There are gins that arrive with a full dossier — origin story, botanical bill, distillery coordinates — and then there are those that land on your bar with little more than a name and an invitation. Karven Dry Gin is decidedly the latter, and I'll confess that appeals to a certain restless part of me.
A London Dry With Quiet Confidence
What we know is this: Karven is a London Dry, bottled at 40.8% ABV — a touch above the category minimum, which suggests a maker who wants the spirit to carry just a fraction more weight on the tongue. The London Dry designation tells its own story, of course. This is a gin bound by one of the most exacting production methods in the spirits world: all botanicals distilled together, no post-distillation flavouring, juniper unequivocally at the helm. It is a category that rewards discipline over novelty, and Karven appears to respect that tradition.
At its price point of £41.75, Karven sits in a competitive corridor — above the everyday pours, below the collectors' shelves. It's a space where a gin must justify itself through character rather than packaging or provenance alone. The liquid needs to do the talking, and in Karven's case, the London Dry framework provides a reliable architecture: clean, juniper-forward, structurally sound.
I'd have liked more transparency around the botanical bill and the distillery behind this spirit — details that, for a writer who has stood in hundreds of stillrooms, feel like missing chapters in an otherwise intriguing story. What's here is competent and composed, a gin that understands its category without trying to subvert it. A solid 7.6 out of 10, with room to climb should Karven choose to share more of its narrative.
Best served in a classic G&T with good Indian tonic and a long twist of lemon peel, late afternoon, when the light is fading and the evening has yet to declare its intentions.