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EU Court Rules Gin Must Contain Alcohol

NORTHWICH, ENGLAND – JULY 06: Bottles of gin sit on display in a Tesco supermarket on July 06, 2022 in Northwich, England. The British Retail Consortium recently said food manufacturers and supermarkets are having to pass on some of the cost of soaring raw materials to consumers, leading to the price of basic goods throughout the UK rising at the fastest pace since September 2008. Fresh food prices increased by 6% in the year to June 2022 coupled with an increase in inflation, and fuel and energy prices to create a cost of living crisis. This is leading to millions of low-income households going without essentials items, falling behind on bills and taking on debt. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

A beverage called “gin” must contain alcohol and juniper berries, and have an alcohol content of at least 37.5%, Europe’s top court has ruled. A German group took exception to a “Virgin Gin” non-alcoholic product.

‘Gin’ must contain alcohol, top European court says

Symbolic, undated image of two iced gin and tonics with lime and rosemary.

If you’re seeking a virgin G&T, it may be in need of a rebrand in EuropeImage: Katerina Solovyeva/Zoonar/picture alliance

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Beverages bearing the name “gin” must contain alcohol, Europe’s top court declared on Thursday. 

The VSW German business association had appealed to the court, saying that a product sold by PB VI Goods and called “Virgin Gin Alkoholfrei” (“Non-alcoholic Virgin Gin”) was in breach of a 2019 EU definition of gin. 

This states that “gin should be produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with juniper berries, and the minimum alcoholic strength by volume of that ethyl alcohol must be 37.5%,” as the court put it in a press release.

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‘Gin’ must contain alcohol, top European court says

A beverage called “gin” must contain alcohol and juniper berries, and have an alcohol content of at least 37.5%, Europe’s top court has ruled. A German group took exception to a “Virgin Gin” non-alcoholic product.

Beverages bearing the name “gin” must contain alcohol, Europe’s top court declared on Thursday. 

The VSW German business association had appealed to the court, saying that a product sold by PB VI Goods and called “Virgin Gin Alkoholfrei” (“Non-alcoholic Virgin Gin”) was in breach of a 2019 EU definition of gin. 

This states that “gin should be produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with juniper berries, and the minimum alcoholic strength by volume of that ethyl alcohol must be 37.5%,” as the court put it in a press release.

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