Home PageGinBertha's Revenge Navy Strength Small Batch Irish Milk Gin 500ml 57.1% ABV |
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Bertha's Revenge Navy Strength Small Batch Irish Milk Gin 500ml 57.1% ABV £32.50
BERTHAS REVENGE NAVY STRENGTH SMALL BATCH IRISH MILK GIN 500ML 57.1% ABVCompared to the normal Bertha's Revenge Gin, Bertha’s Revenge Navy Strength Gin has been raised to a lip-pursing 57.1% ABV, and the botanical blend has been shuffled slightly to accentuate one or two of the more pronounced flavour notes. The extra strength gives the merry crew of spices a megaphone through which to convey their message, which is as smooth and as well-balanced as you would expect from a cow riding at anchor. Bertha’s Navy Strength gin tastes divine when sipped over ice. She is also an excellent base to gin-forward cocktails, especially a Gimlet. What is Navy Strength? Britain historically boasted the largest and most powerful navy in the world and during the Napoleonic wars, more than a quarter of the Royal Navy’s 17,000 men were Irish including including one of Justin’s ancestors, Vice-Admiral Sylverius Moriarty who was born in 1735 at Ballyferriter on the Dingle Peninsula in Co. Kerry. He was also one of the only Irish-speaking Vice-Admirals in the Royal Navy Rum and gin were staples on-board Royal Navy ships and daily rations of rum were issued to the crews up to as recently as 1970. Prior to 1816 there was no accurate way to measure alcohol strength so a rule-of-thumb method was applied: the gunpowder was mixed together with the spirit to form a paste. If the spirit was over a certain strength, the powder would ignite, and if under, it would not. This method made sure the navy was not being swindled and not being sold watered-down hooch and more importantly ensured the alcohol-soaked gunpowder remained highly explosive. This was vital as the casks of spirit and gunpowder were usually stored in close proximity below decks and if the casks toppled over during a storm or during a raging battle and spilled their contents which in turn soaked the gunpowder, the gunpowder would still ignite. High-strength spirit at 57% was therefore what the navy demanded when buying spirits from its purveyors.
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