The world's first blended whisky which was a mix of malt and grain whisky was produced by brewer and small-time distiller Andrew Usher II in Edinburgh under the name Green Stripe, circa 1860. His father, Andrew Usher (1782 – 1855), was also a famous blender in the vatted malt era.
Charles Dickens spelt it whiskey in Martin Chuzzlewit but used both whisky and whiskey in The Pickwick Papers. But then he didn't quite know which city he was in, did he?
North Korea’s Samilpo distillery created its own brand of whisky and launched it mid-2019. The Samilpo whisky bottle is based on the characteristic square design of Scotland’s Johnnie Walker, a popular but expensive brand in North Korea.
The distillery sells two different expressions of its whisky in a format similar to the international best-selling Scottish brand – a 40% ABV “Black Label” and a 42% ABV “Red Label”. There had to be some difference somewhere, I suppose. Its 45% ABV expression which was announced as part of the family is not yet available. The bottles present an unusual volume, 620 ml. Apart from this figure and the ABV, nothing is written in English.
With 78 out of 82 entities using Whisky, there is a strong case for stating that the global spelling of this spirit is whisky.
The first Scotch ever to sell for six figures ($160,100) was the aptly named Dalmore 64 Trinitas, one of just three bottles of this Scotch whisky ever made. Rare stocks are combined in each bottle, containing spirits dating from 1868, 1878, 1926 and 1939.
Eimverk Distillery in Iceland is dedicated to making premium Icelandic spirits from 100% local ingredients. Their whisky is named Flóki after one of Icelands first explorers, Hrafna-Flóki (Flóki of the ravens). Eimverk produces three whiskies, one Young Malt, one unique sheep-dung smoked malt whisky and one 3-YO Single Malt Whisky using locally grown Icelandic barley.
Pakistan's only distillery at the Murree Brewery is owned by a Parsi, Minoo Bhandara.
The vast majority of whisky exported from Scotland is blended, not single malt.
White Horse is a mildly smoky Blended Scotch today. First produced by James Logan Mackie in 1861, it was particularly noted for its free use of the heavily smoked Lagavulin single malt Scotch whisky.
The name "White Horse" comes from an ancient inn in Edinburgh's Canongate.
The White Horse Blended Scotch Whisky of today contains 40 percent malts including Talisker and Linkwood.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the advertising slogan of White Horse Whisky was "you can take a white horse anywhere", accompanied by a white horse in various settings, such as a garden party.
During the Prohibition era in the USA (1920-33), there was a loop-hole in the law which allowed import and production of liquor for ‘medicinal and sacramental’ purposes. White Horse whisky could be imported as a medicinal spirit. So was Laphroaig.
Despite its smokiness, Ardbeg is renowned for its delicious sweetness, a phenomenon that has affectionately become known as ‘the peaty paradox’.
In a change from the usual one-off Committee Releases, Ardbeg 8 Years Old will be around for a while – not forever, but long enough to give you more than one chance to get hold of a bottle.
The spooky ageing warehouse of Highland Park Distillery in the Orkney Islands is believed to house the ghost of Eunson Magnus, a long-deceased Orkney man.
An aged ex-Sherry whisky is new territory for Ardbeg, so they wanted some opinions, producing the 8 YO For Discussion expression July 2021 for that express purpose. The Ardbeg Committee’s experienced palates are expected to provide the said opinion.
Ardbeg is the world’s most highly awarded smoky single malt whisky this century. Since 2008, Ardbeg has won more than 50 gold and double gold medals in key whisky competitions.
Ian Hunter was the last of the Johnston family to own and manage the Laphroaig distillery, between 1908 and 1944.
In 2019, Laphroaig released a new Scotch whisky, The Ian Hunter Story Book One: Unique Character in a novel manner, in the form of a heavy tome that, after a few pages, revealed a neat slot with a bottle holding liquid 30 years old and at 46.7% ABV nestled therein. It was also the first chapter of a series of rare and collectable aged whiskies that honour the legacy of Ian Hunter.
15 such volumes are planned for annual release, covering the history behind Laphroaig and the characters that created it.
They will all be 30 YO or older, unchillfiltered, 70 Cl and bottled at around the 47% ABV mark.
Over time, the original smokiness of Laphroaig’s bottlings, including this 30 YO whisky has become less of an assault on the senses.
The second release of Ian Hunter’s series has come in 2021. Book Two: Building An Icon is at 48.2% ABV.
Book Three: Source Protector 70 Cl ABV 49.9% will be a 33 Year Old, bottled at 49.9% ABV.
Indian Amrut is not the only Fusion Whisky, just the first. The Glover Fusion Whisky will be the second.
The second title in the fusion whisky series, The Kincardine, is a 7 YO blended malt whisky at 52.9% ABV and a fusion of the Indian Amrut single malt whisky and Scotch from Glen Elgin and Macallan distilleries.
The E&K 5 YO Blended Malt 57.8% ABV is the third, a fusion of Scotch whisky from Ardmore and Glenrothes distilleries and malt whiskies from Amrut Distillery in India.
The Glover Fusion Whisky Ltd. was originally formed as a small enterprise for Thomas Blake Glover, TBG & Co. To honour his achievements and role in the historical relationship between Scotland and Japan, independent bottler, Adelphi Distillery Ltd., was asked to create a blend of Japanese and Scotch malt whiskies.
Adelphi was offered the chance to select a single refill ex-sherry hogshead from one of the few remaining casks from Hanyu Distillery. It was shipped to England for marrying with a carefully determined volume of Scotch whisky from two single casks: 35% from an American oak ex-sherry hogshead distilled at Longmorn, and a minor percentage from a Spanish oak ex-sherry butt distilled at Glen Garioch.
The final ratio was assessed through extensive trial vattings by Alex Bruce and Charles MacLean. It was launched as a 22 year old malt whisky in 2015 at an ABV of 53.1%.
The Winter Queen is the next in the series of iconic blends from Fusion Whisky and Adelphi, created in honour of the Scottish princess, Elizabeth Stuart. It is a blend of Scotch malt whisky from Longmorn and Glenrothes distilleries and malt whisky from Zuidam Distillery in the Netherlands at 52.9% ABV.
The Brisbane 5 YO Blended Malt 57.5% ABV is a fusion of Scotch malt whisky from two Spanish oak ex-sherry hogsheads distilled at Glen Garioch, Highland, part of an ex-sherry butt distilled at Glen Grant, Speyside and three ex-Apera casks distilled at Starward Distillery, Melbourne.
The Glover 5th Edition Fusion by Adelphi 4 YO Cask Strength 54.7% ABV contains two of the most exciting single malts in the world: Chichubu from Japan and Adelphi's own Ardnamurchan Distillery.
Today, Jameson is the best-selling Irish whiskey in world.
By the beginning of the 20th century, Irish whiskey was firmly positioned as the best-selling whisky in the world. Its global market share has been estimated at around 70%.
It was the best-selling imported whisky in the U.S., outselling both Canadian whisky and the then fledgling Scotch whisky industry. Irish whiskey even outsold Scotch whisky in England.
The “big four” Dublin based distillers, John Jameson, John Power, William Jameson and George Roe, dominated the whisky trade with an annual capacity of over five million gallons of whisky a year.
By the end of the century, roughly 40% of Dublin’s work force was employed in the brewing and distilling industry.
Derry, Cork and Belfast were also major distillery centres.
Ardbeg 8 Years Old for Discussion is the answer to the question ‘what if, in an alternative universe, Ardbeg Ten Years Old was not the distillery’s “flagship” aged expression?’
Macduff Highland Single Malt Scotch whisky distillery has a classic, clean and functional Delme-Evans design, with the stillhouse being the most intriguing part of the engineering.
In here are five stills – two wash and three spirit – all of which have upward-tilting lyne arms that have a right angled kink in them.
The spirit stills also have horizontal shell and tube condensers. The character is nutty (slightly sulphury at new make stage), with quick mashing, short fermentation and cold condensers. It is this last technique which adds weight to the spirit. It could well be that the kink in the lyne arm helps create just enough reflux to contribute a balancing fruitiness.
Macduff whisky is bottled by its owner as either Glen Deveron or The Deveron.
Between 1966 and 1972, it became part of William Lawson, the whisky arm of Martini & Rossi.
Passport is a Speyside-influenced blended Scotch whose key markets are Brazil, Angola, Mexico, India, Russia and Eastern Europe.
The blend recipe for Passport was developed by Chivas Brothers’ blender Jimmy Lang during the 1960s.
It was a classical Chivas blend in that it embraced the company’s Speyside single malts, including Strathisla and Glen Keith. Indeed, Glen Keith was long promoted as the ‘Home of Passport’, with a banner replicating the bottle label displayed in the distillery entrance.
During the 1970s malt from the newly-built Allt-a-Bhainne and Braes of Glenlivet (now Braeval) distilleries began to appear in the Passport recipe.
Jimmy Lang served as master blender for Seagram’s Scottish subsidiary Chivas Brothers 1971 - 1989.
As well as his role in the creation of Passport, Lang developed the 100 Pipers blend and was responsible for Seagram’s key Scotch brands Chivas Regal and Royal Salute.
Roseisle Speyside Single Malt Scotch whisky distillery is a ‘flexible’ distillery. Six of its seven pairs of stills can switch between stainless steel or standard (copper) shell and tube condensers.
If a light grassy spirit is required, long fermentation (in excess of 90 hours) is used, along with slow distillation with air rests, and condensing in the copper condensers.
If a heavy style is needed then the stainless steel condensers will be used. The lack of extended copper ‘conversation’ will add the requisite weight to the spirit.
A nutty (malty) style could also be produced by shortening mashing and fermentation regimes.
The grassy style which is currently produced is different noticeably to that from other Diageo sites such as Glen Ord or Royal Lochnagar.
Cork’s West Cork Distillers, which owned the North Mall and Midleton distilleries, the latter the predecessor to Irish Distillers Ltd (IDL) New Middleton distillery where Jameson whiskey is produced today, had a capacity of 1.5 million gallons.
Derry’s Watts distillery, where the Tyrconnell brand of whiskey was produced, had a capacity of two million gallons.
Belfast’s Royal Irish Distillers had a capacity of 2.5 million gallons and produced Dunville’s, the best-selling Irish whiskey in the U.S. They also had the largest inventory of aging whiskey in Great Britain.
The Tyrconnell brand is produced today at the Cooley distillery, a subsidiary of Beam Suntory, while the Dunville brand is produced by the Echinville distillery.
By comparison, most Scotch whisky distilleries had a capacity of less than 100,000 gallons. The Glenlivet distillery, the largest Scottish distillery at the time, had a capacity of 200,000 gallons.
Robert Burns, Scotland’s bard, in his late eighteenth century poem Scotch Drink, called the native whisky of Scotland “. . . my Muse! guid auld Scotch Drink . . .”
The greatest threat of violence to legal distillers from smugglers in the Glenlivet area existed when shipments of legal whisky wended their way south to Perth and Dundee through the desolate glens and hillsides. The most dangerous was the “Spittal of Glenshee.”
In 1868, the laird of Aberlour[fellow legitimate distiller James Gordon], presented George Smith with a pair of hair-trigger pistols for ten guineas.
George Smith came to be known later on in life as “Old Minmore.”
The real Glenlivet. became the subject of a popular verse: Glenlivet it has castles three Drumin, Blairfeldy, and Deskie, And also one distillery More famous than the castles three.
James Chivas was well aware of the already legendary malt whisky made at George Smith’s Drumin Glenlivet Distillery, the one people called “the real Glenlivet.” James, therefore, made the stocking of this top-notch malt whisky a priority and a personal mission.
In 1975, Chivas Brothers was instructed to remove the Royal Warrant from Chivas Regal by that year’s end, 132 years after the first appointment.
Beyond the direct positive effect of the Royal Appointments, the queen’s influence and powerful persona encouraged the evolution of a whole new stratum of customers for Stewart & Chivas.
Stewart & Chivas and their famous victuals had become such a phenomenon that by the 1860s their business reached far south into England as the nobles returned home in the autumn.
The affluent English likewise brought with them a fervent, unquenchable thirst for the whisky of Scotland, but made it clear to James that they fancied a tamer, smoother whisky than that offered by most of the Highland malt distillers.
James spent more time in his office mixing various sample whiskies in an attempt to find a proprietary blend worthy of the Stewart & Chivas name as well as a blend that would fulfill the desires of the moneyed English.
On the heels of the implementation of the landmark Illicit Distillation (Scotland) Act of 1822 and the Excise Act of 1823, an explosion of licit malt distilleries mushroomed all over Scotland.
Following the path of George Smith’s Drumin Glenlivet Distillery, other fabled malt whisky distilleries like Macallan, Fettercairn, Longrow, Balmenach, and Mortlach, also began in 1824.
Ben Nevis, Port Ellen, Strathisla, Kippen, Glencadam, and Glenury opened in 1825.
Aberlour and Pulteney opened in 1826.
In 1835, only one single malt distillery, Lochruan, was licensed.
The Highlands’ notoriously combustible Era of Smuggling was largely doused by 1840, to the relief and gratification of both Parliament and the Highland land barons. The near two-century-long epidemic of illicit whisky making had been eradicated through the slow-dripping antidote of legislation.
George offered customers two varieties of Drumin Glenlivet at different “proof” levels in the 1830s and 1840s, ~65% & 72% ABV.
In the nineteenth century, all malt whiskies, including George’s prized Drumin Glenlivet, were dispensed straight from the barrel to the goblet without any reduction in strength.
The English invented the idea of proof in the seventeenth century for the purpose of assigning accurate duties according to alcoholic potency. The higher the alcoholic content, the stiffer the duties.
From the mid-1600s to 1818, excise officials routinely determined the alcoholic strength of beverages by mixing a portion with gunpowder, lighting it and gauging the intensity, the colour and the duration of the flame.
In 1816, Bartholomew Sikes, an excise official, perfected the hydrometer, a device that measured the specific gravity of liquids. From 1818 on, excise officials calculated alcoholic strength with a hydrometer.
To the British, a “proof spirit” contains 57.1 % alcohol and 42.9 % water.
In the US, proof signifies 50 % alcohol, 50 % water, a much simpler set up.
George’s popular frontline Drumin Glenlivet whisky, sold at a per gallon price of 10 shillings, registered at 11 % higher than proof, which probably meant that it hovered at from 60 to 65 % alcohol. This robust whisky, hardly a timid wallflower, was George’s best seller and was almost certainly cut with water by the majority of malt whisky drinkers.
For people with even stronger constitutions and perhaps cast-iron intestines, he also sold a flamethrower, high-octane version of Drumin Glenlivet at what was depicted as “25 % over proof” for 12 shillings and sixpence per gallon. About 70-71% ABV.
Actor Humphrey Bogart commented during a slump in his film career, “I never should have switched from Scotch to martinis.”
Entertainer and famed Scotch admirer Joe E. Lewis quipped, “Whenever someone asks me if I want water with my Scotch, I say ‘I’m thirsty, not dirty.’”
Since the first half of the nineteenth century, the Scotch whisky industry’s visionary, if pragmatic, captains piggybacked its exportation onto a never-before-seen juggernaut, the rapidly expanding British Empire.
George Smith stopped for a night in a heavily frequented inn in Spittal of Glenshee and saw one nasty smuggler named Shaw and his band of thugs eyeing him. George dozed off into a light sleep, both pistols cocked and ready, one in each hand. Shaw apparently pulled out a large butcher knife, leaned over George and softly uttered, “This gully [knife] is for your bowels.” A fully awake George uncovered the pistol in his right hand and aimed it directly at Shaw’s forehead, saying, “And this for a hole between your eyes.” George then discharged the pistol in his left hand into the fireplace across the room, causing Shaw to flee.
The most significant outcome of first Stein’s and later Coffey’s system started to take shape in the late 1840s and 1850s when pioneering whisky blenders, such as Andrew Usher, John Haig, John Walker, Matthew Gloag, George Ballantine, William Teacher, John Dewar, and Francis and Walter Berry, began combining the ethereal whiskies from column stills with meatier, more charismatic Highland malt whiskies from pot stills.
Royal Warrants had expiration dates, which may explain why some of the Warrants first granted Stewart & Chivas and then Chivas Brothers appear to be renewed.
Following the landmark Illicit Distillation (Scotland) Act of 1822 and the Excise Act of 1823, an explosion of licit malt distilleries mushroomed all over Scotland. Between 10 October 1823 and 9 August 1824, no fewer than 79 new stills were commissioned. The number of licensed distilleries in operation grew swiftly from 111 in 1823 to 263 by 1825.
In 1860, Guinness’s Extra Double Stout sold for 4 shillings, 6 pence per bottle; rum ranged from 9 to 14 shillings per gallon, while brandy garnered a steep 32 shillings per gallon because of stiff duties. Ordinary Highland malt whisky sold for 6 shillings 6 pence per gallon; finer malt whisky at 11 percent over proof brought in 8 shillings per gallon; and the malt whisky from George Smith’s new Glenlivet distillery at Minmore, considered Scotland’s crème de la crème, sold for 20 to 22 shillings per gallon.
James married an attractive young woman Joyce Clapperton at the mature age of 44. They had 4 children, Julia, Alexander, Williamina and Charles James.
Entrepreneurs William Hespeler and George Randall established the Granite Mills & Waterloo Distillery in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada- the company that Canadian whisky magnate Joseph Emm Seagram would purchase in 1883, marking the official beginning of the Seagram legacy in the annals of beverage alcohol.
In December 1882, Charles James Joyce Chivas married Emma Grosskopf in his adopted US city of Milwaukee.
Charles James Joyce Chivas was paid a monthly retainer as part of his father’s Will.
The water for the distillery came from a pristine subterranean source, called Josie’s Well, the same water source used in the distillery today.
In 1863, the Strathspey Railway opened a station in the village of Ballindalloch, a mere eight miles from Minmore. A train traveled daily from Ballindalloch south to the town of Tomintoul. Casks of The Glenlivet were soon being transported to the railway station at Ballindalloch on wagons. Running southeast to northwest, the Strathspey Railway also connected the hamlets of Boat of Garten and Craigellachie.
By the last quarter of the 1800s, Scotch whisky was available in most ports of call around the world.
Today, Scotch whisky can be found in over 200 nations.
There are ~137 distilleries in operation in Scotland today.
The last ten NEW distilleries are crowd-funded.
Numerous entities are promoting investment in whisky in Scotland and the UK.
Greater Scotland includes the 787 islands of the Inner Hebrides, Outer Hebrides, the Orkneys, and the Shetlands.
Of these rugged and windswept islands, 130 are inhabited. Six of the inhabited islands—Arran, Islay, Skye, Mull, Orkney, and Jura—currently produce single malt whisky.
Ben Nevis in the western Highlands is Scotland’s highest peak at 1,344 metres.
Today, only one percent of Scotland’s primeval forest remains. Deforestation likewise indirectly affected the Scotch industry, in that, with the forests gone, the main source of fuel in prehistoric Scotland became peat.
Scotland has no shortage of peat since peat bogs still cover an estimated 810,000 hectares (over 2 million acres) of the nation’s surface.
The Guild of Barber-Surgeons was a powerful professional entity in Edinburgh at the turn of the sixteenth century. Their mission, as royally sanctioned by the King’s “The Seal of Cause,” was to maintain and promote the highest standards of surgical practice.
The Guild of Barber-Surgeons was so highly regarded, in fact, that in 1505 King James IV bestowed on them the exclusive right to distill and peddle their aqua vitae for medicinal purposes within Edinburgh.
Glenlivet, or Gleann-liobh-aite in Gaelic, means “valley of the smooth flowing one.
The brewing and distilling industry in the USA organised dozens of anti-prohibition or pro-moderation counter-lobbies. Known as the “wets” as opposed to the pro-prohibition “drys,” the groups drew extensive support from Irish and German communities in the U.S., both of which were heavily represented in the brewing and distilling trades.
Prohibition had plenty of loopholes. There was a broad exemption for alcoholic beverages used in religious rituals, a factor that led to a dramatic rise in self-proclaimed priests organising their own congregations.
Prohibition had two other unintended consequences. The number of arrests from the violation of Prohibition skyrocketed, overwhelming the court system and resulting in multi-year long waits before cases could go to trial. In response, prosecutors introduced the then novel idea of the plea bargain to clear the backlog of cases.
The second unintended consequence was more far reaching. Taxes on alcoholic beverages had funded between 30% and 40% of federal spending. States relied on alcohol taxes, on average, for more than 50% of their expenditures. New York State, for example, derived more than 75% of its tax revenue from taxes on alcoholic beverages. Prohibition eliminated a significant source of tax revenue. The result is that the federal government decided to extend the personal income tax, originally instituted on a temporary basis to fund WW I expenditures, for the foreseeable future. Many states adopted their own income taxes to fill the deficit produced by Prohibition.
The Phylloxera boom would produce a corresponding bust. At the heart of that bust was the case of the infamous Pattison brothers.
Robert Pattison started in the Scotch whisky business by leasing the Teaninch Distillery from 1850 until 1869. In 1887, with his brother Walter and a number of other partners, he formed a blending company in Leith under the name Pattison, Elder and Co, and, at the peak of the Phylloxera boom, went public.
In 1896, the company became a distiller as well. The Pattisons now went on an acquisitions binge that saw the company, Pattison Ltd., acquire half of the Glenfarclas distillery, the Ardgowan distillery, and a substantial part of the Aultmore-Glenlivet and Oban distilleries.
This expansion came against a background of easy credit from the banks and heightened investor interest in the Scotch industry.
In the 1890s alone, 33 new malt distilleries were built and even more distilleries were expanding their capacity.
At one point the company gave away 500 African grey parrots, which had been trained to shout out “buy Pattison whisky” and “Pattison whisky is the best” to their retail customers; the first example of in-store interactive advertising.
By 1899, however, the company fell apart. The collapse of Pattison Ltd. was just the most visible aspect of a much broader industry problem of increasing overproduction and over investment.
In 1898 Scotch whisky production had peaked at roughly 35.8 million gallons versus demand of 22.3 million gallons. Excess production had grown from two million gallons in 1891 to thirteen and a half million by 1898.
A new challenge emerged from Irish distillers. They argued that the blending of malt and grain whisky was not true whisky and should be banned. The Irish challenge prompted the establishment of a Royal Commission to investigate the industry and to determine once and for all “what exactly was whisky?” In 1909, after 18 months of hearings, the Royal Commission issued an exhaustive report confirming that the blending of malt and grain whisky constituted “real whisky” and recommending that these blended whiskies should continue to be produced and sold.
No sooner had this latest challenge to the Scotch whisky industry been averted, World War I would set the industry back for the better part of two decades.
The big Irish distillers opposed the Spirits Act of 1860, sparking a long running debate on what exactly was whisky. Notwithstanding the opposition of the big distillers, however, Ireland was producing a lot of grain whiskeys, and many Irish merchants and exporters began to dilute their whiskey, often excessively, by blending grain whiskey into their pot still whiskey. The issue was finally settled by a 1908 Royal Commission that concluded that blends of grain and malt whisky were in fact whisky.
The Spirits Act of 1860, also called the Scotch Whisky Act of 1860, is wrongly attributed to William Ewart Gladstone. He was the Chancellor of the Exchequer in Henry Temple's Govt in 1860.
The Spirits Act of 1860 had been crucial to the fortunes of the Scotch whisky industry, which boasted 111 operational distilleries in 1868, as it allowed for the first time the blending of spirits under bond without payment of duty, the storage of blended spirits in vats, and the filling of casks with blended spirit in bond.
Gladstone's budget of 1860 was introduced on 10 February along with the Cobden–Chevalier Treaty between Britain and France that would reduce tariffs between the two countries.
Blending of malt whiskies had been permitted in bond on payment of duty and holding fees since 1823. Bonded warehouses could be set up under supervision of the Town Clerk and required retention of barrels of spirits for two years, quickly changed to three.
Very few traders paid heed to this Act, with average retention time being as low as three months. The trader's word had to be accepted as to age and quality.
Blending of Grain whiskies with Malt whiskies was permitted in 1860, but limited to distillers only. The end result was a much milder and flavoursome spirit. The Irish malt whisky industry opposed the introduction of Grain whisky, refusing to even call it whisky.
The initial purpose of blending had been to reduce the cost of whisky, but it was soon discovered that in the hands of a skilful practitioner, a very drinkable and consistent product could be created.
Since most grocers and vintners were also dealers in spirits, they raised an outcry and were permitted to blend Grain and Malt whiskies in bond starting 1863 in an extension to the Cobden–Chevalier Treaty.
Further legislation during the 1860s aided the cause of blending, namely the fact that from 1864 spirit strength could be reduced using water in approved warehouses, and 1867 saw bottling whisky for domestic consumption in bonded warehouses.
A growing number of large distilleries in the Lowlands made grain spirit on an industrial scale, and one effect of the incipient blending boom, which would really take off during the 1870s, was a growing interest in malt whiskies produced in what we now call the Speyside region of production in north-east Scotland, but what was usually referred to in the 19th century as ‘Glenlivet.’
Apart from the famous Glenlivet itself, the area already had a reputation for fine whisky-making, being home to distilleries such as Aberlour, Cardhu, Glenfarclas, Glen Grant, Glenlivet, Macallan, Mortlach and Strathisla.
Speyside whiskies soon found favour among blenders, with commensurate expansion of distilling interests.
Campbeltown also grew steadily and in 1868, Benmore distillery became the 19th distillery to be established in the remote Argyllshire port. It was built by Glasgow-based distillers and blenders Bulloch Lade & Co, and boasted an annual output of 125,000 gallons (568,000 litres), making it one of the larger distilleries in the royal burgh.
In Edinburgh, the Caledonian distillery, which had been established in 1855 to distil grain whisky on a grand scale, was augmented by the installation in 1867 of two large pot stills alongside its existing Coffey apparatus, with the intention of making 'Irish-style whisky of the Dublin variety.'
Such a development was doubtless due in part to the large numbers of Irish nationals who migrated to work in Scotland and England as the economy flourished during the 1860s.
There was also a widespread appetite for Irish whiskey among the British public in the years before blended Scotch really established itself, due to its uniformity of character compared to the output of Scotland’s pot stills.
In Ireland, the blending revolution lagged behind that of Scotland, with many of the largest and most powerful distilling enterprises refusing to admit that ‘Irish’ whisky could be anything other than ‘pure pot still’ – made from a mash comprising malted and unmalted barley, distilled in a conventional copper pot still.
Aqua vitae (‘water of life’ in Latin) was the generic term for distilled spirits throughout the Roman Empire, widely used during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and translated into many languages. In Gaelic, it was uisge beatha, in Irish uisce beatha.
Whisky connoisseur Charles MacLean says that this was Anglicised from uiskie (c.1618) to whiskie (1715) to whisky (1746). F Paul Pacult, author of ‘A Double Scotch’, 2005, says that Aqua Vitae ultimately became Whisky in 1736.
The spelling Whiskey is found equally common in those days. In fact, the Hansard of 1896 uses the term Whiskey. Whisky or whiskey is by convention, not law: the Royal Commission on Whiskey and Other Potable Spirits (1908/09) spelt both Irish and Scotch with an ‘e’ throughout.
Gavin Smith writes in his A-Z of Whisky: "The first use of Scotch with the sense of specifically relating to whisky occurs in 1855, 'while malt liquors give our Scotch and Irish whiskies'”…
Silly rules of thumb like ‘countries without an e in their name…,etc. can be discarded.
is usually a time for celebration in the whisky world –Fèis Ìle, the Islay Festival of Malt and Music, a week-long celebration of Scotland’s most distillery-packed island, with whisky, music, dancing and more is held at the end of May.
In the long drawn out battle with the virus, the distilleries have again taken the party online– it’s time for The 2nd Virtual Fèis Ìle.
Festival week (Saturday-Saturday: a long week) is usually very simple: there are nine distilleries on Islay, and each gets a day of celebration – newcomers Kilchoman and Ardnahoe share the Wednesday.
Every year, Douglas Laing releases a new Big Peat whisky for the Fèis Ìle festival and the tradition was continued in 2020 with the new Big Peat 8 Years Old A846.
The A846 is a “legendary” road that links whisky fans to distilleries across the Scottish island of Islay before steering up through Jura.
The Big Peat 8 Years Old A846 is aged for eight years and bottled at 46% ABV.
In 1878, a polemical piece of writing called Truths about Whisky, was commissioned and published by the four most influential Irish distilling houses, Messrs John Jameson & Sons, William Jameson & Co, John Power & Son, and George Roe & Co, all based in Dublin.
George Roe’s establishment – had an annual capacity of some nine million litres. Even today, that would place it among the most productive handful of Scotland’s malt distilleries.
In total, 23 Irish distilleries were operational during 1868, ranging geographically from Bushmills on the north Antrim coast via Belfast and Londonderry to Cork in the south, Dublin in the east, and Limerick and Galway in the west.
Irish independence in 1922 hurt Irish whisky exports badly. Following independence, Irish distillers lost access to markets in the British Empire.
Before Prohibition, Irish whiskey remained the best-selling imported whiskey by the United States. Prohibition overturned Irish whiskey’s century long dominance of the American whiskey market in favour of the Scots.
Canada went through a similar experience with Prohibition as the U.S. The Dominion Alliance, an umbrella organisation of Canadian temperance groups, advocated for provincial wide bans on the consumption of alcohol.
During World War I many provinces banned the manufacture of “intoxicating” beverages as part of the war effort and then extended the ban following the end of the war.
Prohibition decimated the Irish whiskey industry. Many distilleries closed.
The period marked the beginning of an industry wide consolidation that would continue until the 1970s, a period that is sometimes referred to as the lost century of Irish whiskey.
The Chivas 100 Malts bottling: One hundred of Scotland's finest malts were vatted together to create the Chivas Century of Malts. It was released in 1995 and contains some of the rarest malts like Craigduff, Glenisla peated Glen Keith. A little accompanying booklet by Jim Murray describes all of the 100 distilleries in brief.
The 100 distilleries are Aberfeldy, Aberlour, Allt a `Bhainne, Ardbeg, Auchentoshan, Auchroisk, Aultmore, Balblair, Balmenach, Balvenie, Banff, Ben Nevis, Benriach, Benrinnes, Benromach, Blair Athol, Bowmore, (Royal) Brackla, Braeval, Brechin, Bunnahabhain, Caol Ila, Caperdonich, Clynelish, Convalmore, Cragganmore, Craigduff, Craigellechie, Dailuaine, Dallas Dhu, Dalmore, Dalwhinnie, Deanston, Dufftown, Fettercairn, Glen Albyn, Glenallachie, Glenburgie, Glencadam, Glen Craig, Glen Elgin, Glen Esk, Glenfarcles, Glenfiddich, Glengarioch, Glenglassaugh, Glen Grant, Glengoyne, Glenisla, Glen Keith, Glenkinchie, The Glenlivet, Glenlochy, Glenlossie, Glen Mhor, Glen Moray, Glenrothes, Glen Scotia, Glen Spey, Glentauchers, Glenturret, Glenugie, Glenury Royal, Highland Park, Imperial, Inchgower, Inchmurrin, Inverleven, Isle of Jura, Kinclaith, Knockando, Ladyburn, Lagavulin, Laphroaig, Ledaig, Linkwood, Littlemill, Longmorn, Macallan, Macduff, Mannochmore, Miltonduff, Mortloch, Mosstowie, Ord, Pittyvaich, Pulteney, Rhosdhu, Scapa, Speyburn, Springbank, Strathisla, Strathmill, Tamdhu, Tamnavulin, Teaninich, Tomatin, Tomintoul, Tormore and Tullibardine.
Glenfiddich, arguably the first single malt to be sold in its own right, was also the first to be sold in airport retail shops.
July 27th is National Scotch Day.
Babute distillery is one of many lost distilleries in Argyll that was operational briefly in late 18th century.
Gallowhill Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky Distillery is a here-and-gone Paisley distillery, open from 1798 to 1799.
It was run by a partnership of James MacFarlane and Elizabeth Harvie, of the Harvies who operated Dundashill and Yoker distilleries in Glasgow.
The distillery sat in the Gallowhill area of Paisley, north of the town centre on Brewster Avenue, today part of a large housing estate not far from the M8 motorway and Glasgow Airport.
220 years ago, the area would have been very largely rural. Back then, a burn, now long culverted and vanished, probably flowed from Gallowhill down to the River White Cart.
Haig Whisky is the oldest of all Scotch whiskies and may even be the oldest whisky in the world.
Haig Gold Label, the flagship blend of John Haig & Co. was not just Britain’s most popular whisky, it was the first spirit to smash the million case barrier.
It dates back to the twilight years of the 19th century, and before long the packaging had settled on a dumpy, dark brown bottle with a plain white label and a string of medals at the bottom.
By 1939, Haig was Britain’s best-selling Scotch.
Alongside its deluxe Dimple expression, it was especially popular in Britain. By the millennium its UK sales, together with Dimple Haig, had crashed to just 7,500 cases.
The recipe includes Lowland malts like Glenkinchie with a heavy reliance on Cameronbridge grain.
‘D’ye ken John Haig?’ asked the early adverts, and the slogan was emblazoned on the mainsail of a yacht that would sail up and down the south coast of England to stoke up demand.
This gave way to the long-running ‘Don’t be vague, ask for Haig’ slogan.
John Haig set up the Kilbagie distillery in the 18th century, although his family were noted distillers some time before that.
His great-great-grandfather was busted in 1655 for distilling on the Sabbath.
His grandson (also called John) founded the Cameronbridge grain distillery in 1824.
Noted members of the Haig clan include WWI Field Marshal Douglas Haig, who was so magnificently lampooned by Stephen Fry in Blackadder Goes Forth.
Kelso Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky Distillery was a Borders distillery at Kelso in Roxburghshire that distilled from 1825-47.
Precisely locating Kelso distillery is difficult. One source places it at Rosebank – a mansion and former estate on the north bank of the Tweed on the outskirts of town where now a bridge on the main A698 road crosses the river.
Old maps show no buildings at Rosebank that might be, or might have been, the distillery.
Some way upriver, opposite an island called Kelso Anna, there is a pend with steps down towards the Tweed called Distillery Lane. It leads down to Chalkheugh Terrace and seems the more likely location.
Kelso distillery was opened and licensed to John Mason in 1825.
In 1830 it became a partnership of Mason & Nichol, which lasted until 1833 when John Mason became a sole trader again. Kelso continued under him until 1837 when he was sequestrated.
Of all the old blends, Mackie’s Ancient Scotch could be one of the most precious for its link to the mythical Malt Mill distillery.
Sir Peter Mackie, famously described as ‘one-third genius, one-third megalomaniac and one-third eccentric,’ gave his name to this precious blend.
He owned the Islay distillery of Lagavulin, and was agent for its neighbour, Laphroaig.
Losing the contract for Laphroaig after a bitter dispute, he built a replica distillery in the grounds of Lagavulin and called it Malt Mill. It was designed to make precisely the same style of whisky as Laphroaig – a feat it never really achieved.
The whisky produced at Malt Mill disappeared entirely into Mackie’s blends, particularly White Horse. Or did it?
The distillery is named on bottles of Mackie’s Ancient Scotch, although there is no mention of it being a ‘blend’ or ‘blended’… could it contain single malt from Malt Mill?
Little is known of Mackie’s blend that occasionally surfaces on auction websites, although there were two versions of the whisky.
In the UK there was Mackie’s Ancient Scotch, bottles of which do tantalisingly mention Malt Mill beneath the brand owner, White Horse Distillers Ltd.
The bottling for the US market, called Mackie’s Ancient Brand, does not.
Assuming they are the same whisky, it must date from some time between 1908 when Malt Mill was fired into life, and 1962 when it closed for good.
Whisky writer Serge Valentin has described Mackie’s Ancient Brand as ‘the peatiest blend I have ever tried,’ and speculated that ‘there was quite possibly more than 50% Malt Mill’ in the blend.
Auchmedden distillery (also spelled Auch Madden, Auch Medden and Auchmeddin), an Aberdeenshire distillery, was based on a farm now called Mains of Auchmedden, west of Aberdour Bay, above the picturesque harbour village of Pennan and in the shadow of the ruined Auchmedden castle. The property belonged to the Baird family from 1568, but it was acquired by the Earls of Aberdeen, Gordons, in the mid 18th century.
Two events, the Phylloxera epidemic at the end of the nineteenth century and the imposition of Prohibition in the United States in the early twentieth century, proved pivotal in the growth of the Scotch whisky industry, and led to its ascendency and its current dominance of the spirits market.
In France, production and quality wine were at a peak by the mid-1800s when the first of three tragedies that would cripple the wine industry, and its related brandy industry, struck. The combined effect proved devastating.
The first blow was Odium—specifically uncinula necator—a fungus that causes powdery mildew on grapes. Originating in North America, certain varieties of European wine grapes proved to be particularly susceptible to it. The disease was crippling, but not devastating, it would significantly reduce wine production. This mildew was brought under control in less than a decade.
Just as vintners breathed a sigh of relief the second and even more crippling North American invader—the Phylloxera epidemic—hit them. Phylloxera was caused by a tiny insect, an aphid, sometimes referred to as the grape louse, which attacked the roots of the domesticated, Vitis vinifera, grapevines in Europe.
Native to North America, Phylloxera had not been a problem to European wine makers, notwithstanding the fact that samples of American grape varieties had been exported to Europe for centuries. The advent of steamships completely transformed the potential threat. With fast steamships cutting transatlantic travel to two weeks, insect pests could now survive a transatlantic voyage.
Beginning in 1863, in the French province of Languedoc, French vintners began noticing that a mysterious blight was killing their vines. It was not until 1868 that the grape Phylloxera aphid was discovered as the source of the epidemic, and it was not until 1870 that the solution was discovered.
In that 15-year period, some 40 percent of France’s vineyards were destroyed and the industry was set back for decades. There was worse to come. “Downy” mildew, the third tragedy to hit the European wine industry, came while the French were still looking for a cure for Phylloxera.
Downy mildew was a parasitic fungus that attacked the leaves of grape plants, eventually destroying the leaf tissue of the infected plant. This third plague was remedied at amazing speed, but the damage done by three consecutive blights was catastrophic. In roughly 30 years, wine production in France fell three quarters, and 75 to 85 percent of Europe’s vineyards were obliterated.
It took the French wine and brandy industry almost thirty years to recover. During that period, French Cognac production virtually ceased. Scotch whisky was on its upward incline.
Auchmedden distillery was operated by William Grant – one of countless William Grants in the history of distilling – from 1826-33.
Cabrach Distillery was a farm distillery in the Cabrach, Aberdeenshire, one of few legally sanctioned sites in the area. In the 1800's, the Cabrach was notorious for its illicit distilling of whisky and its ability to evade customs and excise raids due to its inaccessible and inhospitable lands. Some claim the Cabrach as one of the birthplaces of Scottish malt whisky.
Taking its name from the region, Cabrach distillery stood at Haddoch farm, about half a mile north of Upper Cabrach village. The Cabrach Trust was set up to enable the regeneration of this remote upland area. Located in rural Moray, in Northeast Scotland, the Cabrach, is defined as one of the 30 most remote regions in Scotland. A new distillery is planned for this site.
The Cabrach Trust plans to convert the steading buildings at Inverharroch Farm into a historic distillery and heritage centre which will showcase the rich culture and heritage of this haunting and mysterious landscape.
Ardbeg, established in 1815, has led an on and off existence for over 180 years since.
It was not until the brand was purchased by The Glenmorangie Company in 1997 that the Distillery was saved from extinction.
The legacy of the whisky was safeguarded in 2000 by the formation of the Ardbeg Committee, made up of thousands of Ardbeg followers worldwide who are keen to ensure that “the doors of Ardbeg never close again”.
Today there are more than 100,000 members of the Ardbeg Committee in over 130 countries.
Ardbeg is the world’s most highly awarded smoky single malt whisky. Since 2008, Ardbeg has won more than 50 gold and double gold medals in key whisky competitions.
In 1853, when Commodore Matthew Perry sailed his big black ships to Edo harbor, forcing the reluctant samurai rulers to open Japan to trade, he brought with him a few barrels of whisky to keep himself and his crew warm on the long voyage across the Pacific.
He also presented the Emperor a 110-gallon barrel of his finest whisky.
Circa 1875, the Japanese began importing whisky, and local brewers also started making their own versions. This early “whisky” was actually just alcohol with a similar colour to whisky.
The problem today has assumed huge proportions. A large amount of the liquor isn’t actually made in Japan. Some of it isn’t whisky at all.
Unlike most whisky-producing countries, Japan has few rules about what constitutes whisky, let alone what makes it Japanese. Companies can buy spirits in bulk from abroad, bottle and label it “Japanese whisky,” and ship it back out.
Imported by the metal barrel, Scotch or Canadian whisky is watered down, mixed with ethanol and sold as Japanese whisky.
The first modern Japanese whisky distilleries, including Yamazaki, didn’t open until the 1920s.
While they were modeled on Scottish operations and often produced high-quality spirits, they did little to change the overall character of Japanese whisky, which, following World War II, was aimed at everyday salary-men looking for a quick drink after work.
The Japanese government introduced formal definitions for domestic whisky in 1989, but by then the industry was dominated by a few big distilling companies that wanted to keep the rules loose.
After 1989, for example, whisky sold domestically had to contain at least 10% aged malt whisky; the rest could be unaged alcohol, typically made from imported molasses.
Interest in Japanese whisky began to pick up in the early 2000s, snowballing through the next 15 years as the industry’s premium brands, like Hibiki and Yamazaki, racked up global critical acclaim.
Analysts point to fast-growing imports of Scotch and Canadian whisky into Japan in recent years, even as the retail sales of those whiskies remain flat — implying that most of the imported spirit is being bought by distilleries and relabelled as Japanese.
The Japan Spirits & Liqueurs Makers Association announced a new set of industry-wide regulations on 16 February 2021, effective 01 Apr 2021. However, whisky brands have until 31st March 2024 to adhere to them.
The only raw ingredients allowed for use in production are malted grains, other cereal grains, and water extracted in Japan. Malted grains must always be used. Fermentation, distillation, and saccharification must take place in a distillery located in Japan, with the alcohol volume of the distillate not allowed to go above 95% in strength.
Wood casks with a maximum capacity of 700 litres must be used for the maturation of the distilled product and have to be matured in Japan for a minimum of 3 years. Bottling must take place in Japan, and the whisky has to have a minimum ABV of 40%.
Plain caramel colouring (also known as E150a) can be added; this is a common practice in whisky around the world.
Scotch Whisky exports to the US were valued at £1.07bn in 2019 – the industry’s first billion pound market.
In the International Whisky Competition 2021, highlighting the best whiskies for 2021, Scotland has – unsurprisingly – managed to lock out the Top 3 spots with the Ardbeg Uigeadail officially crowned the King of the Casks, Glenmorangie Vintage 1997 in second place (95.1 points), followed by Dewar’s Double Double 32 YO in third (95 points).
Taiwan has been staking their claim, placing fourth with the Kavalan Artist Series: Paul Chiang Peated Malt Single Cask Strength Single Malt Whisky (94.6 points), and placing in three other spots within the Top 15.
Best blended whisky (all categories, all countries), all three top spots were bagged by Dewar. 1st Place: Dewar’s Double Double 32 Year Old; 2nd Place: Dewar’s Double Double 21 Year Old; and 3rd Place: Dewar’s Double Double 27 Year Old.
Illicit distillers and whisky smugglers played a constant battle of cat and mouse with excisemen, or gaugers. The canny Scots came up with a variety of creative ways of hiding their precious bounty, including transporting it in coffins!
Illicit stills were common all over Scotland. In Edinburgh their smoke was disguised by the thick sooty chimney smoke that characterised the era. One such distillery was discovered in the lower cellar of the Tron Kirk on the Royal Mile – not a very reputable sideline for a place of worship!
Robert Burns, Scotland’s Bard became an exciseman after falling on hard times in 1788. He took up the post of Excise Officer for Dumfries; in February 1792 he was promoted to the Dumfries Port Division, an appointment that carried a salary of £50 per annum. The pair of pistols which he carried for his personal protection can still be seen today in the National Museum of Scotland.
The continued flouting of the law prompted the Duke of Gordon, on whose land some of the illicit whisky was being produced- with his prior knowledge and tacit permission- to propose in the House of Lords that the Government should make it profitable to produce whisky legally.
In 1823 the Excise Act was passed, which authorised the distilling of whisky in return for a licence fee of £10, and a set payment per gallon of proof spirit.
Smuggling disappeared almost completely over the next decade, paving the way for the Scottish whisky industry we know today.
It’s worth noting that many present day distilleries stand on sites used by the smugglers over two centuries ago – a modern day continuation of a by-gone practice.
In 1831 Aeneas Coffey invented the Patent Still which enabled a continuous process of distillation to take place, leading to the production of grain whisky, a less intense spirit than the previous malt whisky.
This invention was first exploited by Edinburgh distillers Andrew Usher & Co who, in 1860, blended malt and grain whisky together for the first time to produce a lighter flavoured whisky - extending the appeal of Scotch Whisky to a wider market.
In the 1880s the vineyards of France were devastated by the Phylloxera beetle, which wiped out the crops for wine and brandy production. Their disaster was the Scots fortune however - by the time the French industry recovered, Scottish whisky had taken the place of brandy as the preferred spirit.
Since then, Scottish whisky, especially blended whisky, has gone from strength to strength. The tipple is enjoyed worldwide, supports tens of thousands of jobs in Scotland and plays an important part in the Scottish tourism sector.
With its proximity to the shore, Leith was Edinburgh city's whisky district. Having been a centre for the storage of wine and brandy in the 16th century, with access to as many as 100 bonded warehouses, in the early 1820’s Leith was granted one of only six licences issued to ports in Scotland allowing them to store whisky under bond.
The Phylloxera beetle, which had ravaged crops for wine and brandy in France in the 1880’s, meant that the warehouses of Leith that had previously housed this product, were now lying empty. Seeing a gap in the market, whisky makers quickly moved in.
The Vaults in Leith, home to the Scotch Malt Whisky Society, was originally a wine warehouse dating back to the 18th century.
Many of the whisky industry’s most famous brand names started out as licensed grocers who began to blend whisky in the 19th century.
One such was George Ballantine, who opened his first shop in the bustling trade district of Cowgate, which is situated under South Bridge.
Ballantine’s reputation soon grew, as did his success. He soon moved to smarter premises in nearby Candlemaker Row, then later to a prestigious location just off fashionable Princes Street.
Today, Ballantine’s is the second biggest selling Scotch whisky worldwide.
Today there are the still the remains of long-gone distilleries across Edinburgh, with the buildings taking on a new lease of life.
The Caledonian Distillery, Easter Dalry Wynd. Situated close to Haymarket Station, The Caledonian Distillery was built in 1855. The distillery closed its doors in 1988 with much of it being renovated and transformed into housing. Today, its 300ft chimney stack remains as a reminder of the building’s history.
Edinburgh distillery stands in Sciennes in the city of Edinburgh. In 1849, Alexander Pearson remodelled a brewery that was built in 1430 and established this distillery. The distiilery was called West Sciennes distillery in those days.
The owner changed several times. Also the name changed from Newington (1851-56) to Glen Sciennes (1856-59). After being taken over by Andrew Usher & Co. in 1859, it was renamed Edinburgh Distillery. It closed in 1925 and is thought to be the last distillery in Edinburgh to have produced single malt.
Dean Distillery, Dean Village. Smaller than the city’s other distilleries, Dean Distillery opened in 1881 and was housed in a converted flour mill on the Water of Leith. Closed in 1922, part of the building remains today and is used as offices.
Brothers John and Andrew Usher were born to the whisky trade. Their father, Andrew Usher Sr, had started out as a spirits dealer in Edinburgh in 1813 and the two brothers became partners in the family business, buying the afore-mentioned Glen Sciennes Distillery in 1859.
During the 1860s, the brothers began promoting new whisky brands for the flourishing UK market. Pioneers of creating blended whisky, they were also among the first to recognise the enormous opportunities for exporting whisky around the world.
The brothers left quite a legacy in Edinburgh – one that you can still smell on the city’s streets.
Andrew Usher never saw the hall that took his name, dying in 1898, 16 years before his dream was realised. The Usher Hall was opened by his widow in 1914 and remains one of the most impressive venues in the city. Despite being built upon the proceeds of Scotch whisky, the hall did not have a bar until the 1980’s!
Holyrood Distillery: Edinburgh’s first single malt distillery for almost 100 years is set within a 180-year-old building next to Holyrood Park and within easy walking distance of the city centre, Holyrood Distillery opened its doors to the public for the first time in July 2019.
Glenkinchie Distillery, situated just 15 miles from Edinburgh in the rolling farmland of East Lothian, houses a museum about malt whisky production, an illicit still, a large scale model of a distillery and various other whisky-related displays to grab your attention.
When prohibition ended and Americans were once again able to quench their thirst for whiskey, Irish distillers lacked the stocks to meet this new, now legal, demand. The Scot’s had plenty of whisky, and they leveraged their stocks and their reputation for quality into a dominant position in the American whiskey market at the expense of the Irish distillers.Daftmill is one of the very few truly self-sufficient distillery in Scotland.
At the end of the 19th century, Dailuaine was the largest single malt distillery in Speyside and also one of the most innovative in terms of design.
A small percentage of their farm crop (around 100 tons) is diverted for their own use. The process water comes from their own artesian well, and the draff produced after mashing is then fed to their prize beef herd.
Only 20,000 litres are produced during two x three-month seasons, one starting after the end of the busy spring period on the farm and stopping before harvest, the other during the fallow winter period between November and February.
These sixth-generation farmers reckon that they are only the third family to have farmed Daftmill in 1,000 years of existence.
It was only in 2003 that the idea of whisky making began to form in the minds of the owners.
It is the first member of the now burgeoning small-scale distilling movement in Scotland.
None of the maturing stock has yet been released, though samples from casks show that it is mature, balanced with a gentle herbal note, and very much ready for sale. Rarely seen as a single malt bottling (the occasional Flora & Fauna from owner Diageo, (sporadic independent offerings), Dailuaine is one of the many hard-working distilleries which quietly provide fillings for blends.
It produces a heavy ‘meaty’ make given its long fermentation, rapid distillation and the use of stainless steel in the condensers to cut down on copper interaction. That Flora & Fauna bottling (from ex-Sherry casks) shows this mix of richness and sweetness at its best.
A complete rebuild in 1884 saw the installation of Scotland’s first pagoda on a kiln whose pitch was deliberately steep to minimise the contact time between peat smoke and drying malt, one of the clearest indications of how the old ‘Strathspey’ style was changing.
In 1898, it merged with Talisker to form Dailuaine-Talisker Distilleries Ltd.
Dallas Dhu Distillery designed by Charles Doig is now little more than a museum.
Dallas Dhu Speyside single malt Scotch whisky is rarely seen, but when it does emerge from the shadows it shows a sweet fruited edge, some honey, oiliness and a wisp of peat smoke.
Banff is the most onomatopoeic Scotch distillery and among the least lucky!
On the night of 16 August 1941, Banff distillery was strafed and bombed by the Luftwaffe. A warehouse exploded, sending casks flying into the air and a river of whisky flooding out over the fields and into the river. There was considerable devastation and tales of drunken cows that were incapable of being milked the next day.
Clynelish’s is one of a number of ‘Clearance’ distilleries (Talisker is another example) which appeared in the earlier part of the 19th century. Some landowners forcibly moved tenant farmers from their ancestral lands. The most brutal of these perpetrators were The Duchess and Duke of Sutherland. The Duke established a distillery which he called Clynelish. All were staffed by former farmers who were paid in coin which could only be redeemed at the company’s shops – whose profits went to the Duke. The distillery built a reputation only in 1896 when blenders Ainslie & Heilbron bought it in partnership with John Risk, who was to become the outright owner in 1912. By the end of the century it had become the most highly-priced single malt.
This Act, when published, was limited to distillers only.
It took a further three years till grocers could carry out such blending on premises and sale under their own label legally, under an Extension to the French Treaty Act 1863.
In these three years, many other grocers got into the business full time—John Walker, George Ballantine, Peter Thomson of Beneagles, William Teacher and the Berry brothers are good examples. Matthew Gloag III of the Famous Grouse followed later.
The Chivas Brothers company came into being only in 1857, when John Chivas joined his elder brother James in his grocery, wine shop and luxury goods emporium in Aberdeen.
The Forbes-Mackenzie Act permitting vatting of whiskies when in a bonded warehouse was passed in 1853. A larger variety of blended malts were now available to vendors to sell.
In 1915, when WW I was on, the whisky industry came under governmental pressure to help defray finances. David Lloyd George, the teetotaler Chancellor of the Exchequer, attempted to double the duty on spirits. He backed down after the whisky industry agreed to release its wares only after a minimum of three years’ maturation.
In those days, most whisky was bottled at between 15 and 22 degrees under UK proof as it was then known (48.6-44.6% abv in today’s terms).
In 1915, the Government Control Board permitted whisky to be sold at 35 degrees under proof (37.2% abv).
The same year, the Board tried to further reduce the strength of their spirit sold in military bases and urban areas to 50 degrees under proof (28.6% abv). The whisky industry protested and reached a compromise which standardised the strength of whisky everywhere in the UK at 42.9% abv (25 degrees under proof).
On 01 February 1917, the Government, with Lloyd George as Prime Minister, ruled that whisky had to be sold at no more than 30 degrees under proof (40% abv).
The aromatic complexity of a whisky is markedly different between 40% and 43%.
Sanity was restored by PM Ramsay MacDonald in 1929, who allowed registered Scotch Whisky to be sold at any strength up to cask strength, usually 63-65%, with increased duty for higher strength expressions.
The strength of whisky everywhere in the UK was standardised at 42.8% abv. Distillers had the option to use 40% abv if so desired.
Ballantine’s is comprised of some 50 single malts – mostly from Miltonduff and Glenburgie – and four grain whiskies.
The brand’s flagship blend – Ballantine’s Finest – was launched in 1910. Interestingly, the flagship brands of both Johnnie Walker & and Chivas Regal, viz., Johnnie Walker Black Label & Chivas Regal 25 YO were launched in 1909.
The business was sold to Barclay and McKinlay in 1919, who retained the Ballantine’s brand name in favour of Talisker.
In 1935, the group was sold to Canadian distiller Hiram Walker-Gooderham & Worts.
Hiram Walker began purchasing several distilleries, including Miltonduff and Glenburgie – both in 1936, and built the mammoth Dumbarton complex, which housed the largest grain distillery in Europe at that time.
In 2002, the Dumbarton plant was closed down and production shifted to Strathclyde grain distillery, although a large bonded warehouse complex and bottling plant still exist in Dumbarton.
The core portfolio consists of Finest, Limited, 12, 17, 21, 30 and 40-year-olds, while a lime-flavoured extension, Ballantine’s Brasil, was launched in 2013.
After a successful trial at Inverleven, the malt whisky distillery within the firm’s Dumbarton distillery complex in Dumbarton, it was decided to install a Lomond wash and spirit still at Glenburgie in Moray in 1958.
Christened Glencraig, its newmake spirit was distinct from Glenburgie’s, and gave Hiram Walker another malt for its blends without having to invest in a whole new distillery.
Glencraig was produced throughout the 1960s and ‘70s at Glenburgie on Speyside as a blending malt on a pair of Lomond stills.
While independent bottlings of Glencraig occasionally appear, it was never intended as a single malt in its brief life.
The Lomond stills were abandoned at Glenburgie in 1981.
The real Glen Isla is one of the famous Angus glens than runs north to the ski resort of Glenshee. On the other hand, the eponymous malt whisky was a short-lived experiment to produce a smoky Speyside malt at Glen Keith – the Speyside distillery Seagram built next to its Stathisla distillery in Keith in the late 1950s.
Glen Keith was experimental from the start, testing out triple distillation and gas-fired direct heating for its stills.
Among very rare bottlings of Glenisla, hardly any peat was found in a 1977 release from Signatory.
This was because Glenisla was peated in a very peculiar way. Under Seagram, Chivas Brothers had been sending 45-gallon drums of peated water from Stornaway to Glen Keith, where it was run through an angled condenser to concentrate the phenols. Apparently it was added 10 gallons at a time to the wash charge and its impact on the whisky must have been considerably less than using well-peated malt in the traditional way.
Glenisla was only produced in the 1970s, and then only for a couple of years.
The whisky was blended away, most notably in Chivas’ Century of Malts (a vatting of 100 different malt whiskies) in the 1990s.
Mosstowie was one of a handful of short-lived malt whiskies produced on Lomond stills within another distillery – in this case Miltonduff, near Elgin.
Lomond stills, compared to traditional pot stills, were a lot more versatile – you could adjust the position of the lyne arm and the number of rectifying plates in the neck to vary the amount of reflux and thus heaviness of the spirit.
It was deemed perfect for the company’s flagship blend – Ballantine’s Finest, and so Lomond stills were installed at Hiram Walker’s Inverleven, Glenburgie, Scapa and Miltonduff distilleries.
The whisky produced using Miltonduff’s Lomond stills was named Mosstowie, and while the majority was used for the Ballantine’s blend, there have been occasional independent bottlings as a single malt.
Seagram’s 100 Piper’s blend was once a popular brand in the UK, and claimed to be the fourth most popular Scotch in Scotland in 1988. Four years later it was decided to co-opt a famous Scottish regiment into the brand and rechristen it the ‘100 Pipers of the Black Watch,’ just in the UK.
There was just one piper on the label, and in due course the brand became simply The Black Watch blend.
The Small Stills Act of 1816 abolished the distinction between the industries in the Highlands and the Lowlands. In addition the Act legalised stills holding 48 gallons and above, as well as a weaker wash. This Act, allowed the smaller producers to operate legally and increase the number of the legal distilleries from 36 in 1816 to 125 three years later.
The Excise Act of 1823 which gave a lot of incentives like tax-free warehousing and free export, multiplied the legal distilleries and reduced the illegal trade. By the end of 1825, the licensed distilleries under the new Act were doubled from 111 to 263.
The first license under the new law was obtained by Captain George Smith, the founder of The Glenlivet Distillery.
During Prohibition (1920–33), Bill McCoy fell on hard times and took to rum running on his schooner Henry L. Marshall. As he prospered, he bought a bigger schooner, the Arethusa.
He is credited with inventing the "burlock" – a package holding six bottles jacketed in straw, three on the bottom, then two, then one, the whole sewed tightly in burlap. It was compact and easy to handle and stow.
Bill McCoy pioneered a method of packing liquor(burlock) and could store up to 5,000 cases on the Arethusa. The expression “The Real McCoy” was used by fellow bootleggers to describe unadulterated spirits, particularly Scotch, because of the pride McCoy took in maintaining the quality of the name-brand liquors he transported.
Placing the schooner under British registry to avoid being US jurisdiction, Bill renamed the vessel Tomoka (after the river that runs through his hometown Holly Hill).
When the Coast Guard discovered McCoy, he established the system of anchoring large ships off the coast in international waters and selling liquor to smaller ships that transferred it to the shore. McCoy also smuggled liquor and spirits from the French islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon located south of Newfoundland.
On November 23, 1923, the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Seneca, had orders to capture Bill McCoy and the Tomoka, even if in international waters. When the Tomoka was boarded under cover of the Seneca's guns, he immediately set sail and ran away with the boarding party – one lieutenant, one bos'n and thirteen seamen – and only upon their pleas did he heave to and put them back on the Seneca. He surrendered after the Seneca had fired four-inch shells at him.
The Chivas Brothers company came into being only in 1857, when John Chivas joined his elder brother James in his grocery, wine shop and luxury goods emporium in Aberdeen.
Mysteries surround Loch Ardnahoe: no one is quite sure how deep it is, while others say there’s a ghost of a charging white steed that rises out of the Loch on a full moon.
Ardnahoe is the 9th Islay distillery.
Ardnahoe – which means “Height of the Hollow” in Scottish Gaelic and gives Ardnahoe Distillery its name, is situated on the North-East coast of Islay, equidistant between Caol Ila and Bunnahabhain Distilleries.
Aber Falls Distillery (Aberfall Distyllfa Whisgi)in Abergwyngregyn, Wales, launched its first 100% Welsh single malt whisky on 17 May 2021.
Their copper stills are appropriately named Golchi, meaning wash in English and Gwirod, meaning spirit.
Douglas Laing & Co, the family firm behind the “Remarkable Regional Malts” Scotch Whisky range, unleashed Timorous Beastie “Meet the Beast”, a limited edition of the sleekit dram to amplify the flavour experience of their Highland Malt brand end May 2021.
Offered at a natural cask strength of 54.9% and matured exclusively in ex-American Bourbon barrels, the spirit is said to be a “massive amplification” of the original.
Douglas Laing’s Remarkable Regional Malts, the Ultimate Distillation of Scotland’s Malt Whisky Regions, encompasses The Epicurean Lowland Malt Scotch Whisky, Timorous Beastie (Highlands), Scallywag (Speyside), The Gauldrons (Campbeltown), Rock Island (Islands) and Big Peat (Islay). Beyond its Blended Malts expertise, the award-winning Douglas Laing portfolio also includes Provenance, Premier Barrel, Old Particular, Xtra Old Particular and XOP Black, collectively known as the firm’s “Exceptional Single Casks”.
In 2019, Laphroaig released a new Scotch whisky, The Ian Hunter Story Book One: Unique Character. It was presented in a novel manner, in the form of a heavy tome that, after a few pages, revealed a neat slot with a bottle holding liquid 30 years old nestled therein.
It was also the first chapter of a series of rare and collectable aged whiskies that honour the legacy of Ian Hunter. He was the last of the Johnston family to own and manage the Laphroaig distillery, between 1908 and 1944.
15 such books are planned. Each release is to contain an aged Laphroaig, set into a crafted book that would document a part of Ian’s legacy. Every year, a new chapter would be told, uncovering the history behind Laphroaig and the characters who created it.
Indian Amrut Fusion is not the only fusion whisky. The Glover Fusion Whisky Ltd. was originally formed as a small enterprise- TBG & Co- with the aim of producing a Scotch whisky to raise awareness of entrepreneur Thomas Blake Glover’s role in shaping modern Japan and celebrate Scotland’s historical, economical, cultural and social links to Japan.
5 blended malts have been made with Scotch and Japanese single malts, two with India’s Amrut single malts and one each with Australia and Holland.
Although the profile of Caol Ila as a single malt has been enhanced in recent years, the main function of the distillery is still the production of malt whiskies for the Johnnie Walker blends. Among single malt whisky lovers, Caol Ila is known as a relatively clean peated whisky - but the whisky that is used for blends is actually UNPEATED.
Caol Ila is the largest distillery on Islay by far, producing roughly a quarter of all the malt whisky that is distilled on the isle of Islay. As such, Caol Ila's capacity dwarfs better known malt whisky brands like Longmorn, Glenfarclas and Laphroaig and Lagavulin.
The 'Classic Malts' range of Diageo used to contain only six different single malts (Cragganmore, Dalwinnie, Glenkinchie, Lagavulin, Oban & Talisker).
In 2005, Cardhu, Clynelish and Glen Elgin were added.
In 1830, the Irishman Aeneas Coffey, a former Inspector General of Excise, patented his improved column still. The efficiency of the technique and the smooth characteristics of the grain whisky have changed the drinking map of the world during the next centuries.
The magic formula which helped the whisky to conquer the British elite and the world in the following years was the blending of the rougher malt whiskies with the softer grain whiskies and prolonging the maturation process.
Johnnie Walker used captains of passenger ships as his sales agents.
In 1917, during World War I, malt whisky production was forced to shut down due to shortage in the supply of grains.
During the 1920s, the alcohol prohibition in the United States and the Great Depression led to decline of production and increase in illegal alcohol trading.
In 1877, The Distillers Company (DCL), a company which played an important role in the evolution of the whisky industry was formed by a group of Scottish column still distillers. DCL is now part of Diageo.
In 1898, Pattison, Elder & Co, a blending company which had penetrated the whisky market for almost a decade with aggressive marketing and financing, filed bankruptcy. This fact created financial problems to a lot of distilleries which used to be their suppliers and created a crash in the whisky industry.
Britain's involvement in World War II played a significant role in spreading the whisky in Europe, America and Asia.
In 1962, Grants decide to start selling the 8 Year Old Glenfiddich "straight malt" which was the pioneer for the rebranding of Single Malt Whisky.
In China, Scotch drinkers like to mix their scotch with green tea, in Japan with water and ice, in Spain and France with cola and in the UK, with a little bit of water.
In 1962, Grants decided to start selling the 8 Year Old Glenfiddich "straight malt" which was the pioneer for the re-branding of Single Malt Whisky.
A beer lover or enthusiast is called a cerevisaphile.
Collecting beer mats is called tegestology.
The oldest brewery in the United States is supposedly Yuengling in Pottsville, Pennsylvania - founded in 1829.
There are only 12 Master Blenders of whisky in the entire world.
Unopened, a bottle of scotch can last more than 100 years.
2020 should see 124 malt and 4 grain distilleries in operation.
An aged female soothsayer cursed the parsimonious laird of the Isle of Jura distillery, Archibald Campbell, on eviction and prophesized that the last of the Campbell family to finally depart from the island would have only one eye and all of his earthly belongings would be carried in a cart pulled by a lone white horse. In 1938, Charles Campbell fell on hard times. Blind in one eye as a result of a World War I injury, he was seen walking his white horse and all his possessions to the pier, leaving Jura for good.
Bruichladdich and Arran Bere Barley is an idiosyncratic barley variety that has survived in some of Scotland’s remotest outposts for up to 6,000 years, nearly became extinct 20 years ago, and is now undergoing a resurgence.
The distillation process, the key segment of whisky production was invented around four thousand years ago in the ancient civilizations of Babylon and Mesopotamia.
It’s a common misconception that single malt whisky is the product of one cask. In fact, it is the product of a single distillery and may actually come from several casks therein, a blend of malts of that specific distillery.
Efforts began as early as the 1960’s to eliminate the confusing fractions brought about by the pint, quart, and US/Imperial gallon measurements and by the late 1970’s efforts were underway to convert liquor bottle sizes to the metric system. They managed in both the UK and the US, thank goodness.
Eden Mill became Scotland's first combined brewery and distillery when they began the production of Scotch whisky and gin in 2014.
By 2010 only Tamdhu still used Saladin boxes for malting, in which a lot of malt can be produced in one batch since the malt layer can be up to 1 metre high. Tamdhu produced the malt for Macallan, Glenrothes and other distilleries in the corporate group.
Distilleries with their own maltings are: Balvenie, Bowmore, Glen Garioch, Glen Ord, Highland Park, Laphroaig, Speyburn, Kilchoman, Laphroaig, Benriach and Springbank.
The Athenaeum Hotel in London sells a whisky called “The Athenaeum Speyside Blended Malt Scotch Whisky”. The label mentions that the whisky also contains Highland whisky. This is indefensible, but their argument is that The Macallan is geographically as Speyside as you can get, but the distillery uses “Highland” on the label.
In America, “Whiskey” is the most common spelling, but well-known brands like Maker’s Mark or George Dickel use the “whisky” spelling. The official US regulations for distilled spirits use “whisky” throughout.
The last runnings of the distillation, called feints, are led back into the wash still.
- 1 Quarter cask = 33 us. gal. (125 Litres)
- 1 Barrel = 41.7 us. gal. (158 Litres)
- 1 ASB = American standard barrel = 52.8 us. gal. (200 Litres)
- 1 Hogshead = 66 us. gal. (250 Litres)
- 1 Butt = 132 us. gal. (500 Litres)
- Puncheons (or Pungeons) and pipes 158.5 – 184.9 us. gal.: (600 – 700 litres) are used only rarely.
- Ballechin Distillery between 1810 and 1927
- Blair Athol, originally Aldour
- Glenturret, originally Hosh
- Auchnagie
- Aberfeldy
- Deanston
- Edradour
Cragganmore means "large rock" in Gaelic.
The Glen Garioch 46YO is the oldest official bottle from the distillery.
The Clynelish distillery uses water piped down from Clynemilton Burn.
The primary single malts in Chivas Regal are Strathisla, Braeval and Allt-a-Bhainne. The Glenlivet 12 YO also features in the mix.
Aultmore is one of the many victims of the infamous Pattison crash.
The original distillery ran in tandem with the new distillery under the names of Clynelish A and Clynelish B.
James Buchanan formed his own whisky company in 1884 after five years with blender Charles Mackinlay & Co. His flagship whisky was The Buchanan Blend, a light, smooth unpeated expression designed specifically to appeal to the English palate.
The expression, which initially incorporated Dalwhinnie, Clynelish and Glendullan malts, was named the Buchanan Blend and became an instant hit in London.
It was picked up by the Members Bar at the House of Commons in London. Buchanan renamed the blend Buchanan’s House of Commons Finest Old Highland whisky, and presented it in a dark glass bottle with a striking white label.
Before long, drinkers began ordering ‘that Black & White whisky’, and in 1902 the name was officially changed again to Black and White.
The brand was exported across the world, and in 1907, it was being ordered by the emperor of Japan.
By 1909, it had become the most popular blend in England.
While under the auspices of the DCL during the 1920s, the Black & White terriers began featuring more heavily in the brand’s advertising, quickly becoming iconic ambassadors for Buchanan’s flagship blend.
In 2013 the brand was given a contemporary makeover, and the terriers made the move onto the bottle’s label for the first time.
It is the fastest rising standard Blended Scotch over the last decade.
Sotheby’s announced it will present “The Ultimate Whisky Collection” on September 27, 2019 in what it is calling “the most valuable collection of whisky ever to be sold at auction.”The collection is expected to fetch about £4 million.
Independent whisky bottler Douglas Laing & Co has moved into distilling with the acquisition of Perthshire-based single malt Scotch producer Strathearn Distillery.
Established in 1948, Douglas Laing’s Scotch whisky portfolio includes brands such as Xtra Old Particular (XOP), Old Particular, Timorous Beastie, Scallywag, Rock Oyster, Big Peat and The King of Scots.
William Grant & Sons have changed the appearance of its standard Glenfiddich range. Glenfiddich 12 and Glenfiddich 15 are the first that to be introduced in a new design. Glenfiddich 18 is to follow next year (2020).
Each Glenlivet gets its own colour.
Initially triple distilled, Talisker reverted to double distillation in 1928.
In 1960, a fire destroyed the stillhouse. The five stills lost in the fire were replaced by replicas still heated by coal in two years.
Talisker House & Pershal More
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The Glenlivet has often had a starring role on the silver screen. The whisky has appeared in films such as Anchorman, Grosse Pointe Blank, Birdcage and The Mummy.
Traditionally the majority of the spirit was aged in Oloroso casks, however since the recommencement of production in 2002 bourbon casks have been used, meaning that future releases will have a different flavour profile to the batches being released today.
Dalmore managed to generate lots of free publicity with hefty price tags on many of their older releases, but some of those bottles remained unsold and kept gathering dust on the shelves of luxury liquorists around the world.
Abbotshaugh distillery (1825-28), located in the grounds of an abbey, is one of 18 lost distilleries in the Falkirk area.
The Iona brand was created around 1905 and was immediately widely advertised in the UK national and local (West of Scotland) press.
James Ainslie & Co. was founded as a wine and spirit merchant in Leith, Edinburgh in 1868. A very successful company, it purchased the Clynelish distillery in 1896 and completely re-built it within two years.
The series concept was to introduce three differing styles of blended malt whisky that could be consumed before, during and after dinner. Anchor Bay with its light blend of Speyside malts, was aimed at the aperitif end of the spectrum.
Only Anchor Bay survives today.
Auchnagie blended malt is a considered recreation of the style of whisky thought to have been produced by the lost Perthshire distillery of the same name.
The blended malt is one of several homages to lost distilleries to be introduced by The Lost Distillery Company. With its citrus, black pepper and cereal notes, the expression is as close as we’ll get to tasting the real thing.
Auchnagie is available in three expressions as part of TLDC’s Classic, Archivist and Vintage series.
Auld Acrimony, a 12-year-old Highland blended malt, was produced during the late 19080s/ early 1990s by Grant and Webster Distillers exclusively for British supermarket chain, Safeway. Available only at auctions today.
Born on the island of Islay, blended malt Big Peat is a smoky, oily whisky, with sweetness from Caol Ila, the fruitiness of Bowmore, a medicinal quality from Ardbeg and an earthy tone from Port Ellen.
A medium-weight single malt, Aberlour’s character balances malt, fruit and a distinctive blackcurrant note. It is a whisky which gains in weight and toffee-like sweetness as it matures and has sufficient depth to be able to cope with Sherry cask maturation.
Aberlour’s cult following is for the small batch, 100% Sherry-matured, cask-strength variant A’Bunadh which has run since 2000.
Aberlour was one of the first distilleries to offer a ‘bottle your own’ whisky to visitors.
The first distillery in the village of Aberlour was established in 1825 by James Gordon and Peter Weir. Weir withdrew in 1826.
The distillery was leased in 1826 and ran until 1833, when the co-lessees James and John Grant left to build their own distillery, Glen Grant, in Rothes.
The current distillery was the brainchild of James Fleming who built it in 1879 using water from St. Drostan’s Well, named after an early Columban monk, which is situated on the site.
Like many Victorian distilleries, it burnt down in 1879 and had to be rebuilt. Robert Thorne bought the distillery in 1892.
It burnt down again in 1898 and had to be rebuilt.
Achenvoir was a lost Islay distillery that was open only briefly in the 1810s. No farms or crofts named Achenvoir are listed currently or historically on Islay, so the exact location of the distillery remains a mystery.
Achlatt is one of countless lost Perthshire distilleries, near Moulin, Pitlochry.
Ailsa Bay is a case study in how style is not dictated solely by geographical location.
Ailsa Bay is in the Lowlands, on the Clyde coast.
Its eight stills however produce a wide variety of styles of makes.
This flexibility is deliberate as the distillery was built to both replace ‘Balvenie-style’ malt for Grant’s blends and offer other flavour possibilities. Given this, not surprisingly, the stills are shaped the same as Balvenie’s.
Four different characters are made: estery, nutty, fruity and heavily peated.
During World War II, when the distillery was on short-term working, locals used to smuggle wash up the Aberlour burn and distil illicitly under the Linn Falls.
The distillery became part of Campbell Distillers in 1945, passing into the Pernod Ricard stable in 1974, the year after it had been expanded from two to four stills and wholly modernised internally.
Its ownership has long given it a strong following in France.
It is now part of Pernod’s whisky division, Chivas Brothers.
There is a long history of malt distilleries being built within grain plants: Inverleven at Dumbarton (1959-1991), Ben Wyvis at Invergordon (1965-1977), Glen Flager and Killyloch at Garnheath (1965-1985), and Ladyburn at Girvan (1966-1976).
All of them were built by blending firms and came into being at a time when an increase in production was deemed necessary. All then closed when a downturn in demand occurred.
A slightly different dynamic prompted William Grant & Sons in 2007 to build Ailsa Bay on the same Girvan site where Ladyburn had once stood. This time not only were the Grant’s blends (the Family Reserve range and Clan MacGregor), both growing, but so was demand for its two flagship malts Glenfiddich and Balvenie.
Pressure on the latter was the main reason for the construction of this eight still, 5m litres per annum capacity site. After eight years of production, Ailsa Bay's first official bottling as a single malt was a no-age-statement heavily peated whisky released in February 2016.
The expression unleashed the full flexibiility of Ailsa Bay's production set up, combining innovative techniques in the way of spirit cut points, vatting, maturation and even 'sweetness measurement'.
Ainslie's is the proprietary brand of what became Ainslie & Heilbron (Distillers) Ltd, an old DCL subsidiary.
Ainslie’s was bottled as an ‘Old Liqueur Whisky’ soon after Leith-based wine and spirit merchant James Ainslie & Co. bought Clynelish (the original one, also known as Brora) at the end of the 19th century.
Early bottlings were likely to have featured some Brora malt whisky, though exactly how much is uncertain.
The Ainslie’s brand has featured many blended expressions over the years, including King’s Legend, Royal Edinburgh Specially Selected De Luxe, plus a handful of regional single malt bottlings from unnamed distilleries.
The Exceptional series by Sutcliffe & Son, a subsidiary of US producer Craft Distillers, consists of three expressions: The Exceptional Blend, Grain and Malt, of which several editions have been released over the years.
The editions are designed to vary from batch to batch, with no two the same owing to the variety of whiskies and casks used.
Although each is bottled without an age statement, the constituent whiskies are listed on the back of each label.
The first release, which came in 2013, was The Exceptional Grain, followed by The Exceptional Malt in June 2015 and The Exceptional Blend in 2016.
A Vietnamese collector, Viet Nguyen Dinh Tuan, has been confirmed by Guinness World Records as the proud owner of the most valuable whisky collection.
He has amassed 535 old and rare Scotch whiskies in 20 years, which has been valued at a ‘hammer price’ of £10,770,635 (£13,032,468 adding 21% buyers premium if the collection were sold through a UK auctioneer such as Sotheby’s), by valuation firm Rare Whisky 101.
The collector’s hoard includes the 1926 Macallan Fine and Rare – the world’s most expensive bottle of whisky – which fetched £1,200,000 (£1,452,000 including buyer’s premium), in a sale at auction house Sotheby’s last month. Only 40 bottles of The Macallan’s 1926 were ever released. Viet owns three.
The collector also owns one of only 12 bottles of the oldest Bowmore ever released, which also happens to be both the most expensive Bowmore and the most expensive Islay malt in the world. A similar sold for £300,000 at auction.
In another case, a private 3,900 bottle whisky collection, thought to be the largest to be sold at auction with several bottles valued at over £1 million, will go under the hammer next year at Perthshire-based Whisky Auctioneer.
Called ‘The Perfect Collection’, the bottles were amassed by the late Richard Gooding, an American private whisky collector from Colorado, who spent over 20 years travelling around the world to source the spirits.
It is collectively estimated to achieve an auction price of between £7 and £8 million.
Until recently, the bottles were housed in Gooding’s ‘pub’ – a dedicated room in his family home.
The collection includes highly sought-after bottlings from The Macallan, Bowmore and Springbank, some of which are valued at over £1 million.
It is reported that the collection includes the largest selection of The Macallan ever to go to auction, including the 1926 Valerio Adami (estimated hammer price: £700,000 – £800,000) and 1926 Fine & Rare 60 Year Old bottlings (estimated hammer price: £1,000,000 – £1,200,000).
Other rare whiskies in the collection include bottlings from some now closed distilleries, including Old Orkney from Stromness Distillery and Dallas Dhu, some of which have never appeared at auction before.
Other highlights include Ardbeg 1967 Signatory Vintage 30-Year-Old / Dark Oloroso Butt #578 (estimated hammer price: £3,000 – £5,000); Bowmore 1964 Black Bowmore 29-Year-Old 1st Edition (estimated hammer price: £12,000 – £17,000); Bowmore 1967 Largiemeanoch 12-Year-Old (estimated hammer price: £10,000 – £15,000); Glenfiddich 1936 Peter J Russell (estimated hammer price: £3,000 – £5,000); Glenfiddich 1937 Rare Collection 64-Year-Old (estimated hammer price: £50,000 – £60,000); Glenfiddich Pure Malt circa 1950s (estimated hammer price: £3,000 – £4,000); Highland Park 1958 40-Year-Old 75cl / US Import (estimated hammer price: £3,000 – £5,000); Springbank 1919 50-Year-Old (estimated hammer price: £180,000 – £220,000); The Balvenie 1937 Pure Malt 50-Year-Old 75cl / Milroy’s of Soho (estimated hammer price: £18,000 – £23,000); and The Macallan 50-Year-Old Lalique Six Pillars Collection (estimated hammer price: £90,000 – £100,000).
Abhainn Dearg was The Isle of Lewis’ only legal distillery, in its capital Stornoway (and named after it), but only ran for two years in the 1850s. After that, Lewisians had to import their Scotch from the mainland, or maybe source it from illicit local operations.
In 2008, Marko Tayburn built a distillery at Abhainn Dearg [Red River] on the western coast of the island making this officially the most remote whisky-making site in Scotland.
He designed and built the stills himself, modelling them on an old illicit still he had discovered.
In December 2018 the distillery launched its first 10-year-old single malts – the oldest whisky to be produced by a legal distillery in the Outer Hebrides.
In 2010,he launched his first single malt, the 3 YO Spirit of Lewis.
It wasn’t until Matthew Gloag III inherited the business from William in 1896 that the company registered its first blended Scotch, the Brig o’ Perth.
A year later, The Famous Grouse was released at the same time as The Grouse Brand.
Originally, The Famous Grouse was priced lower than the Grouse Brand. In a little over 10 years, the reverse would be true thanks to the popularity of The Famous Grouse.
When US Prohibition came into force in January 1920, the company’s distribution to markets close to the United States such as Canada, Latin America and the West Indies suddenly shot up.
When William Gladstone passed a law allowing Scotch Whisky to be matured tax-free until ready for sale in 1860, Punch magazine celebrated with the cartoon of the Dancey Man.
The Loch Katrine Adelphi Distillery was built in 1826 by Charles and David Gray on the banks of the River Clyde just south of Victoria Bridge on the northern edge of the Gorbals.
In 1880, ownership of Adelphi changed to Messrs A Walker and Co, owners of two existing distilleries in Liverpool and Limerick. Walker and Co injected new capital and expand the works to include the making of grain spirit as well as malt. A new Coffey Still installed.
1971: Demolition of the Loch Katrine Adelphi Distillery.
1984: Glasgow Central Mosque erected on former site of Adelphi Distillery.
1994: Jamie Walker acquires copyright for Punch Magazine’s cartoon of William Gladstone and The Dancey Man is officially adopted as Adelphi’s mascot.
2014 : First spirit produced at Ardnamurchan Distillery. Ardnamurchan Distillery officially opened by HRH The Princess Royal on 25th July 2014.
2016: The first bottling is released, the Ardnamurchan 2016 AD. 2500 bottles available to the world and it was sold out overnight.
2017: Second bottling released, the Ardnamurchan 2017 AD. Again, there were 2500 bottles and was well received around the world.
If some shipments made their way into the States, then so be it.
Gordon & MacPhail announced the release of an 80-year-old Glenlivet in September 2021. This will be the oldest single malt whisky ever to be bottled: It will be part of the Generations Series.
On February 3, 1940, cask number 340 was placed in Gordon & MacPhail's warehouse by George Urquhart and his father John. On February 5th, 2020 it was decided that the moment of truth had come and this Glenlivet Single Malt Scotch Whisky would be bottled.
The yield of the cask will 250 decanters at 44.9 % ABV.
Such a unique whisky deserves a unique decanter with unique packaging. Gordon & MacPhail has asked internationally renowned architect and designer Sir David Adjaye OBE to design the decanter and an oak box for the Generations 80 Years.
The Generations 80 Years will be unveiled in September 2021.
Decanter number 1 will be auctioned by Sotheby’s in October. The proceeds will be donated to the Scottish charity Trees for Life, whose mission is to return the lost wild glory of the Caledonian forests.
The second batch Glenmorangie’s Cadboll Estate 15-year-old limited edition single estate whisky 43% ABV was released in June 2021.
Airdrie, also known as Tobermore, was a successful and relatively long-surviving distillery. Airdrie is listed under six owners over a 60-year lifespan from around the 1780s to 1852.
It is possible that some owners or operators may have changed the company name on one or more occasions.
Airdry was an elusive North Lanarkshire distillery, possibly the precursor to East Monkland distillery, which sat close to the Monkland Canal and River Calder. However, older maps show no distillery in that area.
Some grain whisky from the lost North of Scotland distillery was bottled under the name ‘Alloa’.
Although there was an Alloa distillery, this whisky actually came from the lost North of Scotland grain distillery in Tullibody, three miles west of the town. The whisky produced there was intended for blends but some 40-year-old casks from 1964 have been bottled by Hart Bros and the German independents Jack Weibers Whisky World and Alambic Classique.
Also known as the Grange distillery, it fell silent in 1851 and is buried under Diageo’s Carsebridge site in Alloa.
In 1958 George Christie set up the North of Scotland distillery just down the road on the site of the old Knox Forth Brewery to give blenders another source of grain whisky.
For a year it also produced a malt whisky called Strathmore from a pair of pot stills, but it seems Christie decided the future lay in grain whisky.
A few old casks evaded the blenders and were acquired after the millennium by a handful of independent bottlers, which released the whisky under the name Alloa. Other well-aged expressions have since been released by indie bottlers as North of Scotland grain whisky.
The North of Scotland distillery was eventually closed in 1980, with the silent site sold onto the DCL in 1982.
Hedonism Lowland Blended Grain Scotch Whisky’s creator John Glaser dreamed of creating a Scotch that showed off the spectrum of flavour grain whisky is capable of. As the spirit is naturally mellower than malt whisky, Glaser chose a variety of styles and levels of maturity to create layers of flavour and complexity, which journey through vanilla cream, toasted coconut and soft toffee.
Named after the Roland TR-808 Drum Machine – one of the first affordable and widely available drum machines launched in the early 1980s – 8O8 blended grain is aimed at an entirely non-traditional market sector: the young, club and cocktail set.
All Bacardi products carry an age statement and are caramel-free.
Chivas Regal signed a three-year sponsorship deal with the British Premier League football team Manchester United in August 2018.
As a follow up in October 2019, it has created a special Manchester United-themed 13 year old blended Scotch whisky in honour of former team manager Sir Alex Ferguson.
Partly matured in ex-rye casks, this expression has been created exclusively for the US where Manchester United is said to have over eight million fans.
Some grain whisky from the lost North of Scotland distillery in Tullibody north of Alloa township was bottled under the name ‘Alloa’.
The whisky produced there was intended for blends.
Some 40-year-old casks from 1964 have been bottled by Hart Bros and the German independents Jack Weibers Whisky World and Alambic Classique.
Way back in 1795 a certain Alexander Glen was running the Alloa distillery.
Also known as the Grange distillery, it fell silent in 1851 and is buried under Diageo’s Carsebridge site in Alloa.
In 1958 George Christie set up the North of Scotland distillery just down the road on the site of the old Knox Forth Brewery to give blenders another source of grain whisky.
For a year it also produced a malt whisky called Strathmore from a pair of pot stills, but it seems Christie decided the future lay in grain whisky.
A few old casks evaded the blenders and were acquired after the millennium by a handful of independent bottlers, which released the whisky under the name Alloa.
Other well-aged expressions have since been released by indie bottlers as North of Scotland grain whisky.
The North of Scotland distillery was eventually closed in 1980, with the silent site sold onto the DCL in 1982.
The warehouses were absorbed by the Cambus grain distillery.
AD Rattray is a family-run independent bottler and retailer, with plans to create its own distillery.
In the late 1800s, A Dewar Rattray was an agent for Stronachie distillery.
In 2004 Tim Morrison, formerly of Morrison Bowmore Distillers, revived the Dewar Rattray company first established by his ancestor Andrew Dewar Rattray, to bottle single cask, single malt whisky.
The firm also developed Stronachie, a single malt sourced from Benrrinnes distillery on Speyside, and intended to replicate whisky produced at the now long lost Stronachie distillery, located on the old Perthshire/Kinross-shire border.
Andrew Dewar Rattray set up in business in Glasgow during 1868, trading as an importer of French wines, Italian spirits and olive oil, as well as blending and retailing Scotch whisky.
Ultimately the firm was sold to the whisky broker William Walker, but was brought back into family ownership by Tim Morrison, who created the ‘new’ Stronachie in 2002.
Morrison also established the Cask Collection label for single cask bottlings, and in 2011 the peated blended malt Cask Islay was released, being transformed into a single malt two years later.
2012 saw the release of a five-year-old blend named Bank Note.
Another of Speyside’s workhorses, Allt-a-Bhainne was one of the first distilleries designed to be operated by one person.
All the equipment is contained in a single room with the mash tun at one end and four stills at the other.
Originally designed to produce a light, estery malt for blending requirements, in recent years it has also occasionally produced a heavily-peated variant.
Allt-a-Bhainne is only very occasionally seen as a single malt bottling.
Its modernist design singles Allt-a-Bhainne out as an oddity within Speyside.
It was built by Seagram in 1975 during a period of growing optimism in the Scotch industry when the Canadian firm (which at that time owned Chivas Regal) was increasing its production capacity.
It has had a chequered history with periods of being placed into mothballs (the most recent being between 2003 and 2005).
With global demand rising, owner Chivas Brothers has it in full production once more.
Altduanalt was a short-lived distillery in the village of Rhu, on the east shore of Gareloch.
Altduanalt was licensed in 1833 to Messrs Paul & Hunter but seems to have closed that same year.
The distillery at Rhu, then spelled Row, in Dunbartonshire is mysterious and hard to locate.
Ambassador, the ‘world’s lightest Scotch’ was a blended whisky with a large following in the US.
Ambassador is a discontinued export blend first created by Glasgow blender Taylor & Ferguson Ltd, which was a big success in the US but unknown elsewhere.
With Benriach, the name itself means ‘speckled mountain’.
Scotch whisky lost a decade of growth in 2020 to Covid and US tariffs.
Global exports of Scotch whisky fell by more than £1.1bn during 2020. The export figures are the lowest they have been in a decade, hit by the combined impact of Covid-19 and the 25% tariff in the United States.
The 25% tariff on Single Malt that the industry is forced to pay to the US is in large part a result of a continuing dispute between the EU, UK and US governments over subsidies granted to Airbus and Boeing.
The export value of Scotch whisky exports fell 23% by value to £3.8bn.
The number of 70cl bottles exported fell by 13% to the equivalent of 1.14bn.
The closure of hospitality and travel restrictions impacting airport retail globally saw export values fall in 70% of Scotch whisky’s global markets compared to 2019.
The impact of tariffs by the USA on imports of single malt Scotch whisky has caused the most significant losses.
The United States is Scotch whisky’s most valuable market, valued at over £1bn in 2019 when it accounted for a fifth of global exports.
Exports of Scotch whisky to the US fell by 32% to £729m, a loss of £340m compared to 2019.
The SWA celebrated with a silent song and dance when Trump lost the US Presidency and President Biden scrapped Trump’s cursed tariff early 2021.
Export volume of Scotch whisky in 2020 was the equivalent of 1.14bn 70cl bottles, down 12.6% compared with 2019.
Exports have fallen in 127 of 179 global markets.
Sales to the European Union saw sales figures dropping by 15%.
There are signs that as pandemic restrictions ease up, sales could see a potential quick rebound.
Sales figures from Pernod Ricard, which owns brands including Chivas Regal and Glenlivet, show that eastern European and Asian sales of Scotch have seen significant growth compared to the first half of 2020.
Over the years it was available as De Luxe, De Luxe 8-year-old, 12-year-old and Royal 12- and 25-year-old.
It is likely that the constituent malts included Scapa and Glen Scotia at some point due to the brand’s ownership.
It is not known what its make-up was and is very much an auction item now.
Taylor & Ferguson Ltd was incorporated as a blender in 1931 and its history is entwined with two distilling companies, one Scottish and the other Canadian.
The company’s major brand was Ambassador blended Scotch, and as blending company Bloch Brothers expanded its business after WWII, Taylor & Ferguson Ltd was absorbed.
Ambassador was then bottled for export either under the Bloch Brothers name, or Taylor & Ferguson’s.
In 1954 Bloch Brothers was acquired by Canadian group Hiram Walker & Sons after the Bloch brothers decided that distilling was not for them. A failed attempt to resurrect Glengyle distillery in Campbeltown had affected them and they were both getting on in life.
The tagline on the 1970s labels was ‘Scotch at its World’s Lightest’.
Anchor Bay is the last remaining whisky in Lombard Brands’ dinner-oriented Illustration Malts series.
A blend of Speyside malts bottled at 40% ABV, Anchor Bay is a light, finessed whisky with a fresh, vanilla nose. It’s designed as an aperitif dram owing to its light body and good balance.
It was introduced as part of owner Lombard Brands’ Illustration Malts series, and is currently available in Russia, Europe and the UK.
Lombard Brands is the Isle of Man-based spirit, wine merchant and bottler owned by the Lombard-Chibnall family.
While the Lombard-Chibnall family can trace its roots in alcoholic beverages back some 300 years, it wasn’t until the mid-1960s that Lombard Brands was founded by its current CEO, Margaret Lombard-Chibnall.
Originally a supplier of bulk whisky for blenders, Lombard moved into blending and bottling its own whiskies, the first of which was Lombard Gold Label, their flagship blend.
With a considerable expertise in laying down commissioned single malt reserves since the 1960s, Lombard drew heavily on its own stocks to create Gold Label.
Anchor Bay is the last remaining whisky in Lombard Brands’ dinner-oriented Illustration Malts series.
A blend of Speyside malts bottled at 40% abv, Anchor Bay is a light, finessed whisky and designed as an aperitif dram owing to its light body and good balance.
Anchor Bay was introduced in 2001 alongside Golden Harvest and Smoking Ember as part of the Illustration Malts series.
The series concept was to introduce three differing styles of malt whisky that could be consumed before, during and after dinner.
Unlike its two Illustration stablemates, which were discontinued in 2013, Anchor Bay was redeveloped and remains available as a solo artist.
Lombard Gold Label was the first Scotch whisky brand to be released by the Isle of Man-based blender and bottler Lombard Brands in the 1970s.
Described as ‘big and chewy’ with a ‘peaty aroma’, the 40% abv blended Scotch reflects Lombard’s desire to ‘recreate the pre-war image of whisky, and re-establish traditional whisky values’.
The economy blended Scotch whisky produced by Lombard Brands is the Golden Piper.
Although kitsch in design, Golden Piper is a relatively modern blended Scotch whisky produced as part of Lombard Brands’ core range.
The 43% abv, no-age-statement expression is bottled under Lombard’s Isle of Man retailer outlet, Whisky Shack, and exported to the US and Equador.
Its whisky components originate from the Highlands, and the blend is described as peppery, creamy, long and warm.
Golden Piper was first introduced in 2011 to the US market as an economy brand.
Whisky Shack launched the brand in the UK in April 2017.
Abhainn Dearg Distillery, an Island Single Malt Scotch Whisky, is the first legal distillery in the Outer Hebrides in 200 years.
The Isle of Lewis’ only legal distillery, in its capital Stornoway (and named after it), only ran for two years in the 1850s. After that, Lewisians had to import their Scotch from the mainland, or maybe source it from illicit local operations.
In 2008, Marko Tayburn built a distillery at Red River [Abhainn Dearg] on the western coast of the island making this officially the most remote whisky-making site in Scotland till displaced from that perch by the Isle of Barra distillery in 2020.
Tayburn designed and built the stills himself, modelling them on an old illicit still he had discovered.
The stills have elongated necks which look a little like witches’ hats and thin descending lyne arms which run into external worm tubs. A mix of unpeated and peated spirit is made.
In December 2018 the distillery launched its first 10-year-old single malts – the oldest whisky to be produced by a legal distillery in the Outer Hebrides.
Anchor Bay was the last remaining whisky in Lombard Brands’ dinner-oriented Illustration Malts series.
Lombard Gold Label is the flagship blend from Isle of Man blender and bottler, Lombard Brands.
Lombard Gold Label is the first Scotch whisky brand to be released by the Isle of Man-based blender and bottler Lombard Brands in the 1970s.
Following 300 years in the wine and spirit trade, Lombard Gold Label was the family's first whisky brand. Aimed at a pre-war standard of excellence, the finest whiskies of Scotland, are hand selected and blended together.
Described as ‘big and chewy’ with a ‘peaty aroma’, the 40% ABV blended Scotch reflects Lombard’s desire to ‘recreate the pre-war image of whisky, and re-establish traditional whisky values’.
While the Lombard-Chibnall family can trace its roots in alcoholic beverages back some 300 years, it wasn’t until the mid-1960s that Lombard Brands was founded by its current CEO, Margaret Lombard-Chibnall.
Select distilleries were commissioned to produce ‘new fill’ and from date of distillation, Lombard took full control over the maturation of its stocks.
Originally a supplier of bulk whisky for blenders, Lombard diversified into blending and bottling its own whiskies, the first of which was Lombard Gold Label. Bottling and blending is within the central region of Scotland.
Lombard continues to invest heavily in the Scotch Whisky industry.
The formidable and expanding portfolio of Blended Scotch Whiskies is a perfect complement to its rare, single cask, single malts. Today, Lombard is in a stronger position than ever to meet the increasing global demand for its whiskies.
Early records (Edward the Confessor 1042-1066) show the family deriving from the village of Chebenhale. At this time, the Chibnall name was ‘de Chebenhale’. In 1351, the English king, John I, bought a cottage in Chebenhale as a pied-a-terre. The royal connection is shown in the family Coat of Arms by a Ducal crown which is engrossed on the dragon's neck – a sign of royal blood !
In 1762, records showed the Chibnall family owning a Wine Merchants, a cooperage business and the local pub. Several predecessors were Wine merchants, but interests expanded via marriage, to cork plantations in Portugal and a cork manufacturing business in London called G. Lombard.
The company has more than 50 years experience of bottling Scotch Whisky.
Lombard’s Golden Piper, like the bagpipes, originates in the Highlands where the character of its whiskies are often a reflection of the wild and rugged landscapes.
Lombard Storm Malt Whisky is a single cask single malt whisky, taken as new make from a coastal distillery.
Dailuaine was built by a farmer called William Mackenzie in 1851. Following the founder's death in 1865 his wife Jane leased the distillery to a banker called James Fleming, who went into business with Mackenzie's son in 1879. After rebuilding work in 1884, Dailuaine became one of the largest distilleries in the Highlands at the time.
The Ancnoc brand came into existence just a few short years after Inver House Distillers bought Knockdhu distillery from United Distillers in 1988.
While its Highland home is more than 100 years old, Ancnoc only came into being in the early 1990s and is flourishing under the guidance of Inver House.
The retention of Knockdhu’s two originally-designed pot stills means Ancnoc’s signature fruity, citric and honeyed flavour is very similar in style to the whisky produced by the distillery more than 100 years ago.
Ancnoc is matured in a mixture of ex-Bourbon and Sherry casks, while the final whisky is free of chill filtration and added colour, lending weight to the malt’s light fruitiness.
Having brought the distillery out of mothballs in the February following its purchase, Inver House set about establishing a brand for its first Scotch whisky plant. It was felt that the distillery name was too confusingly similar to Speyside distillery Knockando, and so Ancnoc [meaning black hill] was chosen as the brand to represent its single malt.
The original Annandale Distillery was built in 1830 by former Elgin-based excise officer George Donald, who named the site after the valley in which it is situated.
Using water from the Middleby Burn for the whisky and the Guillielands Burn for cooling and power, the distillery produced single malt whisky for 90 years.
The first official bottling of Ancnoc was released in 1993, although the brand never really took off until 2003 when it was relaunched with a 12-year-old bottling as its flagship.
In the years that followed a series of vintages and age statements were released, and by 2013 the core range consisted of the 12-year-old alongside a 16, 18, 22 and 35-year-old.
A number of expressions appeared in the Peter Arkle collection – a collaboration with the renowned illustrator who designed the packaging – which was launched as a limited edition range in 2012.
While Knockdhu’s malt is renowned for its light, fruity style, the distillery has been producing a small amount of peated spirit for several years, which was finally released as part of a new collection in 2014. The peaty range comprises of Rutter, Flaughter, Tushkar and Cutter, all of which are named after peat-cutting tools and have been matured in ex-Bourbon casks for between eight and 12 years.
Ancnoc notes the phenol content of all four, which ranges between 11 and 20ppm, as a first, based on the new make itself rather than in the barley.
Annandale’s two signature single malt whiskies won’t be mature until at least 2018, although fans can still pick up a cask in the meantime.
The modern Annandale distillery produces two types of single malt whisky, both matured in American oak barrels – an unpeated spirit that’s described as “smooth and sophisticated”, while a peated version is depicted as “strong and powerful”.
The contrasting styles are a reflection of the Lowlands’ peated whisky past, and its modern reputation as a region that produces softer styles.
Donald ran the distillery until 1883 when it passed to John S. Gardner & Son, the namesake of which kept cows, pigs and horses on-site, feeding the animals on the draff and leftover grain from the distillery. Under Gardner’s tenure the distillery underwent a modest expansion, and at the height of its production was making 28,000 gallons of spirit annually.
In 1896, John Walker & Sons purchased the site for £2000, but the now renowned whisky group had grander ideas up its sleeve. In 1919 the company decided to abandon Annandale to concentrate on developing its signature blended whisky, Johnnie Walker. By 1921 the distillery was closed, its fittings stripped for use elsewhere.
In 2007, the site was purchased by the Annandale Distillery Company, led by husband-and-wife owners David Thomson and Teresa Church. The duo set about painstakingly returning the site to its former glory over a seven-year period that cost in the region of £10.5 million.
Production of two significant whisky styles began in November 2014, named Man O’ Words after the poet Robert Burns, and Man O’Sword after Scottish warrior Robert the Bruce.
Casks of both are available to purchase before the spirit is mature enough to be called whisky.
The Annandale Distillery Company put a price tag of £1 million on the first cask filled on 15 November 2014.
The Antiquary is a historic Victorian blend identifiable by its unique gemstone-shaped bottle.
Named after the 1816 gothic novel by Sir Walter Scott, The Antiquary is a Victorian blend with Edinburgh roots that is under Japanese ownership.
Early bottles featured a caricature of one of Scott’s main characters (likely the antiquary himself, Jonathan Oldbuck) on the label.
Today The Antiquary is sold as a no-age-statement, 12-year-old and 21-year-old, as well as a limited edition 35-year-old. A high proportion of Highland and Speyside malts (45%) provide typical citrus and vanilla notes, while a dash of Islay malt accounts for its light smokiness.
The unique diamond-esque bottle shape, which is now synonymous with the brand, was introduced in the mid-20th century and has been retained through subsequent changes in ownership.
James Hardie set up as a tea, wine and spirits merchant in Picardy Place, Edinburgh in 1861. His sons John and William soon joined him in the business and like so many other merchants in the city, moved into blending in 1880 as J&W Hardie Ltd.
The business established its own steady supply of grain whisky as one of the founding shareholders in Edinburgh’s North British distillery in 1887. The following year the brothers registered one of their blends – The Antiquary – as a brand.
J&W Hardie sold The Antiquary brand in 1917 to J&G Stewart, which was itself taken over by the DCL in the same year as recovery of a pending loan.
The brand and its founder were reunited when, in 1948, J&W Hardie was also absorbed by the DCL and the licence for The Antiquary returned to its original producer.
By the early 1980s The Antiquary had become a global sensation, widely available in countries such as Venzuela, Paraguay, Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Japan and Andorra.
In 1996 J&W Hardie was bought by the Tomatin Distillery Co. Ltd, which had been under Japanese ownership since 1985. The move signalled the owner’s confidence in entering the premium blended Scotch whisky market with an established and reputable brand.
The Antiquary was given a makeover in 2015 to modernise the brand for a younger audience and highlight its unique bottle shape.
Today the blend counts France, Portugal, Russia, Angola, the UK and the US among its most successful markets.
Ardincaple, an Islands Single Malt Scotch Whisky, was a short-lived distillery on the Island of Seil, south of Oban. The distillery was licensed for just one year in 1798 to Duncan Anderson.
Ardincaple is a mansion, still inhabited today, in extensive grounds at Clachan-Seil in the north-west of the island. Its distillery was one of many such sites established in the grounds of castles and country houses in the 18th and 19th century, although Ardincaple’s was rather short-lived.
Ardiseer Distillery was one of countless short-lived distilleries in Inverness-shire, also known as Ardersier.
Pinpointing Ardiseer distillery’s location is difficult, it would logically have sat beside one of the two burns that converge just south of the village, before flowing into the firth.
A large Victorian distillery, Ardmore has a heft and scale which is surprising given its rural surroundings. It is also a rarity in terms of style – a peated Highland malt.
It was the second-last distillery to retain coal fires under its stills.
The peatiness (it comes across as woodsmoke) is balanced by a gentle apple/floral lift, the product of a regime which insists on clear wort and very long fermentation in wooden washbacks.
The fires which once raged under the stills added a heavy, mid-palate weight, as did the downward facing lyne arms.
When the fires came out, the distillery team spent seven months creating new steam coils with kinks in them to replicate the ‘hot spots’ in the stills which had contributed this flavour.
Since the steam has come in, an unpeated variant, called Ardlair after a nearby stone circle, has also been made.
In 1898, Adam Teacher, son of Glasgow blender William Teacher, decided that the family firm needed its own malt whisky distillery.
The site he chose, on the outskirts of the village of Kennethmont in rural Aberdeenshire, had water, peat and home-grown barley.
Ardmore has remained in the Teacher’s stable ever since, providing smoke and also top notes to a blend which still sells over a million cases globally.
Its main markets today are India and Brazil.
In 2014, it became part of the new Beam Suntory portfolio.
The Ardmore Triple Wood is a complex and rewarding travel retail exclusive Highland malt. Triple matured in American Oak barrels, quarter casks and puncheons, this non-chill filtered expression at 46% ABV, is rich in traditional Highland peat smoke notes.
Ardnahoe distillery has Scotland’s longest lyne arms at 24.5ft.
Everything at Ardnahoe is set up to produce a heavily peated, richly fruity spirit with a creamy, slightly oily consistency.
Barley is peated to 40ppm. The fermentation is long, lasting between 60 and 70 hours to allow the yeast to produce fuller fruit flavours. In the still house, the two copper pot stills are run slow, allowing for greater copper contact as the spirit travels through the lanky lyne arms and into 77 metres of copper coiling in the worm tub condensers.
Legal distilling was unknown on the remote Ardnamurchan peninsula until independent bottler Adelphi opened its distillery there in 2014.
This is not the first distillery to bear the Adelphi name.
The original was built in the Gorbals district of Glasgow in 1826, passing into the hands of Archibald Walker in 1880, making the firm the only distiller to make whisky in Scotland, Ireland and England.
One of many small licensed distilleries that sprang up in Perthshire over the decades, Ardtalnaig was located in the village of the same name, probably next to the Allt a Chilleine river that flowed into Loch Tay.
Ardtalnaig distillery was licensed to Alexander McDougall & Co. in 1830. Two further owners took on the distillery before it closed for good in 1840.
Arbikie has already secured a reputation as one of Scotland’s most experimental distilleries, despite holding back from releasing a whisky for 14 years.
Its whiskies – traditionally Highland in style with a coastal flair – will only be released at ages 14, 18 and 21 years old, with each bearing the vintage of its distillation and the field in which the barley was grown. That means its first release won't likely be until at least 2029.
the 2,100-acre estate is owned and operated by three brothers who first conceived the idea of building a distillery on the property over a few drinks on a night out in New York.
Their concept was to produce the finest malt whisky in Scotland using a farm-to-bottle process – they also own the fields and water source.
This is not the first time distilling has occurred at Arbikie. The family believe there to have been a distillery operational in the area as far back as 1720, although the earliest record of a site is a map from 1794.
In Sep 2015, master distiller Kirsty Black was producing single malt spirit, which will be laid down for a minimum of 14 years before being bottled as whisky.
Arbikie plans to build its own maltings before 2018, ‘closing the circle’ on its farm-to-bottle process.
It currently sources malted barley from Glenesk maltings in Montrose, just 7.5 miles down the road.
In the 1920s, the Lawson family took over Ardbeg before DCL and Canada’s Hiram Walker acquired significant minority stakes in 1959.
A rise in demand for peated whisky saw production increase in the 1960s and 1970s, with demand necessitating that the distillery bring in peated malt from Port Ellen from 1974.
or aficionados, the end of Ardbeg’s self-sufficiency was the end of an era – and a style. Seven years later, Ardbeg’s kiln was finally extinguished.
Hiram Walker took full control in 1979, buying out DCL’s 50% share for £300,000, and everyone else’s holdings at the same time. By that time, blends were once again on the slide and, to compensate for the drop in demand for smoky malt, an unpeated make (Kildalton) began to be produced.
In 1997, it was taken over by Glenmorangie, which paid £7m for the distillery and stock – or what there was of it.
The stock profile meant that its first age statement release was a 17-year-old, while it would take until 2008 for its own Ardbeg 10-year-old to appear.
From 2004, however, there had been incremental releases: ’Very Young’, ‘Still Young’ and ‘Almost There’ showed the work in progress.
The portfolio still concentrates on no-age-statement releases, some exclusively from (now very rare) old stock, others from new, some from a mix. Different oaks have also been used as part of a general improvement in the quality of casks used.
The range has been bolstered in recent years by the addition of core expressions Ardbeg An Oa (NAS) in 2017 and Ardbeg Traigh Bhan 19 Year Old two years later.
In the early 1890s, shortly after Charles Doig had installed the industy's first ever pagoda-style distillery roof at Dailuaine, the partnership between Mackenzie and Fleming was rearranged, taking the name Dailuaine-Glenlivet.
The Dailuaine-Glenlivet was a principal component of the Mackenzie produced Phipson Black Dog.
By 1916, the company had not only merged with Talisker and Imperial, but also acquired the Bon Accord grain distillery in Aberdeenshire, renaming it North of Scotland.
After WWI, the Dailuaine-Talisker Company (as it was then known) was fully acquired by DCL in 1925.
Today, Dailauine is one of the largest distilleries in Diageo's portfolio in terms of potential production capacity. It needs to be - the malt produced at Dailuaine is a key ingredient in the Johnnie Walker stable, with only 2% of production being retained as a single malt. Despite being a very well-respected single malt, Dailuaine has never been a part of Diageo's Classic Malts range, and very few official bottlings have been released.
For the same reason, independent bottlings are few and far between. The Flora and Fauna 16 year-old bottling remains the main expression, and is much-praised for its assertive, sweet, richly-sherried profile.
All Banker Distillery products are 3 Year Olds.
Banker Distillery’s Ruby Collection is a 3 Year Old Blended Grain Scotch Whisky.
Banker Distillery’s Amber Collection is a 3 Year Old Blended Scotch Whisky influenced with Malt (10%).
Its Emerald Collection is a 3 Year Old Scotch Blended Malt Whisky.
In the 1960s Abbot’s Choice ceramic monks filled with Scotch sold as far afield as Peru. Today, the blend based on Linkwood, lives on as an occasional oddity in whisky auctions.
The White Horse Blended Scotch had the smoky Lagavulin as one of its constituents.
Consequent to a drop in demand for smoky malt, Ardbeg introduced an unpeated make called Kildalton.
Ardincaple Distillery was a short lived Islands Single Malt Scotch Whisky. Today, Ardincaple is a mansion, still inhabited today, in extensive grounds at Clachan-Seil in the north-west of the island, near Oban. Its distillery was one of many such sites established in the grounds of castles and country houses in the 18th and 19th century, although Ardincaple’s didn’t last long.
Ardmore’s peatiness comes across as woodsmoke and is balanced by a gentle apple/floral lift, the product of a regime which insists on clear wort and very long fermentation in wooden washbacks.
When steam replaced coal, an unpeated variant called Ardlair- after a nearby stone circle- has also been made.
One of many small licensed distilleries that sprang up in Perthshire over the decades, Ardtalnaig was located in the village of the same name, probably next to the Allt a Chilleine river that flowed into Loch Tay.
It was possibly also called Lochtayside.
Arngibbon distillery operated in Kippen, Stirlingshire, for six short years in the early 19th century. Arngibbon itself was an estate of at least four farms and one country house, located southwest of Arnprior.
Arngibbon distillery was first licensed to John Morrison in 1825, but was closed in 1831.
Although the Arran distillery is relatively new (production started in 1995), the island in the Firth of Clyde has a long history of whisky-making.
A fertile place, the farmers in the south of the island had plenty of raw materials to work with, and when home distillation and small stills were effectively banned in the late 18th century, they simply went underground.
A buzzing island with over 50 whisky distilleries, the island of Arran was home to only one until recently, which claims its water, sourced from Loch Na Davie, is the purest in Scotland.
As an island whisky, it might be thought that Arran would always have been peaty. Instead, it started as a non-smoky ‘Highland-style' malt. Like any new build distillery, the equipment is in an easily managed single tier space with a small semi-lauter mashtun, wooden washbacks and two pairs of small stills.
A legal distillery ran at Lagg from 1825, but it closed in 1837.
Bottling started with a limited edition three-year-old in 1998 and the range has continued to expand, although today there are fewer ‘finished’ variants than in the past.
A peated expression, ‘Machrie Moor’, has also been introduced.
Parent company Isle of Arran Distillers opened a second distillery, Lagg, in the south of the island in 2019, then revamped the Arran range with clean, modern packaging plus the introduction of new core expressions.
Ascot House was an export-only blended Scotch produced by Kintocher Whisky Co Ltd, a trading subsidiary of the Rum Company Ltd of Basel. Its main market was Italy.
Its core expression did not carry an age statement, although a 12-year-old was also produced.
Ascot House was produced during the 1960s and is now extremely rare.
The Rum Company of Basel (now based in Reinach) owned Kintocher Whisky Co though its Glasgow-based subsidiary Acredyke Whisky Ltd of Bothwell Street, which was registered in August 1960. Kintocher Whisky Co. was struck off the companies register in 1985.
Auchentoshan’s claim to fame is that it is the only distillery in Scotland which exclusively uses triple distillation.
Legal whisky-making started here on the banks of the Clyde in 1817 when the Duntocher distillery was built by John Bulloch. Like many early start-ups it had a chequered early history and Bulloch went bankrupt soon after.
It wasn’t to put his family off however. His grandson co-founded one of the 19th century’s most famous blending and broking firms, Bulloch Lade.
The wash still operates as per normal, while the spirit coming from the intermediate still is split into two, with only the high-strength ‘heads’ being carried forward for the final distillation. The low-strength ‘tails’ are mixed with the next distillation from the wash still.
The ‘heads’ are then mixed with the ‘feints’ from the previous spirit still distillation and a cut with an average strength of 81% is taken.
A short fermentation gives Auchentoshan a cereal note which acts as a grounding flavour during maturation as well as balancing the high-toned citric notes.
Its high strength means that it can easily be overpowered by oak. Consequently, the older the expression, the more ‘relaxed’ the wood influence is.
Over the years Scotch whisky has been bottled in everything from miniature golf bags to models of Nessie and Big Ben.
According to the yellow, parchment-style labels of Abbot’s Choice, John McEwan & Co was established in Leith in 1863. The firm owned other blended whiskies including King George IV and Chequers, all of which have since been inherited by Diageo.
The brand was originally called ‘McEwan’s Whisky – the Abbot’s Choice,’ and dates from some time before World War II.
Among its European markets was Italy where it was imported by the Brescia-based firm of Samaroli, while it was also exported to Latin America. Abbotshaugh is one of 18 lost distilleries in the Falkirk area.
Abbotshaugh was located in the grounds of an abbey that has long since vanished. It was possibly on or beside West Mains of Abbotshaugh, a farm close to the Forth-Clyde Canal that had opened in 1790.
Abbotshaugh distillery opened in 1825, licensed to the Abbotshaugh Distillery Co. However, the site closed in 1828 when Mr A McFarlane, a major investor, withdrew from the venture.
Technically a Lowland distillery, Aberargie eschews regional style with its rich and fruity whisky.
Its sole use of Golden Promise barley – grown entirely on its own farms – gives an inherent waxiness to the new make spirit, while the distillery is set up to nurture a fruity quality, with a smoky characteristic from the occasional peated run.
Aberargie is designed as a ‘barley to bottle’ operation – every process bar the malting will take place on-site.
Every drop of spirit produced at the distillery is destined for Aberargie single malt, although some may be commandeered as fillings for Morrison & Mackay’s Bruadar whisky liqueur.
Aberargie marks a return to distilling for the Morrison family.
Whisky broker Stanley P. Morrison had owned Bowmore during the 1960s, his distilling, blending and brokering business forming the basis for Morrison Bowmore, now owned by Beam Suntory.
In 2005 the Morrison family – later renamed Morrison & Mackay – moved into blending and bottling Scotch whiskies under the Carn Mhor range, and re-established the Old Perth brand in 2014.
The Morrison family secured a majority stake in the Scottish Liqueur Centre in Bankfoot, Perth, where it nurtured the Bruadar and Columba Cream liqueur brands. A separate distillery to be owned and operated solely by the Morrison family, The Perth Distilling Company will include all three brands.
One of the sweetest single malts, Aberfeldy’s characteristic honeyed note is the result of very long fermentation, coupled with slow distillation.
John Dewar & Sons is typical of many of the blending firms which were founded in the 19th century.
Dewar himself, though born in humble surroundings in a croft at Shenvail, became a wine merchant in Perth and by the middle of the century had started to blend whisky. It was however his sons, John Jr and Thomas (Tommy), who made the family firm a globally recognised name.
In the 1890s, they decided to go into whisky production and built a distillery at Aberfeldy, only two miles from where their father had been born.
The site had originally been a brewery and some distillation had taken place in the early part of the century.
Fed by the Pitilie Burn [where gold is still panned], Aberfeldy became the malt at the heart of the firm’s blends.
A private railway line linked the plant with the firm’s operational hub in Perth.
Dewar’s joined DCL in 1925 and in 1973 the Aberfeldy site doubled in capacity to its present size.
In 1998, the Dewar’s estate [the blends, plus Aberfeldy, Aultmore, Craigellachie and Royal Brackla] were bought for £1.1bn by Bacardi-Martini.
The value of Scotch Whisky exports to the US grew from £280m in 1994 to over £1bn in 2018.
By value, 33% of Scotch Whisky exports to the US in 2018 were Single Malts (a value of £344 million, or $463 million).
The US market accounted for 22% of global value, and 10.7% of global volumes of Scotch Whisky exports in 2018.
Global exports of Scotch Whisky fell by more than £1.1bn during 2020. The export figures are the lowest they have been in a decade, as the combined impact of Covid-19 and the 25% tariff in the United States hit distillers hard.
In 2020, the export value of Scotch Whisky exports fell 23% by value to £3.8bn. The number of 70cl bottles exported fell by 13% to the equivalent of 1.14bn.
The value and volume of exports to most of Scotch Whisky’s top 10 markets fell as countries went into lockdown to combat the spread of Covid-19 during 2020. The closure of hospitality and travel restrictions impacting airport retail globally saw export values fall in 70% of Scotch Whisky’s global markets compared to 2019.
Exports to the EU 27, the industry’s largest regional export market, fell by 15%.
It is the continued impact of tariffs by the USA on exports of Single Malt Scotch Whisky thereto that has caused the most significant losses. The United States is Scotch Whisky’s most valuable market, valued at over £1bn in 2019 when it accounted for a fifth of global exports.
In 2020, exports of Scotch Whisky to the US fell by 32% to £729m, a loss of £340m compared to 2019, and accounting for around one third of total global export losses.
The SWA celebrated with a silent song and dance when prize goof Diaper Don lost the US Presidency and the new President scrapped Trump’s cursed tariff early 2021.
The 25% tariff on Single Malt that the industry is forced to pay to the US is in large part a result of a continuing dispute between the EU, UK and US governments over subsidies granted to Airbus and Boeing.
The Scotch Whisky industry has now paid over half a billion pounds in tariffs on behalf of the UK government because of the subsidies that the government granted to the aerospace sector in breach of World Trade Organisation rules.
Export volume of Scotch Whisky in 2020 was the equivalent of 1.14bn 70cl bottles, down 12.6% compared with 2019.
Exports have fallen in 127 of 179 global markets.
Exports by value are now at their lowest level since 2010 when £3.48bn was exported.
Scotch Whisky exports to the US were valued at £1.07bn in 2019 – the industry’s first billion pound market.
Compared to Scotch Whisky, other spirits categories, including tequila, mezcal, Cognac and American whiskey, performed positively in the US market during 2020.
The Scotch Whisky industry directly employs about 11,000 people in Scotland, and many more indirectly through its supply chain. Over 7,000 of these jobs are in rural areas of Scotland.
An advertisement in the 1867 Aberdeen Journal illustrated Glenlivet’s popularity: “Glenlivat Whisky. Mr Sheed begs to call attention to his large stock of matured old and very old Glenlivat (sic) Whisky from the celebrated distillery of Mr George Smith, which is acknowledged to be the finest spirit made, and unrivalled in the trade. Forwarded, in cask or in bottle, to all parts of the United Kingdom and abroad free of duty.”
Whisky distilleries in neighbouring districts like Morayshire, however, were unrepentant about copying the flavour traits of The Glenlivet.
New Speyside distilleries were often merely imitators; at Craigellachie, for instance, ‘The Glenlivet’ characteristics, which were much admired, were reproduced—namely, the ‘pineapple’ flavour which was the original old Glenlivet style from the sma’ still days.
Scottish Judge Robert Macqueen,
circa 1750, is credited with having thriven on a " stintless regimen of
beef, brandy, and claret," being firmly persuaded that a point of law will
be more easily studied after drinking a bottle of the favourite beverage than
by abstemiousness. He was elevated to peerdom as Lord Braxfield in 1776.
The Persian judiciary were
required to first discuss and argue a case twice, first when sober and then
when fully inebriated. In vino veritas.
In 2017, the UK Supreme Court
ruled that Scotland could set a minimum price for alcohol, rejecting a
challenge by the Scotch Whisky Association (SWA).
Scotland’s national drink
in the 1700s was French Claret, preferred to the Port of the English.
For centuries, ever since
the signing of the Auld Alliance in 1295, Scotland had been importing Claret
from France. Because of the Auld Alliance, Scottish merchants had the privilege
of selecting the first choice of Bordeaux’s finest wines - a privilege which
was eagerly protected for hundreds of years, much to the annoyance of English
wine drinkers who received an inferior product.
The whisky boom of the
1960s resulted in a brief fashion for malt distilleries being ensconced within
grain distilleries: Kinclaith in Strathclyde; Glenflagler and Killyloch from
Moffat; Ben Wyvis in Invergordon; and Inverleven & Lomond in Dumbarton.
Ladyburn was another.
Ladyburn Distillery:
Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky: An incredibly rare whisky, Ladyburn has only
been bottled on two occasions by its owner. Independent bottlings are equally
hard to find. It appears to have been a straight down the line malt with some
delicate floral/lemon notes and a crisp finish.
Ladyburn Distillery was
built within William Grant & Sons’ Girvan grain complex in 1966, its four
stills destined to produce fillings for the Grant’s blends and also to free up
stock from Glenfiddich which was, by then, beginning to make a name for itself
as a single malt brand.
However, when the grain
side of Girvan’s operation needed to expand in 1975, Ladyburn was dismantled.
Its spirit lingers on because, in 2007, another single malt distillery opened
within Girvan – Ailsa Bay.
William Grant put his
entire life savings of £755 into the construction of Glenfiddich distillery in
1886. Five years later Balvenie was opened on the same site as Glenfiddich, and
almost a century later they were joined by Kininvie in 1990.
As Scotch whisky began an
upward trend in the early 2000s, William Grant & Sons combined malt whisky
from the three distilleries to create a new blended malt, Monkey Shoulder – one
of very few on the market at the time.
Launched in 2005, Monkey
Shoulder filled a gap in the category for a fun-yet-premium brand that
resonated with both consumers and bartenders alike.
In 2012 the brand launched
in the United States but due to its unforeseen rapid popularity in that market,
Monkey Shoulder fell into short supply for much of 2014.
Now that whisky produced
by William Grant’s Lowland distillery Ailsa Bay is mature, the group has
revealed intentions to cease communicating the provenance of Monkey Shoulder’s
malts, allowing for the potential to utilise stocks of its full malt portfolio.
In early 2016, Monkey
Shoulder was named the ‘trendiest’ Scotch whisky brand in the world in a poll
of the world’s best bars by trade title Drinks International.
By 2018, the same poll
also named Monkey Shoulder as the best-selling Scotch whisky among the world’s
leading high-end bars, usurping long-time leader Johnnie Walker from the top
spot.
Glenfiddich was the first
whisky to be marketed worldwide as a Single Malt in 1963.
Cadenhead’s Whisky Shop on Canongate, when owned by the Cadenhead family, was Scotland’s oldest independent bottler. It was taken over by J & A Mitchell & Co. Ltd., in 1972. The name remains unchanged, even though Mitchell & Co. bottle and sell Springbank, Longrow, and Hazelburn single malt whiskies, along with Campbeltown Loch and Mitchell’s 12 YO. Its unique selling point is that customers can have a custom bottle poured straight from a cask and labeled with their name. When sealed it has a label with the “born on date.” Since whisky stops aging as soon as it leaves the wooden barrel each bottle is a unique expression, www.wmcadenhead.com or in London www.whiskytastingroom.com.
North Korea's Samilpo has two blends, Black Label @ 40% ABV and Red Label @ 42% ABV in 620 ml bottles that resemble the Johnnie Walker bottles, except for that odd volume. Their third brand at 45% ABV is expected soon. Other than volume and ABV, nothing is in English; whisky would then be right, since Kim loves Trump! Or would it be the concerned writer’s choice?
78/82 should be above par for concluding that the global spelling of this type of alcoholic beverage is whisky.
There are over 25 descriptive terms for the colour of whisky.
Whisky gains as much as 60% of its flavour from the type of cask used in the ageing process.
There are currently 133 operational distilleries across Scotland, 8 grain and 125 malt.
Diageo invested £10 million in its state of the art Cambus Cooperage to make it a completely up to date operation combining innovation with traditional skills.
Scotch is sold in more than 200 markets globally.
Total amount of Scotch released for sale to the UK market was 90m bottles of 70 cl. each.
Scotch sells three times its nearest foreign whisky rival.
The industry generated about £3 billion in tax revenue to the UK government.
Scotch whisky accounts for a quarter of UK food and drink exports.
Export of Scotch whisky has increased by 87% in the past decade.
A closed bottle of Scotch can be kept for 100 years+ and will still be good to drink.
After opening, a half-full bottle of Scotch whisky will remain good for six to eight months.
The most expensive bottle of Scotch whisky today is Isabella’s Islay ($6.2 Million).
The oldest Scotch whisky on the market is the Aisla T’Orten 107 Years old, distilled in 1906 and available for $ 1.43 million (£870,000). Probably an April Fool's Day prank.
The highest price paid at an auction for a Scotch Whisky is £288,000 (for a 64-year-old 42.5 % Macallan malt whisky).
Glenfiddich is the largest selling single malt in the world, followed by the Glenlivet.
Johnnie Walker Red label is the world's largest selling Scotch whisky.
The Famous Grouse is the most popular Scotch whisky in the UK.
Glenmorangie is the largest selling malt whisky in Scotland.
The Glenlivet is the most popular single malt Scotch whisky in the US.
Experts advise you to drink Single Malt whisky neat or with a tiny bit of water. The water supposedly ‘Releases the Serpent’ from the whisky.
If there is a serpent, there is also an Angel. As it ages, 2.0-2.5 % of the whisky maturing in a barrel is lost to evaporation every year. Distillers refer to this as the ‘angel’s share’.
But the Devil has the last word. Besides the loss due to ageing as stated earlier, the term also includes the fact that the larger the barrel used to mature whisky, the more the spirit that is absorbed by the wood and lost, called by distillers the ‘Devil’s Cut’. The professional term for it remains INDRINK.
Maturation of the new make has to be done in a wooden oak cask not exceeding 700 L capacity.
The most expensive first world country in which to buy Scotch is New Zealand. In the EU, Austria and Switzerland are the most expensive.
Although their proof differs, standard drinks of beer, wine and spirits (liquor) contain an equivalent amount of alcohol – 0.6 ounces each. They’re all the same to a breathalyzer.
Glenturret is the oldest distillery in Scotland (1775), followed by Bowmore (1779).
Glenturret, Oban and Glenlivet are the three oldest malt whiskies currently sold.
William Lawson’s blended Scotch, a relatively unknown brand, is a bestseller in Russia.
18,000 litres of Scotch whisky worth over $800,000 (£ 500,000) were accidentally flushed down the drain at the Dumbarton bottling plant of Chivas Brothers in March 2013.
There are a total of 133 distilleries in Scotland, 125 malt and 8 grain or multipurpose, according to the research briefings and fact sheets presented to the UK Parliament.
In the UK, the six most popular Scotch blended Whiskies are The Famous Grouse, Bell’s, William Grant’s, Teacher’s, J&B and High Commissioner.
LVMH’s Glenmorangie distillery is one of the smallest in the Highlands and employs just sixteen craftsmen – ‘The Sixteen Men of Tain’ - who have become synonymous with the Glenmorangie brand all over the world.
Edradour was the smallest distillery in Scotland - Three people run the entire operation.
Strathearn distillery claims to hold that distinction. It is temporarily closed today.
Loch Ewe is the smallest distillery in Scotland; the owner is a one-man show.
Releases of Scotch whisky from bond for sale in the UK in the first half totaled 37.3 million bottles, down about 5.5% on the corresponding figure of 39.5 million in the opening six months of 2012. The SWA blamed the domestic excise duty regime, and called for UK Government help in this regard.
The fastest growing Scotch whisky in the world over the last five years was Black Dog. Not any more after a lawsuit was filed against Diageo and USL for falsification and fabrication of facts. Read about The Black Dog at https://noelonwhisky.blogspot.com/2017/02/the-intriguing-history-of-black-dog_10.html / You may have noticed the totally changed gold-coloured and black cover describing its history.
The Australian Wine Research Institute has introduced a measure called a standard drink. In Australia, a standard drink contains 10 g (12.67 ml) of alcohol, the amount that an average adult male can metabolize in one hour.
Japanese owned Tomatin is the largest capacity distillery in Scotland.
Haig’s Pinch (Dimple) is the fourth largest blended Deluxe Scotch whisky in the world.
Persian overlords were required to rule twice on a case; once when stone cold sober and again when intoxicated, in the belief of ‘in vino veritas’.
UK Whisky Cheaper in Europe: The price of a bottle of whisky, including the Excise Duty, has been subject to Value Added Tax since 1973. The EU mandated size of the Scotch bottle is 70 cl or 700 ml, minimum 40 per cent ABV. In a single European market, Scotch actually costs less in Europe than in the UK. A 70cl of the average blended Scotch whisky might sell for £10.70 in the UK. Tax would take £7.07 or 66% of the retail price. In 10 out of 15 European countries, lower taxes mean that the same bottle is sold for less. Look at the list below:
Spain about £4.50 about 40%
Italy about £4.85 about 40%
Greece about £ 5.50 about 44%
Germany about £6.40 about 49%
France about £6.60 about 55%
Andorra about £ 3.75, about 35%
Age Mentioned on a Blended Whisky Label: A blended whisky contains anywhere from 15 to 50 different malt whiskies. The skill of the blender is to create character and consistency in the product – and to choose only the whiskies that complement each other. The age of the blended Whisky mentioned on the bottle refers to the youngest whisky in the blend. If it says 10 years it means that the youngest Whisky has been matured for a minimum period of 10 years in oak casks. The same holds good for Single Malt Whiskies as well.
Dewar’s Adds Honey to Scotch: Bacardi, in an attempt to woo the younger generation, unveiled a brand called Dewar’s Highlander Honey, which the company describes as a Scotch whisky “infused with Scottish heather honey filtered through oak cask wood.” The Scotch Whisky Association argues that this Dewar’s product is not Scotch whisky and that under EU law, it has to be sold under the sales description ‘Spirit Drink’. The label may refer to Scotch whisky as one of its constituents.
The first malt whisky ever to be exported to Australia was the Dalmore, in 1870.
The Dalmore is the only distillery permitted to source Matusalem sherry wood casks for finishing its single malt at Gonzalez Byass.
Cadenhead’s Whisky Shop on Canongate, when owned by that family, was Scotland’s oldest independent bottler till taken over by J & A Mitchell & Co. Ltd. in 1972. The name remains unchanged, even though Mitchell & Co bottle and sell Springbank, Longrow and Hazelburn Single Malt whiskies, along with Campbeltown Loch and Mitchell's 12 year old. Its USP is that customers can have a bottle poured straight from a cask and labelled with a person’s name. When sealed it has a label with the ‘born on date’, as whisky stops aging as soon as it leaves the wooden barrel so each bottle is a unique blend.
The source of the name Auchentoshan is Gaelic. It means 'corner of the field'.
Auchentoshan was probably started by Irish settlers, led by the MacBeathas.
Some sources claim that these Irish whisky distillers brought the Irish custom of triple distillation with them. Auchentoshan uses triple distillation.
Antique records from the year 1800 mention an (illegal) Duntocher distillery, which may have been a predecessor to the legal Auchentoshan distillery. A license for distillation was obtained in 1823.
The ‘e’ in whiskey: Scotch whisky is always spelled without an ‘e’? Four other nations, Ireland (since 1960), Peru, Mexico and most but not all brands in the United States call their similar spirits Whiskey. Be sure you never add the ‘e’ when writing to a Scotsman.
Bruichladdich’s The Octomore 08.3 is “the most heavily peated Octomore to date”, containing barley peated to 309 ppm. Octomore 2009 Edition 06.3, peating level is 258 ppm.
For over 220 years, Highland Park has smoked its barley over 4,000-year-old peat, hand-cut from Hobbister Moor, just 11 km from the distillery. From the heathery Fogg layer down through the dense, compacted Yarphie to the ancient coal-like Moss, the core of their peat dates back 4,000 years.
The GlenAllachie has released inaugural bottlings with its first ever Wine Cask Series.
After initial aging in American Oak ex-bourbon barrels, the whisky was transferred into the adroitly chosen wine casks to undergo almost two years of additional maturation: an 11-year-old Grattamacco Cask Finish, a 12-year-old Sauternes Cask Finish, and a 13-year-old Rioja Cask Finish.
The GlenAllachie launched its first ever blended Scotch whisky, White Heather 21 Year Old, early 2021.
The name comes from a blended whisky brand that was discontinued back in the 1980s, which was acquired by The GlenAllachie Distillers Company in 2017.
Aucherachan Distillery, a Speyside Single Malt Scotch whisky distillery went alternatively by Achorachan, Achorechan and Acherachan – such was the quality of spelling in the late 18th century – but also Glenlivat (sic).
As with so many early licensed distilleries, struggling against illegal distillers and heavy taxation, Auchorachan had mixed fortunes and several owners. However, in its day it played an important role in the history of Glenlivet and the whisky industry.
The distillery was originally registered in the 1780s under William Gordon, who died in 1790.
Aucherachan distillery was briefly operational in the following decade but then lay unused for around 40 years until Captain William Grant (not of Glenfiddich fame) re-opened it in 1833.
The distillery is noted as ‘operating’ in 1851, but after Captain Grant suffered a serious fall in 1854 the business began to suffer, although some claim his misfortunes were down to the work of some angry fairies.
2018 was a year littered with auction records, particularly for 60-year-old Macallan featuring labels designed by artists Sir Peter Blake and Valerio Adami – but they were all capped by the £1.2m spent in November on a bottle hand-painted by Irish artist Michael Dillon.
Japanese whisky is sought-after as never before, from the hordes of Highballs consumed in the bars of Tokyo to the cult bottlings of Karuizawa and Hanyu breaking auction records on a regular basis.
But there’s a dark side to this surge in interest. As stocks dwindle, bottlings such as Hakushu 12 and Hibiki 17 have been forced to withdraw from the market – and yet there is an apparently never-ending stream of new brands entering the fray.
The withdrawals came about because the rules governing Japanese whisky are so loose that all manner of hybrid and adulterated products can legally claim to be ‘Japanese whisky’, even though they are arguably neither of those things.
It doesn’t take much to stoke up a storm in the fevered world of social media, but Johnnie Walker’s US launch of a ‘female’ version, The Jane Walker Edition, prompted a backlash even before its release.
Speyside’s Kininvie distillery has released three new ‘experimental’ whiskies from its new innovation arm Kininvie Works, including a rye whisky, triple distilled malt and single-distillery blended Scotch.
Kininvie Works’ three whiskies, code-named KVSM001, KVSG002 and KVSB003, are the result of three different trials run by the William Grant & Sons-owned distillery.
Each code refers to the distillery (KV), spirit type (SM, SG, SB) and batch number (001).
KVSM001 is a triple-distilled single malt, the first of its kind released by Kininvie, which usually produces a double-distilled spirit.
KVSG002 is technically a single grain Scotch whisky distilled in copper pot stills using a combination of malted barley and malted rye. Distillers used a mash containing 11% malted rye, maturing the resulting spirit in virgin American oak casks for three years. The final product, which is bottled at 47.8% abv, is said to have ‘a distinguished toffee flavour along with the classic spiciness associated with rye’.
KVSB003 is a blend of double distilled malt whisky, and the Kininvie single grain malted rye and barley mash. All components of KVSB003 have been produced on-site.
Kininvie is situated on the same property as Balvenie distillery.
The launch of Kininvie Works marks a departure from the single malt brand’s focus on luxury whisky, which in recent years has included the release of the distillery’s ‘first drops’, a series of 25-year-old single casks sold for around £400 per 35cl bottle.
Bruichladdich Bere Barley is an idiosyncratic barley variety that has survived in some of Scotland’s remotest outposts for up to 6,000 years, nearly became extinct 20 years ago, and is now undergoing a resurgence.
In celebration of London Cocktail Week’s 10th anniversary in 2019, the Speyside single malt brand The Glenlivet created a range of edible/drinkable cocktail capsules in collaboration with Alex Kratena and Monica Berg of London’s Tayēr + Elementary, rated one of the world’s best bars after just nine months of operation, and capsule designer Notpla.
Three original cocktails ‘inspired by the elements and flavours of The Glenlivet Founder’s Reserve’ – Citrus, Wood and Spice – are filled into a biodegradable casing made from seaweed extract (called ‘oohos’) and presented to patrons in a bespoke gold box.
Ardnahoe – which means “Height of the Hollow” in Scottish Gaelic and gives Ardnahoe Distillery its name, is situated on the North-East coast of Islay, equidistant between Caol Ila and Bunnahabhain Distilleries.
Ardnahoe Distillery is the ninth malt whisky distillery on the world-renowned whisky island of Islay.
They draw the water to produce Ardnahoe spirit from Loch Ardnahoe nearby.
Loch Ardnahoe offers extremely soft water that has been filtered through peat and rock for thousands of years.
Mysteries surround Loch Ardnahoe: no one is quite sure how deep it is, while others say there’s a ghost of a charging white steed that rises out of the Loch on a full moon.
Tomintoul entered the Guinness Book of World Records by producing the largest bottle of whisky in the world, containing 105.3 litres of 14 year old Tomintoul malt whisky.
All about Royal Salute:
In 1953, Princess Elizabeth ascended the throne. An exquisite blend was created using whisky from Strathisla, the oldest working distillery in the Scottish Highlands. It was given the name Royal Salute – after the famous 21-gun-salute.
To this day, Royal Salute has marked each significant event in the lives of the British Monarchy and is unique in having only ever used whiskies aged at least 21 years in its blends.
All Royal Salute whiskies are at 40% ABV in 70 cl bottles.
Over the decades, Royal Salute master blenders have collected and stored whiskies of immense distinction behind locked doors in legendary storehouses across Scotland.
Sandy Hyslop is the fifth Master Blender in the history of Royal Salute.
The Signature Blend 21 YO: This blended Scotch whisky started it all – a whisky fit for a queen. This is a classic, unchanged since 1953, with a flavour and fragrance that is unforgettable.
The Malts Blend 21 YO: Royal Salute’s first malts-only blend, it harmonises 21 precious single malts, each matured for a minimum of 21 years, from the five regions of Scotland.
The Lost Blend 21 YO: At the heart of The Lost Blend are rare whiskies rescued from distilleries that have vanished into the mist. Many of these whiskies are lost forever and finding a Royal Salute Lost Blend may be beyond the pale.
In the Royal Salute vaults lie its own “crown jewels” – rare and precious whiskies, under lock and key. This whisky features the finest blends, aged for 25 years or more, and expertly combined to create an exceptional liquid with a glorious flavour. The Treasured Blend is available exclusively in travel retail.
The Polo Estancia Edition 21 YO: The first edition of a new collection which aims to celebrate iconic polo destinations, The 21-Year-Old Polo Estancia Edition pays homage to what is universally known as the ‘home of polo’ – Argentina. It is a bespoke 21-year-old blend fully finished in the finest Argentinian Malbec casks.
The Malbec: Argentinian Malbec wine is characterised by its deep colour and intense fruity flavours. The Polo Estancia blend was fully finished in top of the range Malbec wine casks from the high altitude ‘boutique terroir’ of Cafayate.
The Finish: A meticulous process that requires a talented Master Blender to reach the exact desired profile and ensure the strength of flavours of the Malbec do not overpower the more delicate aged notes within the Royal Salute whiskies.
The Inspired Blends comprise of the Union of the Crowns, Stone of Destiny and 62 Gun Salute.
Royal Salute Union of the Crowns: This 32 YO celebrates a remarkable coming together – the Union of the Crowns, which saw Ireland, Scotland and England united by the British monarchy. This blend is itself a powerful union of precious whiskies from all five regions of Scotland, aged for 32 years or more.
Stone of Destiny: The bedrock of the British monarchy, the Stone of Destiny has been the coronation seat of kings and queens for centuries. The Stone of Destiny comprises an extraordinary collection of rare and fine whiskies, all matured for at least 38 years.
62 Gun Salute: The spectacular 62-gun salute is the highest ceremonial honour, reserved for the most significant royal occasions. 62 Gun Salute is presented in a midnight blue, hand-crafted Dartington Crystal decanter, adorned with 24-carat gold and crowned with a cut crystal stopper, complete with a book describing the creation of the blend. The whiskies used to make the blend are aged for at least 40 years. It was launched in June 2010, for the Queen’s birthday celebrations. The few bottles available have 50 YO malt and grain whiskies.
Royal Salute 29 Year Old PX Sherry Cask Finish: A limited-edition 29-year-old blended whisky from Royal Salute, matured exclusively in Pedro Ximénez sherry casks. 70 cl at 40% ABV.
The first blended grain whisky in the Royal Salute portfolio, the Snow Polo Edition evokes the spirit of the spectacular sport from which it takes its name. It is carefully crafted to a higher than usual ABV of 46.5% to match the exact latitude of St Moritz, the Swiss resort where snow polo was first played against the backdrop of pristine, white mountain peaks.
The Royal Wedding Edition: This expression commemorates the wedding of HRH Prince Henry to Ms Meghan Markle. Every whisky in this exquisite blend has been matured entirely in American oak casks as a tribute to Ms Meghan Markle’s American origins. Only 70 bottles were made, in individually numbered, hand-blown crystal decanters and presented in a handcrafted American oak box.
The Peats Beast family has grown. Along with the Standard 46% single malt whisky un-chillfltered, no additives, no colouring, the range now includes: a batch strength version finished for 9 months in Pedro Ximinez casks.
Timorous Beastie represents “ultimate distillation of the Highlands” in a small batch marriage of Single Malts distilled at Glengoyne, Glen Garioch, Blair Athol and Strathearn Distilleries, amongst others.
Douglas Laing & Co, the family firm behind the “Remarkable Regional Malts” Scotch Whisky range, unleashed Timorous Beastie “Meet the Beast”, a limited edition of the sleekit dram to amplify the flavour experience of their Highland Malt brand end May 2021.
Established in 2014 by Douglas Laing & Co, Timorous Beastie represents “ultimate distillation of the Highlands” in a small batch marriage of Single Malts distilled at Glengoyne, Glen Garioch, Blair Athol and Strathearn Distilleries, amongst others.
Macallan: Macallan is likely derived from the Gaelic magh, which translates to fertile ground and ellan, which is a reference to an Irish-born monk 8th century Christian monk named St. Fillan.
The Famous Grouse outside Glenturret Distillery |
Oban: Oban distillery, was constructed in 1994 along the rock-filled harbour of the same name. Because of its location, it has characteristics of both the Highland and Island whiskies.
Women in Scotch Whisky HISTORy
2021 June’s relaunch of Benriach’s entire core range, accompanied by many new releases, is Barrie’s most significant stamp of authority. Dr. Barrie believes that Benriach 10 is the personalisation of Sammy Davis Jr’s song, Rhythm of Life.
Jill Boyd, Whisky Maker at Compass Box, was the first woman to join the Compass Box team and has recently over seen the release of Hedonism: The Muse, their Blended Grain 50.3% ABV limited edition expression celebrating International Women’s Day.
Margaret Gloag may be credited with getting her family into the liquor business.
The three granddaughters of The Highland Distilleries Company plc’s first chairman William Robertson, Agnes, Ethel and Elspeth, combined their business interests under a holding company, Edrington, and created a charitable trust to be its principal owner and distribute its dividends to charities in Scotland.
The first licensee after the passage of the 1823 Excise Act was Jane Macgregor of Littlemill Distillery.