Four Pillars have been one of the most commercially astute operations in the global gin market for the better part of a decade, and their Sherry Barrel Aged expression is a textbook example of why. While half the industry was chasing pink gin and flavoured line extensions, the Australian distillery was quietly building credibility in the barrel-aged category — a segment that remains niche but increasingly relevant as gin drinkers trade up and bartenders look for spirits that can hold their own in stirred, spirit-forward serves.
A Barrel-Aged Gin With Commercial Pedigree
The Sherry Barrel Aged Gin sits at 43.8% ABV — a considered strength that suggests the distillery wants this to drink with weight and presence without tipping into cask-strength territory. The sherry cask influence is the defining play here: it positions this gin somewhere between a classic juniper spirit and something approaching the complexity you might find in aged rum or whisky. It is the kind of crossover product that earns its place on a back bar precisely because it starts conversations.
At £44.25, the pricing is competitive within the barrel-aged gin bracket, where bottles routinely push north of £50 without offering meaningfully more complexity. Four Pillars have always understood value positioning, and this release fits squarely within their strategy of accessible premium.
I would rate this 8.3 out of 10. It delivers exactly what the category promises — depth, warmth, and a point of difference — without overcomplicating things. Four Pillars rarely miss, and this expression reinforces their reputation as one of the few brands making barrel-aged gin that genuinely justifies the cask treatment.
Best served: In a Negroni, where the sherry cask character will complement the vermouth beautifully, or served neat over a single large ice cube as an after-dinner pour. This is a gin that bartenders reach for when a customer says they usually drink whisky.