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Glenmorangie Distillery
Situated next to the Dornoch Firth in a series of handsome red sandstone buildings, the Glenmorangie distillery started life as the local brewery for the town of Tain. In 1843, William Matheson converted it to a distillery and it remained in the family until 1887 when it was sold to the Glenmorangie Distillery Co, co-owned by the Maitland brothers and Duncan Cameron. After WWI the business was sold to a partnership between two blending and broking firms, Macdonald & Muir and Durham & Co, soon passing entirely to the former who used the whisky for blends such as Highland Queen. Although it was bottled in small quantities from the 1920s, a change of strategy in 1959 saw Glenmorangie revived as a single malt that soon became Scotland’s top selling.
This was not the first time this had happened however. Records show that at the end of the 19th century Glenmorangie was being sold in the Savoy and other top-end London hotels, as well as being exported.
During the latter part of the 19th century Glenmorangie Distillery began overseas exportation and destinations included Europe and the United States.
Such was the dependence on foreign trade that the distillery closed in 1931 following the enactment of US Prohibition and the Great Depression. The distillery remained closed until November of 1936.
Early success in the infant single malt category resulted in two more stills being added to the original pair in 1976, a number which was then doubled in 1990. In 2009, four more were added along with a larger mash tun and extra washbacks. Five years previously, French luxury goods firm Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy (LVMH) had bought the firm [plus Ardbeg] for £300m. More recently, extra warehousing has been built, the result of a decision to mature and vat all the production on site.
Glenmorangie is now the third largest selling single malt in the world.
The process at Glenmorangie starts with mashing unpeated barley with water from the distillery’s Tarlogie Springs – making this one of a small number of hard water sites in Scotland. Although there is no smoke, once a year some chocolate malt is added to the mash for use in the firm’s Signet brand – another of the distillery’s many innovations.
Fermentation is long, while distillation takes place in the tallest stills in Scotland, all of which retain the same long-necked design of the original pair which were brought from John Taylor’s gin distillery in 1887. This extra height allows a long interaction to take place between alcohol vapour and copper, and while the new make is decidedly high-toned [the cut points here are quite high] there is still a little note of cereal adding a dry counterpoint.
The vast majority of Glenmorangie’s make is aged in ex-American oak casks, many of which have been made to the distillery’s exacting specifications: slow-growth American white oak from north-facing slopes in Missouri, which is then air dried. The firm’s Astar bottling uses 100% of these ‘bespoke’ casks.
The casks are only used twice, with the second-fill casks all ageing in damp ‘dunnage’ warehouses to increase oxidative-driven flavours. As the whisky matures, it picks up more lush fruits, some honey, and mint as well as notes of vanilla, crème brûlee and, in the oldest expressions, chocolate.
Some of the mature spirit is then transferred to ex-fortified wine [Port, Sherry] and still wine casks [Sauternes, Burgundy, Super Tuscan etc] for a period of finishing. Glenmorangie was one of the pioneers of this technique.