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Glenmorangie

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Glenmorangie distillery. Coordinates: Glenmorangie logo Glenmorangie (pronounced with the stress on the second syllable: listen ; the toponym is believed to derive from either Gaelic gleann mor na sith "vale of tranquillity" or gleann mór innse "vale of big meadows")[2] is a distillery in Tain, Ross-shire, Scotland that produces single malt Scotch whisky. The distillery is owned by The Glenmorangie Company Ltd, whose main product is the range of Glenmorangie single malt whisky. History[edit] Legend tells that alcoholic beverages of one kind or another were produced in and around Tain since the Middle Ages.[5] It is said that the production of alcohol started at Morangie Farm in 1738, when a brewery was built that shared the farm's water source, the Tarlogie Spring.

The distillery was purchased by its main customer, the Leith firm Macdonald and Muir, in 1918.[6] The Macdonald family would retain control of the company for almost 90 years.[3] Production[edit] The stills which stand 26 ft (7.9 m) high Pronunciation[edit] Glenmorangie Distillery Feature Page on Undiscovered Scotland. Glenmorangie is said to mean The Glen of Tranquility. What is beyond debate is the growing contribution the distillery makes to the enjoyment of discerning whisky enthusiasts worldwide. And, in particular, in its native land, for Glenmorangie is the most popular single malt sold in Scotland itself. The distillery can be found a mile or so west of Tain just off the A9 close to where it crosses the Dornoch Firth on its way north from Inverness to Wick and Thurso. The local production of spirits goes back until at least the early 1700s when a still was recorded at the nearby Morangie Farm.

The existing Distillery, however, had its origins as a brewery; before being converted to a legal still in 1843. On approaching the distillery from the A9 you are led past the distillery pond and through to a car park located above the distillery itself. Perhaps the most unusual aspect of Glenmorangie's process is its distillation.

The key ingredient in any malt whisky is the water that goes into it. Glenmorangie. Home | Help | Scotland | Speyside | West Isles | Search No: 208 Producer: Macdonald & Muir Region: Highlands District: Northern Highlands - Multimap viewOS Sheet 21 ; Map reference NH 767 837 ; Latitude 57 50° N, Longitude 3 58° W Founded ca 1843 ; Operating Status (1999): operating The biggest selling single malt in Scotland but from a small company. Glenmorangie (the Scots pronounce it to rhyme with "orangey") made an early start: It has been available as a single since the 1920s. The distillery is at Tain is in the county of Ross-shire, on the Morangie burn and overlooking the Dornoch Firth.

The site housed a meal mill from the 1550s and a brewery from the 1820s, not to mention illicit distillation which went on in the area for most of that time. The water comes from the Tarlogie springs about a mile from the distillery, flows though lime and sandstone and is hard. All of Glenmorangie's output is now bottled as a single malt and the distillery is unusual in this respect. Tastings. Glenmorangie | Home. Distillery Tour. Home — Glenmorangie House. Buy Whisky Online | Single Malt Whisky & More - Master of Malt. Glenmorangie Distillery - The Distilleries of Scotland - scotchwhisky.net. Our Whiskies. Glenmorangie Distillery Tour Information. Last Updated on Monday, 04 March 2013 16:27 Find Scotland Tours that visit Glenmorangie Distillery.

Unusually for Scotland, the water supply for Glenmorangie is very rich in minerals and this may account for the whisky’s flavour, but then some will argue that the shape of the stills has more influence on flavour. This may indeed be true as the stills at Glemorangie are among the tallest in Scotland and it is claimed that tall stills only allow the lightest spirits to pass. Glenmorangie is also an interesting distillery to visit because the whisky is offered in a very wide range of finishes. You may chose from whisky that has been “finished” in a variety of casks e.g.

Fino Sherry, Ruby Port, Dry Oloroso, Malmsey Madiera, Claret and even Cote de Beaune red wine. If further recommendation is required, then you may like to know that Glenmorangie is the best selling malt in Scotland. Regular tours start at 10.30am and the last tour is one hour before closing. Glenmorangie Distillery: All about it. Text from The Whisky Trails, Copyright © Gordon Brown 1993: Glenmorangie is the best-selling malt whisky in Scotland and the distillery that makes it sits at the bottom of a slope on the shore of the Dornoch Firth.

The setting is very much a little ‘glen of tranquillity’, as the translation from the Gaelic describes it. Glenmorangie is close to the Royal Burgh of Tain, one of Scotland’s oldest towns and long a place of pilgrimage due to its being the birthplace of St Duthus around the year 1000 AD. Assorted buildings climb the slope above the warehouses at the water’s edge and in summer stone-built distillery cottages are smothered in flowers. Documentation about distilling at the old Morangie farmhouse goes back at least 250 years to the 1730s, but the licensed activity began in 1843 with the conversion of a brewery by William Mathieson. The water at Glenmorangie is hard and 100 years old by the time it bubbles up in the Tarlogie Springs, which can be visited in the adjacent woodland. Glenmorangie Single Malt Scotch Whisky from the Highlands.

Glenmorangie Distillery, Single malt whiskey wisky, Tain, Highlands of Scotland, whisky tours, scottish distilleries. Glenmorangie tasting notes. Glenmorangie - Scotch malt whisky distillery profile. The Glenmorangie distillery in the Northern Highlands of Scotland can be credited with the popularisation of the idea of 'finished malt whisky' - although I'm not sure if they were also the first to apply the technique of double maturation in another cask. Around 1995 Glenmorangie released three different ' wood finishes' - a Port Finish, a Madeira Finish and a Sherry Finish.

Later on some more finished 'limited releases' were bottled. For a few years Glenmorangie was virtually the only malt whisky distillery to use 'deviant' casks for the maturation of their stocks, but around the year 2000 more and more whisky distilleries in Scotland started to experiment with unusual casks that had no place in the whisky tradition. Particularly Bruichladdich and Edradour turned into radical finishing freaks, taking the concept of double maturation further than Glenmorangie ever did. Personally, I prefer some of these 'finishes' to the regular product...

But is it any good? Tain Community Website - Glenmorangie Distillery. The Source of Scotland's Favourite Malt In the far north of Scotland, beyond Inverness and half a mile from the Ancient and Royal Burgh of Tain, lies the distillery that creates the whisky nation's favourite dram - Glenmorangie. A dram that today reaches all four corners of the globe. Think "orange" when you pronounce it - the name rolls on the tongue just like the rich bodied whisky. Think "heaven" when you visit it, for its cluster of barns and outbuildings lie in a tranquil glen overlooking the shores of the Dornoch Firth. In fact, locally, Glenmorangie is known as the "Glen of Tranquility".

The source of the all-important water (in Glenmorangie's case uniquely hard and mineral rich) is a short walk from the distillery - the Tarlogie Springs. A little nearer heaven At Glenmorangie Distillery the gleaming swan-necked copper stills - the tallest in Scotland - play a vital role in the making of Scotland's favourite dram. In the Original Still House Purchased at Source Opening Times. Early Historic Scotland.