Thursday, June 25, 2026

Best Breakfast Gins; and a Bonus Recipe*

Among gins that actually evokes breakfast flavors—citrus marmalade, tea, toast, and brunch cocktails—there are a few standouts:

Best Overall Breakfast Gin

FEW Spirits Breakfast Gin

  • Specifically designed as a "breakfast" or brunch gin.

  • Botanicals include Earl Grey tea, lemon, juniper, and citrus peel.

  • Excellent in a French 75, Ramos Gin Fizz, or simply with tonic.

Best British-Style Breakfast Gin

Marmalade Old Tom Gin

  • Built around Seville orange marmalade.

  • Slightly sweet Old Tom style.

  • Tastes like quality marmalade on toast translated into gin.

Best Easily Available UK Option

Hendrick's Gin

  • Not marketed as a breakfast gin, but it is superb in a Breakfast Martini (gin, marmalade, orange liqueur, lemon juice).

If You're in Southern England Right Now

Look for:

  • Marmalade Old Tom Gin

  • Slingsby Marmalade Gin

  • Sipsmith Zesty Orange Gin

  • Any quality Old Tom or citrus-forward gin paired with a good Seville orange marmalade.

My Recommendation

For a gin enthusiast, I'd choose FEW Breakfast Gin because it genuinely captures breakfast notes through Earl Grey tea and citrus. For a more traditional British palate, I'd choose Marmalade Old Tom Gin and make a Breakfast Martini with it.

And if you're asking what gin I'd pour at an actual breakfast table with smoked salmon, eggs, or kedgeree: a French 75 made with FEW Breakfast Gin would be hard to beat.

Bonus Recipe: Breakfast Martini

Ingredients
  • Gin: 1 1/2 oz (or 50 ml) London dry gin
  • Orange Liqueur: 1/2 oz (or 15 ml) Cointreau or Grand Marnier
  • Lemon Juice: 1/2 oz (or 15 ml) freshly squeezed
  • Marmalade: 1 heaped teaspoon of good-quality orange marmalade
  • Garnish: Orange zest/twist or a small piece of cinnamon-sugar toast
Instructions
  1. Combine ingredients: Add the marmalade and lemon juice into a cocktail shaker.
  2. Dissolve the marmalade: Use a bar spoon to stir the mixture briefly so the marmalade liquefies and blends with the citrus.
  3. Add spirits and ice: Pour in the gin and orange liqueur. Fill the shaker with ice.
  4. Shake: Shake vigorously for about 10 to 15 seconds until the outside is very cold.
  5. Strain: Double strain the drink into a chilled coupe or martini glass to keep out any orange pulp or ice chunks.
  6. Garnish: Squeeze the orange zest over the top to express the oils, drop it into the drink, and enjoy.


*or, Sometimes You Ask a Facetious Question and Discover You've Entered a Very Serious World...

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

AMOC Amok



The mighty engine of the northern seas,
Which drove the warming currents from the south
And blessed the Celtic hills with gentle breeze,
Now halts its stride inside the ocean’s mouth.

The great Atlantic conveyor stills its pace,
As frozen waters from the northern ice
Dilute the brine and alter nature's face,
A sudden shift that exacts a heavy price.

Where once the emerald fields of Britain grew,
The biting winds of sudden winter blow,
And frost locks down the earth the winter through,
Buried beneath a permanent shroud of snow.

While Europe freezes in a new-born chill,
The swollen tropics choke on stagnant heat,
The shifting monsoons skip the parched hill,
And dry the soil where crops were once replete.

The deep abyss, deprived of oxygen,
Becomes a tomb where ancient life must die;
The whales must seek a warmer path again,
Beneath an altered, unfamiliar sky.

The plankton drift, the food webs break and fall,
As ocean currents lose their rhythmic bound,
A quiet catastrophe that touches all,
From highest peak to trenches deep and drowned.

We stand as witnesses to this great pause,
The architects of our own shifting fate,
Now bound by nature's unyielding laws,
And learning wisdom when it is too late.

The great machine of climate shifts its gear,
A restless giant waking from its sleep,
As humanity confronts its deepest fear:
The bitter harvest that we chose to reap.