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Gin & Dubonnet, Bottled

British confidence. Poured properly. A favourite of the late Queen, returned with a little charm of its own.

70cl | 23% ABV | Ready to pour

The Reason You’re Here

G&D is a bottled gin and Dubonnet cocktail, poured properly.
Light. Aromatic. Deep red in the bottle.


A classic British serve, revived for people who like their drinks with a bit of ceremony.

Bottle of Dubonnet and gin premixed drink photographed on a dark background, showing its deep red colour.

Meet G&D

A deep, regal red. Light and aromatic in the glass.
Balanced so you don’t have to think about it.
Small batches. Proper ingredients. No shortcuts.


A bottle that behaves well on a Tuesday and still feels right on a Saturday night.

St andrews flag
Union jack element for the G&D prebottled cocktail
Union flag element for a british drink
Union Flag element

For people who still believe Britain
is worth raising a glass to.

For people who still believe Britain
is worth raising a glass to.

Hunting hounds illustration used in traditional British drink branding.

How to Pour G&D Properly

(A polite way of saying: here’s how to get the most joy for the least effort.)

Premixed gin and Dubonnet being poured over ice into a short glass.

The Queen Mother’s Way

G&D neat is the purest expression of the whole thing. No bubbles. No garnish. No excuses. It asks nothing from you except a clean glass and a vague sense of occasion.


It’s also the only drink in Britain where you can have one at noon and feel strangely productive afterwards.

 

That’s the magic. Or the Dubonnet.

Dubonnet and gin with soda served in a tall glass over ice.

The Tuesday Afternoon Optimist

A splash of soda shifts G&D from “quiet treat” to “I might actually get things done today”.
It’s the sort of drink that makes a dull task feel like a small adventure. Light, bright, oddly cheering.


A behavioural scientist might say it increases your “perceived optionality”.
You’ll just say it tastes lovely.

The Aristocrat’s Spritz

Take Britain’s most unlikely duo and top it with Champagne.
It shouldn’t work. It absolutely does.


It’s fun, it’s confident, and it has that delightful whiff of mischief that comes from combining two already-quite-posh things and pretending it’s perfectly normal.


Ideal for celebrations, minor achievements, and moments where you want people to assume you’ve inherited something.

Champagne being poured over Dubonnet and gin to make a spritz.

For years Britain forgot one of its simplest pleasures: a small, elegant drink that doesn’t demand you turn it into an occasion.
G&D fixes that.

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It’s the sort of thing you pour before you’ve decided what the rest of the day looks like.

A drink with a raised eyebrow built into it.

A reminder that we still do charm better than most countries do sunshine.

G&D — 70cl — 23%

You didn’t come this far down the page to not buy it.
It’s deep red, absurdly drinkable and has a habit of making whatever you pour it into look more expensive.


The sort of bottle that sits on your sideboard and quietly upgrades your entire personality.
People come back to it faster than they’re prepared to admit.

 

We bottle in small batches and send them out soon after.
Patience is part of the charm.

Gin and Dubonnet bottled

G&D The spirit of British mischief

You didn’t come this far down the page to not buy it.
It’s deep red, absurdly drinkable and has a habit of making whatever you pour it into look more expensive.


The sort of bottle that sits on your sideboard and quietly upgrades your entire personality.
People come back to it faster than they’re prepared to admit.

 

We bottle in small batches and send them out soon after.
Patience is part of the charm.

Studio shot of Dubonnet and gin cocktail bottle with minimal background for a luxury presentation.

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@SPIRITOFBRITISHMISCHIEF

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