Strathisla
Speyside
Scotland
Kernabfüllungen
Über
As a classic old-style distillery, Strathisla’s architecture means that the visitor moves through a maze of rooms and passageways before ending up in the rafters of the low-roofed stillhouse – at the same level as the lyne arm of the stills themselves.
Geschichte
What is most surprising about Strathisla is that so little is made of the fact that this is the oldest licensed distillery in Scotland. It started life as the brewery of the local monastery and turned itself to the making of whisky in 1786, one of the few distilleries in what is now the Speyside region to go legal. It was known as Milltown/Milton until 1870, but its whisky was long known as Strathisla after the river which it sits beside. The distillery was renamed Strathisla in 1951.
It had a period of considerable fame in the late 19th and early 20th century when it was bottled as a single malt, but by the late 1940s it had fallen on hard times.
Acting on behalf of Sam Bronfman’s Seagram , the legendary whisky broker Jimmy Barclay bought it for £71,000 at auction in 1950, the year after its previous owner had been jailed for tax evasion. It began to rise in prominence immediately as the first piece in Bronfman’s plans for a reformulated Chivas Regal 12 Year Old.
A major tourist attraction with a fair claim to be Scotland’s prettiest distillery, in recent times it has played the role of the ‘home’ of Chivas Regal. That accolade also explains why this is a relatively small player in terms of single malt with Gordon & MacPhail being the main resource for bottlings. A repackaging in 2013 however suggests that times may be changing as far as official bottlings are concerned.
Zeitleiste
- 1786 Alexander Milne and George Taylor license Milltown distillery, making it the oldest registered plant in Scotland
- 1823 The distillery is purchased by Macdonald Ingram & Co.
- 1830 William Longmore purchases the distillery
- 1880 Longmore retires and the distillery is passed to son-in-law John Geddes-Brown who creates William Longmore & Co.
- 1890 The distillery's name is changed to Milton
- 1940 Jay Pomeroy purchases a majority share of the company, but is jailed for tax evasion and the distillery is bankrupted
- 1950 Acting on behalf of Seagram, Jimmy Barclay purchases the distillery at auction for £71,000
- 1951 The distillery's name is changed once more to Strathisla
- 1965 Two additional stills are installed, bringing the total to four
- 1970 Strathisla begins a short run of a heavily peated whisky, Craigduff
- 2001 Now part of Chivas Brothers, the group is purchased by Pernod Ricard
- 2013 The Strathisla brand is given a packaging update
Produktionsfakten
- Capacity (mlpa)
- 2.4
- Condenser Type
- Shell and tube
- Fermentation Time
- 54hrs
- Grist Weight (t)
- 5.32
- Heat Source
- Steam heating coils
- Malt Specification
- Non peated
- Malt Supplier
- Bairds
- Mash Tun Material
- Stainless Steel
- Mash Tun Type
- Traditional
- New-make Strength
- 72%
- Spirit Still Charge (l)
- 8,081
- Spirit Still Shape
- Boiling balls
- Spirit Still Size (l)
- 11,900
- Stills
- 4 (2 wash, 2 spirit)
- Wash Still Charge (l)
- 11,900
- Wash Still Shape
- Lantern
- Wash Still Size (l)
- 13,500
- Washback Size (l)
- 23,800
- Washback Type
- Wood
- Washbacks
- 10
- Water Source
- Broomhill, Cossburn Springs
- Yeast Type
- Kerry
Eigentum
Aktueller Besitzer
Muttergesellschaft
Vorbesitzer (5)
Alexander Milne and George Taylor
1786–1823
McDonald Ingram & Co
1823–1830
William Longmore
1830–1940
George Jay Pomeroy
1940–1949
Seagram Distillers
1950–2001
Im Katalog Alle im Katalog
Strathisla 12 YO
Gordon & Macphail 15 YO Strathisla-Glenlivet Gordon & Macphail
Strathisla 1997 25 YO Artist #12 Legendary Distilleries
Strathisla 25 YO (D.1997, B.2022) Artist # 12
G&m Strathisla 1987 33 YO Connoisseurs Choice
Gordon & Macphail 33 YO Strathisla (D.1987, B.2021) Connoisseurs Choice
Gordon & Macphail Strathisla 1967 ( Bottled 2012) Gordon & Macphail
G&m Strathisla 1985 35 YO Private Collection