Journal
From the archives
Heritage, craft, and collector notes on the Tannenblut Black Forest gin. Written by Dr. Raphael Nagel (LL.M.), in the tradition of J. Ferdinand Nagel, Hamburg 1873.
Heritage
From Genever to Gin: What the Vienna Medal of 1873 Meant
An essay on Genever gin history 1873, the Vienna World Exhibition, the Hamburg distiller J. Ferdinand Nagel, and how one gold medal anticipated the craft-gin renaissance that Tanne…
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Hamburg 1873: How J. Ferd. Nagel Won Gold at the Vienna World Exhibition
The story of Jakob Ferdinand Nagel, the Hamburg distiller whose Genever took the highest award at the Vienna World Exhibition of 1873, and the quiet withdrawal that followed his ye…
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The Black Forest Withdrawal: Why Jakob Nagel Left Hamburg
On the merchant who built an industrial distillery on the Elbe, won gold in Vienna in 1873, and then turned inland toward fir, resin, and silence. A reflection on the origin of Tan…
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The House of Nagel: 550 Workers, 23 Million Litres, and a Name on Three Continents
An economic history of the J. Ferd. Nagel Hamburg spirits empire: port logistics, export routes to Europe and Africa, and the branded bottle as merchant signature. By Dr. Raphael N…
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The Imperial Medallion: The Bottle Nagel Dedicated to Franz Joseph
An essay on the three-faced bottle Jakob Ferdinand Nagel presented at the 1873 Vienna World Exhibition, and why this imperial object still anchors the Tannenblut Bereshit aesthetic…
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Copper Distillation and the Black Forest: Why the Still Matters in 2026
A chemistry and terroir argument for why Tannenblut is still distilled in copper in the Schwarzwald: sulphur binding, granite aquifers, and the quiet reasons a 19th-century method …
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Matte Black Glass: The Decision Against the Shelf
A design argument for opacity. Why Tannenblut rejects the transparent-glass orthodoxy of premium gin, and what matte black communicates to a collector who was never meant to meet t…
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No Compromise: The Tannenblut Production Philosophy
On the three refusals that define the Tannenblut production philosophy: what a craft distiller pays to avoid synthetics, why 3,000 bottles is the correct figure, and how refusal be…
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The Four Voices of the Forest: Fir Resin, Spruce, Wild Juniper, Blackthorn
An essay on the four wild botanicals behind Tannenblut Black Forest Gin, by Dr. Raphael Nagel (LL.M.) of Tactical Management. A reading of resin, needle, berry and sloe as a quiet …
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Founder’s Tier Tannenblut: The First Fifty Bottles of the Bereshit Series
On the Founder’s Tier of the Bereshit Series: the first fifty numbered bottles of Tannenblut, individually blessed under rabbinical supervision, authenticated by hand, and reserved…
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Holy Numbers Edition: Where Numerals Meet the Tanya
An essay on the Holy Numbers Edition within the Bereshit Series of Tannenblut, where symbolic numerals, the Tanya, and hand-bottled gin from the Black Forest meet in a single colle…
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The Bereshit Series: 3,000 Bottles, Distilled Once, Never Reproduced
On the Bereshit Series by Tannenblut: three thousand individually numbered bottles, distilled once, allocated by private invitation, and closed forever to the ledger. A note from D…
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The Rebbe Bottle and the Number 770: Apex of the Tannenblut Bereshit Series
An essay on the Rebbe bottle within the Tannenblut Bereshit Series: a single numbered flask, the symbolic weight of 770 in the Chabad-Lubavitch tradition, and the logic of a hybrid…
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The Six Collector Tiers of the Bereshit Series
An essay on the six collector tiers of the Bereshit Series by Tannenblut, from the one-of-one Rebbe bottle to the Standard Collector, each a different density of the same principle…
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Invitation-Only Allocation: The Logic of Scarcity in the Luxury Collector Market
An essay on why the most coveted spirits, watches, and artefacts are never sold on an open shelf, and on the discipline behind the Tannenblut collector list. By Dr. Raphael Nagel (…
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Kosher Alcohol Market: Why a Religious Mark Became a Quality Signal
A study of how kosher certification migrated from observant households into the vocabulary of clean-label drinkers, ethical collectors, and family offices, and what that means for …
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The Chabad Network as Cultural Distribution Infrastructure
Dr. Raphael Nagel (LL.M.) on the Chabad-Lubavitch network as a quiet, global infrastructure for the circulation of kosher-certified collector goods, and how it shapes the geography…
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The Kosher Spirits Market: 44 Billion USD, and Growing
An essay on the scale of the global kosher spirits category, its compounding growth, and the position of Tannenblut Black Forest Gin within a segment that now outperforms much of t…
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