º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Gin produced from recycled coffee grounds

The coffee based, but caffeine free spirit is the latest product from Grounds for Good, a social enterprise that aims at stopping coffee grounds going for landfill

Ground For Good has release a gin

A Welsh gin produced from recycled coffee grounds will launch on World Gin Day tomorrow.

The coffee based, but caffeine free spirit is the latest product from Grounds for Good, a lockdown-launched range, created in October by medical doctor turned entrepreneur Dr Rosie Oretti and friend and fellow beauty expert Amy Adams.

With a shared love of coffee and a value for all things sustainable and ethical, Dr Oretti and Ms Adams' first products were three body polishes of repurposed coffee grounds destined for landfill, followed by candles. And now Dr Oretti is taking the brand forward with the GFG London Dry Gin No.1, distilled at the Gower Gin Company.

GFG is a social enterprise, with some profit donated to The Wallich, a homeless charity which supported many of addiction psychiatrist Dr Oretti’s patients, and where she is now a Trustee, since retiring after 30 years within the NHS.

“This is a cause close to my heart,” said Dr Oretti, who, as one of Wales’ few addiction psychiatrists, advised Welsh Government on substance misuse strategy and policy for 10 years.

“And yes, I recognise the irony - I certainly did not envisage that I would be producing and selling alcohol in my future,” she says.

While some GFG profits go towards supporting The Wallich, these aren’t from the gin. As many homeless individuals suffer from alcohol or drug related problems, it wouldn’t be ethical to donate assets from this type of source, which Dr Oretti feels, doesn’t align with the charity.

Drawing on their years of green, clean beauty experience – having met while they both worked for vegan, cruelty-free sustainable º£½ÇÊÓÆµ franchise Tropic Skincare – Dr Oretti and Ms Adams harnessed a three-pronged approach or ‘three angles of good’ – good for you, good for the community and good for the planet.