Lochside
Lochside's imposing white tower was once unmissable, but is now missed from the Montrose skyline.
Lochside's imposing white tower was once unmissable, but is now missed from the Montrose skyline.
A malt, a blend and a grain make up this trio of whiskies from Sutcliffe & Son.
Late 19th century distillery designed by Charles Doig, now owned by John Dewar & Sons.
This Inverness malt distillery was a forerunner of innovation though sadly demolished in 1983.
Part of Chivas Brothers' portfolio, Aberlour is best known for its cult expression, A'Bunadh.
An historic site given a new lease of life as a grassy, malty Lowland malt.
A blink-and-you’ll-miss-it Caithness farm distillery that opened and shut in 1798.
The most successful blended Scotch created by one of Glasgow’s great brokers, Wm Lundie & Co.
A distillery west of Glasgow, at the village of Duntocher, on the Clyde's north bank.
Blended malt born by mistake at Glenmorangie’s blending plant after some clever lateral thinking.
This series of three independently bottled blended malts raised thousands for charity.
The last remaining whisky in Lombard Brands’ dinner-oriented Illustration Malts series.
Blended malt whisky produced to mimic the style produced by one of Fife’s lost distilleries.
An early 19th century lost distillery located in its namesake village in Stirlingshire.
Fleeting rural 19th century distillery that operated in the village of Blackburn near Aberdeen.
A rural distillery near the harbour village of Portgordon – then Banffshire, now Moray.
A 19th century distillery that was once located in its namesake village in Perthshire.
This early 19th century village distillery lasted a good 15 years – a notable feat for the time.
A rural distillery that survived nine years from 1817 to 1826 under two distillers in the ...
A short-lived distillery in the village of Rhu, on the east shore of Gareloch.
A demolished distillery situated in its namesake village, in Stirlingshire, now East Dunbartonshire.
A distillery at its namesake village in the Black Isle with a 35-year history, 22 of them silent.
Airdrie, also known as Tobermore, was a successful and relatively long-surviving distillery.
Possibly the same distillery as Auchtergaven, Bankfoot distillery is an anomaly.
A distillery once located in Perthshire on Loch Tay’s south shore, possibly also called Lochtayside.
One of countless short-lived distilleries in Inverness-shire, also known as Ardersier.
An Aberdeenshire distillery that survived seven years of the 19th century, quite a feat at the time.
A far-flung distillery on the Isle of Tiree that distilled in the early 19th century.
A long-lost farm distillery, once sited between Musselburgh and Tranent.
A small Perthshire distillery that flowered and withered in the early 19th century.
A lost Stirlingshire distillery. Not to be confused with the many blends that use the Bard’s name.
A lost rural 19th century Perthshire distillery, the precise location of which is ambiguous.
A rural distillery at Beauly, in Inverness-shire, that stood beside the river of the same name.
One of a swathe of lost Islay distilleries, Bridgend was briefly licensed in the early 19th century.
A farm distillery in the Cabrach, Aberdeenshire. One of few legally sanctioned sites in the area.
Distillery established in Lanarkshire in the early 19th century, also known as Wilsontown.
An early 19th century Argyll distillery that became a world-class racing yacht workshop.
A Kirckaldy-located 19th century distillery, whose buildings still survive today.
One of the very earliest registered distilleries in Caithness, indeed the whole of Scotland.
Rathohall, also known as Ratho, was a Midlothian distillery established near Edinburgh in the 1820s.
A distillery at Dunbar, East Lothian, that distilled from 1798 until the mid-1830s.
This short-lived lost distillery was founded by knighted author Sir David Stewart of Garth.
This early 19th century Muthill farm distillery’s buildings still exist today as a cattery.
Balloch distillery stood in or near its namesake castle by the southern tip of Loch Lomond.
Also known as Damhead, this now lost distillery was active near Falkirk in the 1830s.
A Stirlingshire distillery with a long history. Also known as Glenmurray and St Thomas’s Well.
Also spelled Gledfield, this was a fleeting distillery in Ross and Cromarty from 1798-99.
The early 19th century farm distillery at Portmahomack was situated on the Seafield estate.
A here-and-gone distillery at Culbokie in the Ferintosh area of the Black Isle, Easter Ross.
Blended Scotch whisky named after the famous shipwreck that inspired Whisky Galore!
The proprietary brand of what became Ainslie & Heilbron (Distillers) Ltd, an old DCL subsidiary.
A core standard blend in the Chivas Brother’s portfolio, especially popular in Asia.
A popular 20th century blend named after one of the great Glasgow whisky firms – Bulloch Lade.
A heavily peated single malt, distilled on the Isle of Islay at Bruichladdich distillery.
Netherlands-based online retailer that also produces special whisky festival bottlings.
Online fan club run by the former owners of Bladnoch distillery, and bottler of single cask whisky.
An online retailer offering a curated range of Scotch whisky, specialising in single casks.
Former owner of the Clynelish (Brora) distillery in Sutherland.
US owner of The BenRiach Distillery Company, and producer of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee whiskey.
London’s Fortnum & Mason has supplied food, drinks and more to its customers for over 300 years.
Village grocer, ironmonger and wine and spirits merchant that became known for its whisky.
The UK’s highest whisky retailer and independent bottler in Tomintoul.
Independent bottler and blender with plans to revive Perth’s whisky heritage.
The holding company created to build and operate Isle of Harris distillery.
Operator of the Tomintoul distillery at Ballindalloch, and previous owner of Fettercairn.
Edinburgh-based company behind the first Scotch whisky distillery on the Isle of Raasay.
A multifarious whisky shop, museum, café and independent bottler based in Rendsburg, Germany.
A famous name in the world of Scotch whisky and wine, and one which has survived to the present day.
Retailer and importer of Scotch whisky based on the island of Malmö in Central Sweden.
This Germany-based independent whisky retailer is the creator of the annual Whisky Calendar.
Independent whisky retailer in Zurich, which occasionally offers its own label Scotch.
Danish wine and spirits store stocking a small selection of own-label Scotch whisky.
German whisky and cigar merchant that offers customers occasional single casks under its own label.
German whisky retailer specialising in Scotch whisky with a small number of own label bottlings.
Swiss wine and spirits importer and retailer located near Aargau.
Nineteenth-century Yorkshire food retailer with its own selection of Scotch whiskies.
Speyside hotel and bar, located in Craigellachie at the heart of Scotland’s Malt Whisky Trail.
John Milroy’s company under which the Frisky Whisky range was bottled.
A high-end grocer and delicatessen based in Munich, Germany with its own line of own-label whiskies.
Young Italian independent bottler with a meticulous focus on single cask whiskies.
Danish whisky retailer owned by Brian Toft, which also offers its own independent bottlings.
California-based wine merchant and auctioneer that bottles single malts under the Faultline label.
Small Cumbria-based indie bottler with a number of interesting but obscure whiskies to its name.
A whisky and tobacco merchant founded in Glasgow in 1874, now with stores across the UK.
American bottler specialising in Scotch and world whiskies under the Single Cask Nation label.
Subsidiary of The Glenmorangie Company Ltd that once bottled the notorious 80:20 blend.