Benromach distillery explained

Benromach distillery
Type:Speyside
Location:Forres, Moray, Scotland
Owner:Gordon & MacPhail
Architect:Charles C. Doig
Status:Operational
Source:Chapelton Springs in the Romach Hills
Stills:1 wash stills
1 spirit stlls[1]
Capacity:400,000 litres
Brand 1:Benromach
Type 1:Single malt
Misc Heading:Map

Benromach distillery is a Speyside distillery founded by Duncan McCallum and F.W. Brickman in 1898 and currently owned and run by Gordon and Macphail of Elgin. It is situated near Forres in Morayshire and is fed with spring water from the Chapelton Springs in the Romach Hills beside Forres.

History

Duncan MacCallum and F.W. Brickmann founded the Benromach Distillery Company in 1898. Duncan MacCallum had previously been working at the Glen Nevis Distillery in Campbeltown and FW Brickmann was a spirit broker in Leith, Edinburgh. Construction work started at the site of Benromach Distillery in 1898 however due to the depression in the Scotch Whisky industry in 1898 the distillery did not start producing whisky until 1900 but closed the same year due to a lack of money.

In 1911 Benromach was acquired by the London based Harvey McNair & Co who continued distilling until the onset of the First World War. After the war Benromach was acquired by Benromach Distillery Ltd and was run by this new private company until 1925. In 1938 Benromach was acquired by Associated Scottish Distilleries Ltd which later became a part of Scottish Malt Distillers Ltd. Between 1966 and 1974 the distillery was modernised and continued to run until 1983 when the distillery was officially closed.

In 1993 Gordon and MacPhail took over the site and in 1997 they started to restore the distillery to a working order. The design of the distillery was changed slightly to allow it to be operated by one man. Finally in 1998 the distillery was officially reopened by Charles, Prince of Wales and bottling of the new malt started in 2004.[2]

At the World Whisky Awards 2014, Benromach 10 Years Old won gold in the "Best Speyside Single Malt – 12 Years and Under" category.

Scotland's Malt Whisky Trail is a tourism initiative featuring seven working Speyside distilleries including Benromach, a historic distillery (Dallas Dhu, now a museum) and the Speyside Cooperage. According to a BBC article, visitors can try some of the whiskeys and "see the traditional dunnage warehouse (where the whiskys are stored to mature), the mash tun, the burnished copper stills — and the cask signed by Prince Charles".[3]

Production information

Benromach's annual output is around 400,000 litres of cask strength whisky.

Products

Current products

Past products

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20160821170537/https://www.whisky.com/whisky-database/distilleries/details/fdb/Distilleries/Details//benromach.html Benromach on Whisky.com
  2. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Acdb_wFujEx6QiReeKe8xHZHFniKvRe6/view Malt Whisky Trail
  3. Web site: Exploring Scotland's historic whisky trail.