Genever (sometimes spelled jenever) is the Dutch forerunner of gin. English soldiers discovered the juniper-flavored spirit in the 17th century while fighting the Thirty Years War in the Netherlands and the region that’s now Belgium. The Brits developed their own version back home, which came to be known as gin.
Though both beverages combine juniper with complex blends of other botanicals, their spirit bases are dramatically different. The base of modern gin—particularly the variety known as London dry gin—is usually neutral, while genever’s base contains malt wine, a grain distillate (usually malted barley combined with other cereals like rye and wheat) more akin to a young whiskey. When we taste gin, the botanicals take center stage. When we sip genever, the juniper and other botanicals hang back a bit and share the spotlight with the malty, grainy, sometimes nutty character of its base.
This story is from the March-April 2017 edition of DRAFT Magazine.
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This story is from the March-April 2017 edition of DRAFT Magazine.
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