Bottles of gin and ingredients are seen at a distillery in Johannesburg, South Africa, June 5, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Home » Huge Increase in South Africans Enjoying Fynbos-Flavoured Gin

Huge Increase in South Africans Enjoying Fynbos-Flavoured Gin

JOHANNESBURG – Last year, gin consumption in South Africa grew by an astonishing 50 percent, to half a pint for every man, woman and child. No wonder that distilleries are mushrooming, trying to give a colonial tipple a distinctive flavour of the fynbos. If the British made use of the freely available local juniper berries […]

28-06-19 19:23
Bottles of gin and ingredients are seen at a distillery in Johannesburg, South Africa, June 5, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

JOHANNESBURG – Last year, gin consumption in South Africa grew by an astonishing 50 percent, to half a pint for every man, woman and child. No wonder that distilleries are mushrooming, trying to give a colonial tipple a distinctive flavour of the fynbos.

Bottles of gin and ingredients are seen at a distillery in Johannesburg, South Africa, June 5, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

If the British made use of the freely available local juniper berries to bequeath the taste for gin, it is South Africa‘s young entrepreneurs who are exploiting the unique vegetation of the shrub- and heathland of the coastal Cape.

From under a dozen gin distilleries in 2015, there are now around 65 nationwide, according to the Gin Box subscription club, supplying outlets from artisanal and farmers’ markets in Cape Town to the gastronomic hot spots of Johannesburg.

FILE PHOTO: Garreth Maynar, bartender at the Ginologist distillery, gestures during an interview with Reuters in Johannesburg, South Africa June 5, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

“Before craft gin drinks came around, the gins that we had were all imported gins. And they only used international flavours, foreign flavours,” said Albert van Wyk, co-owner of the Johannesburg gin maker Ginologist.

The distillery sits in a refashioned warehouse under Johannesburg’s busiest highway that also hosts live bands and art markets on weekends. Inside, clear liquids bubbled disconcertingly in industrial-size glass vessels above outsize versions of science-lab Bunsen burners.

FILE PHOTO: Ingredients are seen in front of bottles of gin at a distillery in Johannesburg, South Africa, June 5, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

“Our Citrus Gin gets all its citrus from the region up north in Mpumalanga,” van Wyk said. “And our Floral Gin uses hereditaranium, which is a unique South African flavour.”

Beer remains easily South Africans’ favourite alcoholic drink, and the higher-margin craft beers have also enjoyed a recent upswing.

But analysts say the beer market, craft and commercial, has reached its ceiling, and that South Africans are joining a global trend in shifting to whiskey, brandy and ginespecially women between 18 and 35. Van Wyk said gin sales in some grocery chains were growing by 40% a year.

A 2018 report by market researcher Euromonitor International found craft spirits in South Africa were set for healthy growth in coming years – even if “increasingly obscure and radical botanical tinctures” risked overcrowding the segment.

South African retailers this year surprisingly reported alcohol performing better than grocery items in an otherwise depressed environment where consumers are spending less. (Perhaps drowning their sorrows?)

With the cheapest bottle of artisanal gin averaging around 350 rand ($28), annual consumption around last year’s 15.2 million litres or more should keep the distillers in business for a while yet.

(Reporting by Mfuneko Toyana, Sisipho Skweyiya and Siyabonga Sishi; Editing by Kevin Liffey)