Ginmacher Distillery

Ginmacher Distillery operates from an address in the southern Vienna belt, earning a Pearl 1 Star Prestige in 2025 from EP Club. The operation sits within Austria's growing craft spirits conversation, where proximity to wine-country raw materials and local grain sources shapes the distiller's approach. For those tracing Austria's artisan distilling circuit, this is a credible stop.
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Where Vienna's Edge Meets the Distiller's Craft
Ginmacher Distillery is a winery at Perfektastraße 61/8, 1230 Wien, in Vienna. Brunn am Gebirge sits at that threshold, close enough to the capital's consumer base to draw attention, but removed enough to operate with the deliberateness that small-batch distilling requires. Ginmacher Distillery works from Perfektastraße 61/8, a 1230 Wien address that places it inside this transitional zone, where industrial-era workshop buildings have gradually given way to the kind of small-production operations that Austria's craft spirits scene has been quietly building for over a decade.
Austria's distilling tradition is older than most outside the country recognise. Obstbrand, fruit brandy, has been produced in farmhouses and licensed Abfindungsbrennerei operations across Styria, Burgenland, and Lower Austria for centuries. What has changed in recent years is the arrival of a more internationally legible craft gin and spirits vocabulary, layered on top of that agrarian base. Producers working in this newer register tend to draw on the same geographic advantages that make Austrian wine interesting: varied soils, pronounced diurnal temperature shifts, and access to botanicals from vineyards and orchards that have been farmed carefully for generations. Ginmacher Distillery, as the name signals, operates within this newer craft gin frame rather than the traditional Obstler lineage, though the two traditions increasingly inform each other across the Austrian scene.
The 2025 Pearl Star and What It Signals
In 2025, EP Club awarded Ginmacher Distillery a Pearl 1 Star Prestige recognition. Within EP Club's rating architecture, the Pearl tier marks operations that demonstrate consistent craft standards and a clear point of view, producers that have moved beyond novelty and established a repeatable quality signal. This recognition positions Ginmacher within a tier of Austrian craft producers.
The Austrian craft distilling field is not yet as internationally mapped as its wine equivalent. Producers like Weingut Scheiblhofer Distillery in Andau and 1310 Spirit of the Country Distillery in Sierning have begun building recognition within that space, as has 1404 Manufacturing Distillery in Sankt Peter-Freienstein and 1516 Brewing Company Distillery in Vienna. A. Batch Distillery in Bergheim and Abfindungsbrennerei Franz in Leithaprodersdorf represent the more traditional end of that spectrum, where fruit-based spirits anchor the range. Ginmacher's Pearl 1 Star Prestige places it in conversation with this broader peer group, producers that the EP Club editorial team has assessed as operating with genuine craft intent and a coherent product identity.
Terroir at the Distillery Level
For wine producers, terroir is the organising principle of everything: what the soil gives the vine, what the climate does to the grape, what the elevation imposes on the growing season. Austrian wine has made this argument persuasively, and the country's leading winemakers, from the Kamptal estates like Weingut Bründlmayer in Langenlois to the Wachau's Weingut Emmerich Knoll in Dürnstein, have built international reputations on expressing specific sites through their wines. Burgenland producers such as Weingut Pittnauer in Gols and dessert wine specialists like Weingut Kracher in Illmitz extend that tradition into different stylistic registers, while Weingut Wohlmuth in Kitzeck demonstrates how southern Styrian elevations create their own flavour logic. Weingut Heinrich Hartl in Oberwaltersdorf, operating close to Ginmacher's own geography, shows how even the transitional zone between Vienna and Lower Austria's wine villages can produce credible, site-inflected wine.
For distillers, terroir operates differently but is no less real. The botanical sources, juniper, coriander, citrus peel, locally foraged herbs, carry the character of the place where they were grown or gathered. Austrian gins have increasingly leaned into this, using regional botanicals that speak to alpine meadows, river-corridor vegetation, and the same southern-facing slopes that make Grüner Veltliner interesting. A distillery operating from the Vienna-Lower Austria boundary has access to an unusually wide botanical palette: the Viennese Woods to the west, the Pannonian plain edging in from the east, and the dense market-garden agriculture of the Vienna belt in between.
Austria's Craft Spirits Scene in Context
Austria has not historically been positioned as a spirits destination in the way that Scotland, home to producers like Aberlour in Aberlour, has been for whisky. The domestic tradition has run through fruit distillates, Schnapps, and the licensed small-batch operations that supply local restaurants and farmers' markets. What has shifted is the arrival of a generation of distillers who have absorbed the international craft gin conversation and are translating it through local ingredients and Austrian production sensibility. This has happened in parallel with a broader premiumisation of Austrian drinking culture, which the country's wine scene normalised over decades of export success.
Vienna itself has become a reference point for this shift, with a cluster of bars and producers operating at a more technically exacting level than even five years ago. The city's geographic position, at the intersection of Central European grain-farming country and Alpine foraging territory, gives its producers an ingredient base that is genuinely differentiated from the Scottish, Nordic, or English craft gin models. Ginmacher, working from a southern Vienna address, sits at the edge of this urban cluster while maintaining physical proximity to the rural source materials that make Austrian spirits interesting in the first place.
Planning a Visit
Visits may be arranged directly or through advance contact. Checking directly with the distillery before travelling is the prudent approach. The 1230 Wien address places the operation in the southern city. For those building a broader Austrian spirits and wine itinerary, pairing a Ginmacher visit with estates in the nearby Thermenregion or with a drive into the Kamptal or Wachau adds geographic coherence to a day's travel.
At-a-Glance Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ginmacher DistilleryThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Winery | , | 1 recognition | |
| Brennerei Baumann | Winery | , | 1 recognition | Stanz im Landeck |
| Weingut Juris (Stiegelmar) | Pinot Noir, St. Laurent | $$ | 1 recognition | Gols |
| Brennerei Kirchbichler | Winery | , | 1 recognition | Wildschönau |
| Brennerei Weigand | Winery | , | 1 recognition | Steyr |
| Kiesel Distillery | Winery | , | 1 recognition | Sigless |
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