HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesThe Tippling Point | Charles Tanqueray and the story of London Dry Gin

The Tippling Point | Charles Tanqueray and the story of London Dry Gin

The Tanqueray 10 supreme premium gin has eight botanicals, compared with four earlier. It was also the first gin to use fresh citrus.

September 11, 2021 / 13:15 IST
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Representational image of a bartender pouring gin. (Image: Jack Oughton via Wikimedia Commons 3.0)
Representational image of a bartender pouring gin. (Image: Jack Oughton via Wikimedia Commons 3.0)

What could a family of clergymen in England do in the world of gin!

For Charles Tanqueray and his brother Edvard, whose great-great-grandfather hailed from France, a call to serve the almighty stood in the way of materializing their dreams. The lads realized their hearts pounded for a more exciting field. Their father and their uncle were ministers in the Church of England.

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Always a bit too scientific to follow the path of religion, young Charles along with his brother went to the Curries distillery to learn the craft of distilling. It was the first half of the 19th century when gin hadn't yet garnered the notoriety it later got during the period of the London Gin Craze. The brothers tried to learn everything related to the respected art of distilling gin, sometimes tinkering with the proportion of juniper berries, sometimes changing the very place from where the berries were sourced to see what would click. They were hell-bent on making the perfect gin.

Charles was one of the first to create what would soon be known as 'London dry gin.'