Peddlers Shanghai Barrel Aged Gin arrives at a moment when the barrel-aged category is finally shaking off its novelty status and demanding serious consideration. At 45.7% ABV, it sits comfortably above the threshold where wood influence and botanical character can genuinely coexist — a balance that too many barrel-aged gins get wrong, either drowning in oak or barely whispering of the cask.
The Shanghai Connection
What intrigues me about Peddlers is the positioning. This is a gin that leans into its Shanghai provenance at a time when Chinese craft spirits are carving out real estate on back bars from London to New York. The barrel-aged category has long been dominated by European and American producers, so a credible entry from Shanghai signals something worth paying attention to. It suggests a distillery confident enough in its base spirit to let it evolve in wood — you don't put a mediocre gin into a barrel and expect miracles.
At £37.95, Peddlers occupies sensible territory. It undercuts several established barrel-aged expressions while sitting above the impulse-buy threshold, which tells me the brand is pitching to drinks enthusiasts and bartenders rather than casual browsers. That's a shrewd read of the market. The barrel-aged segment rewards producers who respect the format, and the pricing here suggests they're serious about competing on quality rather than curiosity alone.
I'd score Peddlers Shanghai Barrel Aged Gin at 7.9 out of 10 — a compelling proposition in an increasingly crowded barrel-aged field, with enough distinctiveness in its origin story to warrant space on any well-curated shelf.
Best served: Over a single large ice cube with a twist of orange peel. Barrel-aged gins sell well as spirit-forward serves — bartenders reach for them in Negroni builds and Old Fashioned riffs, where the wood character can do real work.