Ad
related to: list of distilleries in speyside pa today
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
For categorisation reasons, this list contains only the distilleries within the Moray local authority area – there are a small number of additional locations within the Speyside single malt production area within neighbouring Highland (council area) or Aberdeenshire.
Scotland's Malt Whisky Trail is a tourism initiative featuring seven working Speyside distilleries, a historic distillery (Dallas Dhu, now a museum) and the Speyside Cooperage. A 2012 BBC article recommends a leisurely tour, taking a day or two at each distillery to appreciate the local "traditions and lore". [9]
Seven of the eight distilleries are in production and operational, whilst the Dallas Dhu distillery is a historic distillery. The Malt Whisky Trail is a local theme route marketing initiative, established to promote the region's whisky-related cultural heritage and encourage tourism.
The diversity of the landscape in the Highland region is the main difference to Speyside, [whose] distilleries mainly take from tributaries of the River Spey, or the Spey itself.”
Harvey's of Edinburgh, established 1770, are the new owners of The Speyside distillery company since 2012. Today's production are Single Malts SPEY, BEINN DUBH and BYRON'S GIN. These include SPEY Single Malts: Tenne, Trutina, Fumare, Chairman's Choice and Royal Choice; Beinn Dubh Single Malt in the core collection.
Here are all 10 distilleries from USA Today's winning craft specialty spirits list: ... Big Spring Spirits - Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. Tamworth Distilling - Tamworth, New Hampshire.
Miltonduff distillery site 'Milton' was said to have been chosen because of the good quality of the local water source under the ownership of Pluscarden Abbey; indeed, the distillery is the site of the Abbey's former mill. [1] Milton became Miltonduff after the Duff family acquired the area and a distillery was built in 1824.
When it opened in 1958, it was the first new distillery to open in Speyside since the great whisky crash of 1898. [2] It therefore contrasts markedly with Strathisla - the third oldest in Scotland. Construction started in 1957 on the site of a meal-mill and was completed in 1960, initially with three stills with the intention of triple ...