The Curious Bartender Podcast

#65 Henry Jeffreys - Drinking the British Empire, Churchill, Fortified Wine, Bordeaux, Rum, Gin, Cider, Legendary Drinkers

Feb 16, 2026
Henry Jeffreys, drinks writer and historian behind Empire of Booze, explores how British trade and taste reshaped global drinking. He traces Bordeaux’s rise in London, the role of fortified wines for sea travel, rum’s naval functions, Marsala and Madeira’s histories, gin trends, cider’s lost potential, Churchill’s daytime drinking, and colorful historical drinkers.
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INSIGHT

Madeira Is Undervalued Despite Exceptional Old Bottles

  • Madeira is underpriced relative to its historic quality because mass plantings used lesser grapes and consumer knowledge faded.
  • Great Madeiras (Malmsey, Sercial, Verdelho) exist but are rarer and demand a higher entry price to taste their complexity.
INSIGHT

Science And Commerce Fueled British Drink Innovation

  • British drinking culture combined scientific curiosity, mercantile wealth and empire to create diverse alcoholic traditions.
  • The Royal Society members investigated fermentation and bottle fermentation, linking elite science to beverage innovation.
INSIGHT

Empire Roles Varied Between Broker And Producer

  • The British role ranged from merchant broker to producer depending on region: merchants in Bordeaux, producers in Caribbean islands.
  • Empire needs (navy, trade) drove local production like rum distilling where imports weren't available.
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