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FEATURE: Still Life With Gin

Gin is a shortened form of the older English word genever, which came to us via Dutch – hence the phrase ‘Dutch courage’. Hove dipsomaniac, Eric Page, catches up with dishy distiller and broadcaster, Kathy Caton, from Brighton Gin to talk about her still life.

Photo by Liz Finlayson

Is this a Queer Gin?
I think we’re definitely queer in attitude with a diverse workforce – a significant number of our team are LGBT+, we range in age from 20 to mid 70s, more than 70% identify as female. We’ve got a firm community-led ethos too: every year we make a slightly different Pink Brighton Gin to raise funds for the Rainbow Fund, and to give to unsung community heroes to say thank you for all their hidden hard work. We’re trying to embody the spirit of Brighton!

Do you use copper pot distilling?
We do indeed distil in copper, using a pot still (the copper helps with purification) which in combination with using absolutely the best quality ingredients means we’ve done all we can to help you dodge a hangover!

Are your juniper berries local?
We’d love our juniper to be local. Juniper is a tough shrub, a member of the pine family, which is why in my early gin experiments when I over boiled the juniper it smelt of Domestos! Juniper used to grow over the South Downs – I dream of re-wilding a bit, but it takes 15 years or so to come to fruition – that’s a long wait.

Is it a secret recipe?
We spent a long time perfecting our recipe so I’m pretty precious about it! It’s a simple process, but like making a souffle, there are 3,000 different ways you can stuff it up.

Exactly what is a ‘botanical’?
‘Botanicals’ are the herbs, berries, citrus and so forth that give gin its unique taste and are what allow for such variety. Legally, to be called ‘gin’, it must simply taste predominantly of juniper – anything else is fair game!

Hogarth or Toulouse-Lautrec?
On balance, it would have to be Hogarth. It’s worth taking a look at Gin Lane’s companion piece, Beer Street, where everyone is plump, well-fed and churchgoing. It was meant to be viewed first to make Gin Lane all the more shocking.

Were you Brighton’s first legal gin still?
We’re definitely Brighton’s first legal distillery. I’m really surprised actually that there hasn’t been a distillery here before us. One factor I think is that we’re in an area of the country with an amazing brewing heritage so those have taken precedence. Also, I think Brighton is focused on the consumption rather than the production of booze until recently.

How did being voted the UK’s favourite gin feel?
That was an extraordinary, brilliant moment. So much of what we do at Brighton Gin is unglamorous – there’s a lot of heavy lifting and fierce hours, so to receive that recognition was amazing. It meant a huge amount to us and I’m not ashamed to say there were a few tears (and some popping corks) when we found out.

Where’s your favourite place in the city?
What a question. So, so many! Upstairs in the Marlborough Theatre for queer culture (Eric, I remember seeing you perform there back in the day), The Bedford Tavern on New Year’s Day or the beach in late summer, watching the setting sun sharing a bottle of something cold.

Mother’s ruin or sophisticated tipple?
We’re keen that drinking Brighton Gin means fun, whether that’s at a sophisticated cocktail party, a mate’s house, in the pub or over dinner.

What’s caused the explosion of gins, and gin drinking, in the past decade?
The interest in provenance, quality and localism has been driven by what’s happened in craft brewing – craft spirits is absolutely following that. With gin in particular, there’s so much room within the category, an infinite variety of botanicals and combinations, the different methods you can use. There are over 500 British gins now, but there’s room for everyone. I love that gin is now something that’s enjoyed across the gender and age spectrum – when I was at university, I was laughed at for drinking ‘my nan’s drink’. Now it’s enjoyed by people across the generations, all drinking it in different ways.

Do you have distillery envy? 
I do! I’m a sucker for giant copper stills and people with vast space and handsome flint barns as tasting rooms. One of the issues for us is that distilleries ideally need a lot of space and a lot of headroom and those spaces aren’t available to us.

Any distilled disasters?
Many, many, they’re such a key part of learning – from early distillations that tasted like Dettol, a minor fire patted out with oven gloves that then started smouldering, to someone ordering 1,056 of the wrong bottles that we couldn’t return – we’re still trying to find creative ways of using them up.

When was the last time you cried?
Shamefully, in Paddington 2. I blame jet-lag and white wine for that one.

Know any good gin jokes?
I’d go with Dorothy Parker’s lines on a gin martini: “I like to have a martini, two at the very most. After three I’m under the table, after four I’m under my host”.

OPINION: Transitioning with Sugar: Trans healthcare and the Gender Recognition Act

Sugar, still in the midst of surgical recovery, asks, is it all worth it?

As I sit at my desk on a hot mid-June’s day, already five days behind deadline (oops, sorry ed and design), feeling somewhat overwhelmed with my scar management and post-operative care, I’ve spent the last week plagued by writer’s block.

Recently, I’ve been suffering with activist burnout. 2018 was supposed to be my year of rest after six gender-related surgeries last year, but I’ve never found myself busier. Never have I had so many organisations come to me to ask me to write for them, to talk to them, to sit for paintings, to hand hold girls through Gender Reassignment Surgeries that I’ve previously undertaken myself, my continued work in empowering other trans women to take control of their own hormone and surgery regimes and my work in consulting with the medical profession on trans healthcare.

Great! It may seem that way, until I feel so exhausted by it all that I just want to run away, live a stealth life where nobody knows I am trans, get myself a cis partner and just be known as Sugar, the tall, tattooed bad ass woman, not Sugar, the trans woman. For that is what I am, a woman; and as the period of time elapses since I started transition the more the stealth life appeals. I used to look at girls who were stealth and I would judge them. I’d think to myself, ‘Why are you hiding? Why aren’t you educating? Where is your visibility? Where is your Pride?’ Whereas I now fantasize about running away and going stealth myself.

July is the busiest month for us trans folk in the UK and, just when I want to be slowing down, I find myself having to speed up. We have the annual Trans, Non-Binary and Intersex conference happening this month and I’m particularly looking forward to listening to friend and fellow activist Mx Tyler Austen speak on the subject of activist burnout. Conference is always scheduled for the week leading up to Trans Pride weekend, a Pride event that I can really get behind and give my full support. As Trans Pride enters its sixth year we’re reminded that things really aren’t that great for trans people.

Many assume that our city is a utopia, a bubble where LGBTQIA folk roam free of oppression and hate. This simply isn’t true. As our visibility grows the push back against us grows at an extraordinary rate.

In the last few months many of us have felt the pure hatred aimed at us from Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminist groups (TERFS). We’ve watched dinosaurs like Germaine Greer afforded prime-time television where she can repeat her tired old rhetoric. We’ve had to watch as cis people discuss our rights as if it has anything to do with them whatsoever (hint: it doesn’t) and we, as a city, have been plagued by hate groups who’ve been putting up stickers on lamp posts and pedestrian crossings hating transwomen specifically. We’ve had to gather our troops and do all we can to stop these groups of TERFS congregating in our city and spreading hate speech. I’m part of an underground network of people on the lookout for these stickers, amongst other things, and we do our best to deploy our forces to remove them as soon as we spot them.

We will not be bullied into submission by people who are trying to take our rights as women away. Our genders ARE NOT up for debate and the only person that can decide whether someone is trans or not is that very person themselves.

The whole NHS Gender Identity Clinic structure needs to change. From GP referral, we currently have to wait around two years for a cis person to tell us if we’re trans or not, then we have to wait six months for another cis person to agree with them and allow us hormones, and then another six months for one of them to say we’re trans enough for surgery, and then guess what? Another six months for another to agree with them. After this, we have to wait another six months to see a surgeon and, if they’re happy to proceed, we wait about a year for surgery. That’s a minimum of five years to get to surgery, much, much more for many of us, that is, of course, if we haven’t already killed ourselves. The system is broken and we need to continue to fight for change. No cis person gets to decide whether we’re trans or not, that’s something that can only come from within.

The Gender Recognition Act of 2004 is in the middle of a huge shake-up, and quite rightly so. Self Identification for trans people which, in a nutshell, means trusting us to know our own minds, instead of cis people deciding for us whether we’re ‘trans enough’, is something that should have happened years ago and we need to keep pushing hard for this, however much the TERFS disagree. Their rhetoric is that I need cis people to decide for me if I’m a ‘real’ trans person or if I’ve had my balls cut off, had my face rearranged, taken oestrogen every day and had a pair of big old tiddies put in for shits and giggles just so I can go around creating havoc in women’s bathrooms.

Urgh! It is just so, so tiring. We really aren’t asking for a lot, we’re just asking to be allowed to be ourselves and to be trusted that we know who we are, it’s not that hard, is it?

When I reflect on the state of the regime in which so many of us are forced to live under I realise that my work is absolutely worth it, that it’s imperative that I continue and that I remain united with all my trans siblings and running away to live that stealth life isn’t a luxury I can afford yet as there is much work to be done.

PICTURE DIARY: Proud Parkers Photography at Golden Handbag Awards

Everyone’s a winner at the Golden Handbag Awards just by being there!

Photos taken by Natasha Parker-Small at Proud Parkers Photography.

To view complete collection, click here:

MUSIC REVIEW: Do you dream of ice cream?

AY Wing keeps things sweet with latest track Ice Cream Dream

Image created by Ray A-J

 

VANILLA. Strawberry. Chocolate. And now electronica. Berlin based singer AY Wing changes up the flavours with her latest song Ice cream Dream.

The creamy track from her 2018 E.P Ice Cream Dream perfectly blends simplistic beats of marching drums with a stripped back texture found in her previous track Strange, to create an easy listening vibe. But AY drops in just a dash of cheer to the relaxed electronic track, with swaying drums and a bright synth melody that follows close in the melodic footsteps of the vocals, in each rendition of its jumping chorus.

Layering a funky baseline, extraterrestrial synth drone, and a light female vocal smothered in reverb, the subtly chirpy song riddles itself with catchy lines and danceable rhythms, but never sidelines the importance of the message behind the music. Both snarky lyricism and the cheeky accompanying video (set in a makeshift gym) aim to poke fun at misplaced obsession with fitness in modern times, chanting: “keep me happy, keep me sweet.” But AY keeps things light with the outlining metaphor of ice cream that pops up towards the end of the video.

As the Swiss born singer herself says: “In an age where we’re all a little bit more stressed than we probably need to be, couldn’t we all use a little more ice-cream sweetness in our lives?

PICTURE DIARY: The Golden Handbags 2018

Everyone’s a winner at the Golden Handbag Awards just by being there!

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A full list of the winners and runners up will appear in the August issue of Gscene.

Photos courtesy of Tyrone Darling

Government to ban gay conversion therapies

Gay conversion therapies which try to cure people’s sexuality are to be banned under the governments new LGBT+ Action Plan.

Prime Minister Theresa May
Prime Minister Theresa May

THIS follows the biggest survey of its kind accessing the difficulties facing LGBT+ people living in the UK. It found among other things, that more than two-thirds of same-sex couples said they didn’t hold hands in public for fear of facing abuse.

The Governments Equalities Office has drawn up a new national action plan with 75 new measures including a ban on controversial conversion therapies, which attempt to change people’s sexuality; the appointment a new LGBT+ Health Advisor to improve access to Health Services; and a consultation on reforming gender laws to make it easier for trans people to change their birth certificate.

Prime Minister Theresa May said: “We can be proud that the UK is a world leader in advancing LGBT+ rights, but the overwhelming response to our survey has shone a light on the many areas where we can improve the lives of LGBT+ people.

“This LGBT action plan will set out concrete steps to deliver real and lasting change across society, from health and education to tackling discrimination and addressing the burning injustices that LGBT people face.”

The action plan will include a £4.5m fund to address inequality and support the delivery of actions in the plan in areas including health, education, personal safety and the workplace. It says the Government will, among other actions:

Penny Mourdant MP
Penny Mourdant MP

The Equalities Minister Penny Mourdant, added: “I am incredibly proud of the UK’s global leadership on LGBT+ equality and the fact that this is the largest survey of its kind, but many of the results are very disturbing.

“It’s unacceptable that people feel they cannot hold hands with their partner in public, and that they are unable to walk down the street without fear of abuse. It is also deeply worrying that LGBT people experience difficulty accessing public services such as healthcare, and that so many are being offered the abhorrent practise of conversion therapy.

“This Government has done much to promote a diverse, tolerant society and supporting lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people – but it is clear we have more to do.

“Our Action Plan is a step towards everyone – regardless of their sexual orientation, gender identity or sex characteristics – being able to live safe, happy and healthy lives where they can be themselves without fear of discrimination. It will mark a culture change to allow LGBT people to feel respected at every level of society.”

Human Rights and LGBT+ activist Peter Tatchell, said: “The LGBT Action Plan is a welcome start but it falls short on key issues.

“The biggest fail is the lack of any pledge to end the detention and deportation of LGBT+ refugees fleeing persecution in violently homophobic countries like Uganda, Iran, Russia, Egypt and Jamaica.
“Another big omission is the absence of any commitment to compensate gay and bisexual men who were convicted under past anti-gay laws. They suffered greatly; frequently being hit with huge fines. Some were jailed and beaten in prison. They often lost their job, income and home. Many suffered mental breakdowns. Their lives were wrecked for decades. The government’s unwillingness to include compensation in its Action Plan is a huge let down.
“The £4.5 million budget is derisory and insulting. It coincides with cuts in funding for sexual health clinics, which make it hard to get testing and treatment appointments. This is contributing to a rise in infections among gay – and straight – people. 
“Banning gay conversion therapy is the right thing to do. It doesn’t work and it is deeply offensive to try to change a fundamental, natural and widespread human characteristic.”

Ivor Caplin, to speak at The Village MCC

Ivor Caplin will be the guest speaker at The Village Metropolitan Community Church on July 29.

CAPLIN was MP for Hove between 1997-2005, during which time he served in the Labour Government as a PPS, FCO whip, and Minister for veterans at the Ministry of Defence. He was also the first Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on English Language Teaching.

Ivor is actively involved in the Brighton & Hove Jewish community and was recently appointment as National Chair of the Jewish Labour Movement.

Rev Michael Hydes
Rev Michael Hydes

Rev. Michael Hydes, senior pastor at The Village MCC, said: “I am thrilled that the right honourable Ivor Caplin will be joining us on July 29 to begin our Pride celebrations this year.  Like myself, he is a regular guest on Queersay on Latest TV and will be bringing his unique perspective on PRIDE, both as an out and proud gay Jewish man, and as a parliamentarian.”

The Village MCC Brighton and Hove is a church that was created by LGBT+ Christians, their families, friends, and allies. It’s an MCC (Metropolitan Community Church) called to support the LGBT+ communities in whatever ways it can.

The Village MCC Brighton and Hove offers a safe space where anyone can feel at home, fully affirmed in their sexuality and gender identity.

Church members are active in the larger community, offering emergency aid and support to the homeless and vulnerably housed. Their minister, Rev. Michael, offers spiritual direction and pastoral care. They worship together every Sunday evening at Somerset House Day Centre, 62 St James’s St, Brighton at 6 pm.

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