First Impressions
I first encountered Roku on a sweltering evening in Tokyo's Ginza district, ordered as a highball at a bar where the ice was hand-carved and the attention to detail bordered on reverence. It was one of those moments where a spirit and a setting align perfectly. But Roku doesn't need Tokyo to impress — it holds up anywhere, and at $28, it's one of the smartest buys in the contemporary gin category.
The hexagonal bottle represents the six Japanese botanicals that define Roku's character, each harvested at its peak season. It's a concept deeply rooted in Japanese philosophy — the idea that ingredients have an optimal moment, and a craftsperson's job is to honour that moment.
The Distillery
Roku is produced by Suntory, a company whose reputation for meticulous spirit-making spans over a century. The gin is made at the Osaka Works, where each of the six Japanese botanicals — sakura flower, sakura leaf, sencha tea, gyokuro tea, sansho pepper, and yuzu peel — is distilled separately using the still best suited to extracting its character. Some are processed in pot stills, others in stainless steel vacuum stills that preserve heat-sensitive aromatics. The individual distillates are then blended with the base gin, which uses eight traditional botanicals.
This multi-distillation approach is characteristically Suntory — methodical, patient, and driven by the belief that precision in process leads to harmony in the glass. It's the same philosophy that made Yamazaki and Hibiki benchmarks in whisky.
Tasting
The nose opens with cherry blossom — delicate, almost ephemeral, like the real thing in late March. Yuzu zest follows, bright and distinctly different from Western citrus, carrying that characteristic combination of grapefruit, mandarin, and lemon that makes yuzu so singular. Green tea provides freshness, while juniper sits in a supporting role, present but never pushy. A background note of cinnamon adds just enough warmth to give the nose structure.
On the palate, Roku reveals its depth. Sakura sweetness leads — not sugary, but the soft, almost almond-like sweetness of cherry blossom. Sencha tea introduces a clean astringency that prevents the gin from becoming cloying, while yuzu brightness keeps the citrus dimension alive and vivid. Mid-palate, sansho pepper arrives with its distinctive numbing tingle — closer to Sichuan pepper than black pepper, it adds a textural dimension that's genuinely unusual in gin. Throughout, a sturdy core of juniper and coriander ensures this reads unmistakably as gin.
The finish is medium-long, with sansho pepper warmth carrying through alongside green tea dryness and a delicate yuzu echo. It's clean, composed, and leaves you wanting more — which, at 43%, is easy to do.
How to Drink It
The Japanese way — a Roku highball with quality tonic, plenty of ice, and a thin slice of fresh ginger — is genuinely the best way to drink this. The ginger picks up the sansho pepper's spice and amplifies it beautifully. Fever-Tree Japanese Yuzu Tonic is the obvious pairing and it works, though a clean Indian tonic is equally good.
In cocktails, Roku is exceptional in a Gimlet where the yuzu character plays off the lime juice. It also makes a refined Martini — the tea notes add a savoury quality that pairs wonderfully with a dry vermouth like Noilly Prat. I'd avoid overly sweet or fruit-heavy cocktails, which would steamroll the delicate Japanese botanicals.
The Bottom Line
Roku earns its 8 through elegance and value. At $28, it offers a level of craftsmanship and botanical interest that most gins can't match at twice the price. It's a gin that rewards thoughtful drinking — the kind of bottle that makes you slow down and notice what's happening in the glass. For anyone curious about Japanese spirits beyond whisky, Roku is the perfect entry point. For gin enthusiasts, it's simply a beautifully made bottle that deserves a permanent place on the shelf.