper and mushrooms with birch bark, cinnamon, wildflowers with basil, dill, and rosemary, and citrus. A Gin with pleasing botanicals in a rustic and woodsy sort of way.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: roses and violets, ginger and button mushroom, coriander and pickling spices, and fennel and calimus root
Taste Flavor: juniper and mushrooms with birch bark, cinnamon, wildflowers with basil, dill, and rosemary, and citrus
Smoothness Smoothness: Warming
Finish Finish: Normal
Enjoy Enjoy: Enjoy on its own
Bottom Line Bottom Line: A Gin with pleasing botanicals in a rustic and woodsy sort of way.

The Producer

Tom’s Town Distilling Co.

The Producer
1701 Main Street
Kansas City, MO 64108
USA
1 816-541-2400

Gin

Spirits Glass Rock Clear.jpg
Serve in a Rocks Glass
Gin is the original flavored vodka, a clear spirit that is flavored with juniper berries and so-called botanicals (a varied assortment of herbs and spices). The spirit base of Gin is primarily grain (usually wheat or rye), which results in a light-bodied spirit.

The chief flavoring agent in gin is the highly aromatic blue-green berry of the juniper, a low-slung evergreen bush (genus Juniperus) that is commercially grown in northern Italy, Croatia, the United States and Canada. Additional botanicals can include anise, angelica root, cinnamon, orange peel, coriander, and cassia bark. All gin makers have their own secret combination of botanicals, the number of which can range from as few as four to as many as 15 or more.

Most gin is initially distilled in efficient column stills. The resulting spirit is high-proof, light-bodied, and clean with a minimal amount of congeners (flavor compounds) and flavoring agents. Gin's lowland cousin, Genever, is distilled in less-efficient potstills, which results in a lower-proof, more flavorful spirit. Low-quality 'Compound Gins' are made by simply mixing the base spirit with juniper and botanical extracts. Mass-market gins, known as 'Distilled Gins', are produced by soaking juniper berries and botanicals in the base spirit and then redistilling the mixture.

Many top-quality gins are flavored in a unique manner and are referred to as 'London Dry Gins'. After one or more distillations the base spirit is redistilled one last time. During this final distillation the alcohol vapor wafts through a chamber in which the dried juniper berries and botanicals are suspended. The vapor gently extracts aromatic and flavoring oils and compounds from the berries and spices as it travels through the chamber on its way to the condenser. The resulting flavored spirit has a noticeable degree of complexity.

The most famous examples of gin are from the UK. These are among the most complex gins with subdued flavors of pine, peppery spices, citrus, herbal roots, and even floral notes, which are currently in vogue. Gin has experienced a revival thanks to the craft cocktail movement as the base for the wildly popular gin martini, a host of newly resuscitated classic cocktails, and adventuresome new libations.