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Ready to be the host with the most? Here are six foolproof gin drinks to whip up when you've got guests coming over, from simple serves to group serves.
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They say the follow-up album is often never better than the first, but we’re here to prove them wrong. Five years after its initial release, one of our most requested limited-edition gins – Sticky Carpet Gin – is back!
Made with Little Creatures Pale Ale and hops, this gin is beautifully balanced with a dense juniper canvas, a chewy, malty hops character and a bright citrus note.
We submitted this gin to the Global Gin Masters and it came back with a gold medal! Who says the remake is never as good as the original?
First released in 2019 to celebrate the re-opening of Melbourne institution, the Hotel Esplanade, this gin is a tribute to Australia’s great hotels and their front bars, the carpets sticky with beer and thick with stories.
For the second coming, we’ve switched the original stout out for a more aromatic and lifted pale ale and poured the beer straight into the still with the base spirit. We’ve then added juniper, coriander, honey, roasted barley, cassia, macadamia nuts and orris root, while the fresh lemon peel and ginger go into the botanical basket.
The hops get their own little spot in a bag hung above the spirit because they can expand and block the still. And if that happens, the still explodes and the distillery is no more. Safety aside, it’s also a great way to extract the aromatics because it gets a bit hotter than the botanical basket.
By opening the plates of the still for the first half of the distillation and closing them for the second half, the citrus, hops, and honey characters can come through early, while the malty, textural characters come through quite late.
The final gin is beautifully balanced, just like a great pale ale, with a dense canvas of resiny juniper and deep brown spice notes. There’s a chewy, malty hops character that hangs on from the macadamia nut and overall, it’s a touch fruity with a bright citrus note.
And this time around, it's available for you to try in venues around the country! Scroll down for the full list, head into our homes in Healesville or Sydney’s Surry Hills or grab a bottle for your own home right here.
Beer and gin, who’d have thunk it?
Without juniper, there is no gin. When distilled, it adds a medicinal flavour with notes of pine needles. Juniper is grown wild, and the berries are harvested by hand on mountain slopes.
Hoppy, citrus and tropical fruit characteristics, with a hint of bitterness.
This particular blend is a mix of Chinook, grown out of the US, and Casacade, which is a mixture of both US and Australian grown. The hops bring spicy citrus aromas with hints of zesty grapefruit.
We use Organic Yalumba honey collected from younger Eucalyptus trees, some from our own distilling team’s backyard! The flavour is floral and sweet, with hints of orange bloom.
Coffee and dark chocolate characteristics with a hint of nuttiness.
For that bright citrus, zesty zing!
We source coriander seeds locally for their intense aromatics. We use the dry seeds (not fresh leaves) and they produce amazing lemony citrus notes when crushed and distilled.
This spice is made from the bark of East Asian trees related to the ‘true cinnamon’ of Sri Lanka. Cassia adds a distinct richness to our gin, bringing all the other spices together.
The Australian macadamia may be the most expensive nut in the world, and the hardest to crack. But it’s worth it for the sweet, buttery flavour and texture these native nuts provide.
The root of the iris plant, orris has a distinctive floral quality. Used sparingly as a base in gin and perfume.
Lemon myrtle is a beautiful alternative to lemon peel when distilling. Its floral character mingles with the other spices without dominating any flavours, textures or aromas.
Lavender is used sparingly to lift the other aromatics, so it isn’t an obvious character in the final gin. Grown locally, though occasionally we have to source from France.
Fresh ginger provides the level of flavour lift required to match other botanicals. We like to use mature ginger for its juiciness and intensity.
Try a Sticky Carpet Gin cocktail at any of these venues:
This gin was made for a nostalgic, pub-inspired serve. Ginny lemon lime & bitters, anyone?
Reminiscent of a 90s soft drink. Sweet, fresh and zesty.
The grown-up version of your favourite childhood drink and your newest guilty pleasure.
A classic Gin Sour meets lemon lime and bitters. Sweet, bitter and fluffy.
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