Black Watch
Chivas Brothers-owned blend originally known as 100 Pipers of the Black Watch.
Victorian blend that became world-famous thanks to its friendly black and white terrier mascots.
Lochside's imposing white tower was once unmissable, but is now missed from the Montrose skyline.
One of the world’s most recognisable blended Scotch whisky brands with roots in Victorian Scotland.
Guardbridge’s Eden Mill is Scotland’s first combined brewery and distillery.
The smallest legal stills in Scotland live in an area famed for its illicit ‘whisky’.
A malt, a blend and a grain make up this trio of whiskies from Sutcliffe & Son.
Lowland malt distillery situated beside the Garnheath grain plant within Airdrie’s Moffat complex.
Blended Scotch whisky produced by Marussia Beverages that was named after a great Scottish warship.
A Lowland grain distillery now transformed into Diageo’s cooperage hub in Alloa.
One of the Lowland grain distilleries forming the naissance of DCL in the 19th century.
Sympathetic malt distillery built in homage to the adjacent historical Fife abbey.
Experimental Highlands distillery operating from an old fire station beside a castle.
This enduring Scotch whisky is best known for its associations to explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton.
BrewDog’s experimental whisky and spirits distillery is anything but conventional.
A here-and-gone distillery at Culbokie in the Ferintosh area of the Black Isle, Easter Ross.
Single malt distillery owned by Diageo, located on the banks of the Strathspey.
Compass Box’s flagship blended grain whisky broke the mould upon its introduction in 2000.
This Inverness malt distillery was a forerunner of innovation though sadly demolished in 1983.
Once Scotland’s most easterly distillery that fell victim to the 1980s whisky loch.
An old-style whisky that echoes the substantial Victorian buildings in which it’s made.
Part of Chivas Brothers' portfolio, Aberlour is best known for its cult expression, A'Bunadh.
One of the oldest distilleries in Speyside and one that still uses direct fire to heat its stills.
Short-lived malt distillery incorporated into Airdrie’s Moffat complex beside Glen Flagler.
Short-lived malt distillery built within the Invergordon grain complex.
Late 19th century distillery designed by Charles Doig, now owned by John Dewar & Sons.
Nineteenth century Highland malt distillery once operated by Canadian whisky baron Joseph Hobbs.
Diageo's Islay distillery produces a smoky, coastal malt, and was once home to the famed Malt Mill.
Also known as Brechin, North Port was a family-owned distillery bought out and closed by DCL.
Delicate, fruity Speysider recently relaunched as a single malt whisky.
A producer of malt for blending, Royal Brackla became the first Scotch to obtain a Royal Warrant.
This Lowland malt with its gentle, fruity palate, commands a dedicated following.
The biggest, and most iconic, blended Scotch whisky is recognisable the world over.
First produced in Victorian Inverness, this blended Scotch has established a following Stateside.
This blended Scotch whisky was created in honour of the ruined Mull castle and seat of Clan Maclean.
A distillery at its namesake village in the Black Isle with a 35-year history, 22 of them silent.
Single grain Scotch whisky endorsed by David Beckham, with its roots in 17th century Scotland.
Some grain whisky from the lost North of Scotland distillery was bottled under the name ‘Alloa’.
The most successful blended Scotch created by one of Glasgow’s great brokers, Wm Lundie & Co.
One of the world’s best-selling Scotch whiskies, with a strong following in France.
Today this historic Scotch brand created by Macdonald & Muir covers both blends and single malts.
The Teacher’s blend is notable for its high malt content and use of peaty malt whisky.
Brand created to mark the birthday milestones of William Grant’s granddaughter, Janet Sheed Roberts.
A core standard blend in the Chivas Brother’s portfolio, especially popular in Asia.
A blink-and-you’ll-miss-it Caithness farm distillery that opened and shut in 1798.
This blended malt is designed to mimic the character of Perthshire’s lost Auchnagie distillery.
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.
One of two blended malts introduced by Lombard Brands to reflect a region’s characteristics.
Blended malt created to closely mirror the style of one of Speyside’s lost distilleries.
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.
Although named after a lost Campbeltown distillery, Glen Nevis contained different whisky entirely.
Pebble Beach was a transient brand designed to reveal Speyside’s characteristics.
Spice-led blended malt from Compass Box, which gets its flavour from three Highland whiskies.
Fleeting rural 19th century distillery that operated in the village of Blackburn near Aberdeen.
Scotland’s first community-owned distillery is also 100% powered by renewable energy.
Glasgow’s first standalone malt distillery for over 100 years has its own ‘metropolitan’ style.
Heastigro is another quaintly-named and short-lived Caithness distillery, licensed to John Gun ...
A farm distillery once located near Inchinnan in Renfrewshire in the 18th century.
An early 19th century distillery in Ross and Cromarty, the site of which is now said to be haunted.
Remote west coast distillery producing a light, fruity and 100% organic single malt spirit.
An enigmatic distillery near Whithorn whose location and licence-holder remain a complete mystery.
A long-defunct distillery at Portsoy, on the Moray Firth. Also known as Burnside.
Campbeltown’s smallest distillery, Springside managed to survive an astonishing 99 years.
An urban distillery in Aberdeen in the Gilcomston area with a near-90 year history.
Hailed as Scotland’s first single estate distillery, and the first within a castle’s grounds.
One of the few legal distilleries on the Isle of Lewis, which was also known as Ness.
Micro-distillery built at Lagavulin with one of the most enigmatic tales in Scotch whisky history.
Lost 18th century distillery in Morayshire whose unidentified distiller went bankrupt in 1795.
A family-run Perthshire operation that distilled whisky for a short time in the 1820s.
An early 19th century distillery that operated briefly in Alexandria, Dunbartonshire.
One of Stirlingshire’s many lost distilleries, which operated at the end of the 18th century.
A lost distillery that operated somewhere on Aberdeen’s northern edge in the late 18th century.
Airdrie, also known as Tobermore, was a successful and relatively long-surviving distillery.
A Kirckaldy-located 19th century distillery, whose buildings still survive today.
This early 19th century Muthill farm distillery’s buildings still exist today as a cattery.
Early Glasgow distillery, also known as Hutchesontown, which sat on the River Clyde.
An isolated Perthshire farm distillery on the lower slopes of Farragon Hill and Creag A' Mhadaidh.
Diageo’s little-known experimental distillery, situated within the Leven bottling facility.
One of Aberdeenshire’s lost 19th century distilleries, also known as Inverary and Inverurie.
An early 19th century Argyll distillery that became a world-class racing yacht workshop.
The first example of a Lomond still was situated at the Lomond distillery in the Dumbarton complex.
Short-lived malt distillery situated within North of Scotland grain distillery in Cambus.
The Imperial distillery made way for Chivas Brothers’ modern yet historically-sympathetic Dalmunach.
Annandale produces two types of single malt whisky, neither of which will be ready until 2018.
The small town of Dunkeld housed a distillery that operated for just a few years in the 1800s.
The new addition to Glasgow’s distilling revival is a blend of tradition and originality.
One of countless short-lived distilleries in Inverness-shire, also known as Ardersier.
This Glasgow distillery ran for a brief spell near Bridgeton station in the early 19th century.
A distillery west of Glasgow, at the village of Duntocher, on the Clyde's north bank.
A rural distillery that survived nine years from 1817 to 1826 under two distillers in the ...
A short-lived distillery in Kilmahoe parish, Dumfriesshire, that operated in the early 1830s.
A 19th century distillery that was once located in its namesake village in Perthshire.
Blended Scotch whisky named after the famous shipwreck that inspired Whisky Galore!
Another successful colour-coded Scotch blend, if not quite as famous as Johnnie Walker or Dewar’s.
Blended Scotch with one of the longest histories of any continuously-produced whisky.
This historic blend is linked to Ben Nevis and Tormore, and named after a notorious bootlegger.
This malt whisky is rare indeed, and comes from a defunct whisky broker in London.
Well-aged blended Scotch whisky forming part of Murray McDavid’s Crafted Blend series.
A remarkably enduring blend from Victorian Edinburgh containing some of the ‘finest malt whisky’.
This trio of single malts – Dufftown, Glen Ord and Glendullan – has given Diageo a top five brand.
Popular in export markets, this blend became a firm favourite of one of the world’s richest men.
Living up to its name, bottles of Big Boy featured a strikingly strong Highlander carrying a cask.
Single malt whisky produced at Tobermory distillery, initially for a tax exemption scheme.
A late Victorian blend produced by the eponymous distiller Peter Dawson, now owned by Diageo.
A now discontinued light, fruity single malt from Loch Lomond distillery in Alexandria.
The proprietary brand of what became Ainslie & Heilbron (Distillers) Ltd, an old DCL subsidiary.
Value blend produced by Loch Lomond Group that enjoys considerable success in the UK and overseas.
Standard Scotch blend created by the Tanist Bonding Company exclusively for sale in Italy.
A vanished Perthshire blend from the house of Arthur Bell & Sons, now owned by Diageo.
Scotch blend created for the Italian market by the Tanist Bonding Company of Glasgow.
This historic blended Scotch was first created by Skye blender Ian Macleod in the mid-1900s.
Popular blended Scotch and single malt whisky brand sold in over 40 countries around the world.
Blended Scotch whisky produced by the eponymous Glasgow merchant during the 1970s.
A popular 20th century blend named after one of the great Glasgow whisky firms – Bulloch Lade.
A curiosity among blends that is still in production over 120 years since it was first created.
A venerable old Glaswegian blend with a distinctive ‘thin red line’ down the label.
The flagship blend of John Haig & Co. was the first spirit to smash the million case barrier.
The blended Scotch whisky that kick-started the Douglas Laing firm, first created in 1886.
Founded in Glasgow in 1882, Whyte & Mackay is one of Scotland’s most enduring blends.
A now dormant blended Scotch owned by Morrison Bowmore that has its roots in the 1930s.
Bottled in colourful ceramic decanters, this blended Scotch aims high when it comes to age.
Blended Scotch whisky brand created to commemorate the Queen Elizabeth II’s Silver Jubilee.
A one-off blend that appeared briefly in 1986 to celebrate its namesake town’s centenary.
A sister brand to Abbot’s Choice, Chequers was an occasional deluxe blend from John McEwan & Co.
Deluxe blend introduced by Matthew Gloag & Sons around the time of The Famous Grouse.
Blended Scotch that remains part of the diverse range of products made at Loch Lomond distillery.
A defunct William Whiteley & Co. blended Scotch designed for locomotive consumption.
A long established blend from an old Glasgow whisky firm, that is still popular in Asia.
An export-only blend from the late-Victorian era that became ingrained in Glenmorangie plc’s DNA.
Purchasers of this blended Scotch could have their name inscribed on the label gratis.
The peated single malt produced at Speyside’s Tomintoul distillery, near Ballindalloch.
A curated collection of single malts distilled on Islay and bottled under the Port Askaig brand.
The much-hyped up 40-year-old single malt released by Aldi in 2011 for less than £50.
An experimental peated Speyside malt produced at Glen Keith distillery on Speyside in the 1970s.
Heavily peated Lowland malt produced at the short-lived Killyloch distillery in Airdrie.
Luxury single malt produced for Indian drinks company Tilaknagar Industries by Benriach distillery.
An experimental peated single malt whisky produced at the now demolished Littlemill distillery.
Glasgow-based owner of The Ileach, Black Cuillin and Pibroch single malts.
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.
One of the ‘Big Five’ producers that grew from a one-man business into a global empire.
An online retailer offering a curated range of Scotch whisky, specialising in single casks.
Producer of a range of blended malts and single cask Scotch whisky expressions.
Independent bottling company and Islay whisky distiller based in Glasgow.
US-based liquor giant that held significant Scotch interests during the 20th century.
A prolific distiller and blender that eventually became part of The Edrington Group.
Dutch producer and distributor of wine and spirits, and owner of the UK’s Mossburn Distillers.
Leith-based whisky blender most famous for its Vat 69 blend.
British brewer, hotelier and restaurateur that at one time owned five Scotch whisky distilleries.
Prolific English gin and Scotch whisky distiller and blender that became Long John International.
Once owner of Lagavulin distillery and creator of the globally successful White Horse blend.
Former owner of the Clynelish (Brora) distillery in Sutherland.
US owner of The BenRiach Distillery Company, and producer of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee whiskey.
Former owner of Edradour distillery and a range of blended Scotch whiskies.
Owner of two distilleries in in the Argyllshire port of Campbeltown.
Distilling and blending company whose whisky was on board the ill-fated S.S Politician.
Operator of the Borders’ first legal whisky distillery in 180 years.
A hotel and catering conglomerate which became one of the world’s top wine and spirit producers.
Distiller and blender that was integral to the formation of Diageo as we know it today.
Shetland-based operator of Saxa Vord, the most northerly distillery in the UK.
Canadian distiller Hiram Walker-Gooderham & Worts’ Scotch whisky operation.
Private bottling plant that transformed into a substantial whisky distiller and blender.
Spanish whisky producer that once owned Lochside distillery in Montrose.
Distilling dynasty best known for its early adoption of the patent still at Cameronbridge.
Family-owned drinks business, best known for the world’s leading single malt whisky, Glenfiddich.
Grain and malt whisky distiller and blender owned by French group La Martiniquaise.
A Scotch whisky distilling and blending company famous for its Teacher’s Highland Cream blend.
An independent distiller and blender that once operated Caol Ila and Tamdhu distilleries.
Distiller and blender responsible for the Queen Anne and Something Special blends.
Blending and distilling operation perhaps most famous today for its London dry gin.
The French subsidiary of Picard Vins & Spiritueux that owns Tullibardine distillery.
London’s Fortnum & Mason has supplied food, drinks and more to its customers for over 300 years.
Long-lost distiller and blender that operated out of Greenock, London and Dublin.
Although incorporated in 1980, the drinks wholesaler can trace its heritage to the 18th century.
Hereford-based producer of Peat’s Beast, The Corriemhor and the Rest & Be Thankful range.
A historic name in the world of Scotch whisky, now owned by Ian MacLeod Distillers.
Independent bottler and operator of Dornoch distillery in Sutherland.
Legendary wine merchant that bottled whiskies for a short period in the 1970s and 80s.
London-based independent bottler that produces the Port Askaig and Elements of Islay brands.
Independent bottler and blender with plans to revive Perth’s whisky heritage.
The UK’s highest whisky retailer and independent bottler in Tomintoul.
High-end Campbeltown deli-turned-independent bottler that became a Cadenhead outlet.
Dublin-based wine and spirit merchant founded by Alexander Findlater.
Modern group created to build and operate Glasgow’s first distillery for over 100 years.
A family company that owned and operated a single distillery, Dalmore, for nearly a century.
The story of Glenglassaugh distillery’s operator is a true phoenix-from-the-flames tale.
Operator of Glendronach Distillery near Huntly, which is itself owned by BenRiach Distillery Co.
The holding company created to build and operate Isle of Harris distillery.
Established in 1885 to build North British distillery in opposition to DCL’s grain whisky monopoly.
The holding company of Laphroaig distillery, now owned by US-Japan entity, Beam Suntory.
Holding company established by the Wemyss family to purchase Kingsbarns distillery in Fife.
The Morrison family-owned operator of Aberargie distillery near Perth.
Subsidiary of Burn Stewart Distillers that operates Tobermory distillery on Mull.
Holding company overseeing the construction and operation of the Clydeside distillery in Glasgow.
Company behind the build of Invergordon grain distillery, and operation of six malt distilleries.
Modern holding company responsible for the operation of Islay’s Bunnahabhain distillery.
Edinburgh-based company behind the first Scotch whisky distillery on the Isle of Raasay.
Blending company formed by two First Wold War veterans, best known for its Red Hackle blend.
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.
Kilmarnock-based whisky blender focused on recreating malts from long lost distilleries.
Producer of the Islay Storm single malt, owned by the Highlands & Islands Scotch Whisky Co.
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.
German whisky retailer specialising in Scotch whisky with a small number of own label bottlings.
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.
Nineteenth-century Yorkshire food retailer with its own selection of Scotch whiskies.
The Speyside-based sporting retailer has had a couple of whiskies bottled under its own label.
Defunct Glasgow-based wholesale tea, wine and spirit merchant, specialising in whisky blending.
A humble London wine and spirit merchant that created one of the world’s best selling blends.
Owner of a variety of export Scotch brands and a subsidiary of Acredyke Whisky Ltd.
One of the world’s great Port wine houses also blended and bottled Scotch whiskies.
Defunct brewing and leisure company, with single malt and blended Scotch whisky interests.
Blender and merchant most famous for creating Crabbie’s Green Ginger Wine.
A now defunct company specialising in creating Scotch whisky for export, especially to Italy.
The brand owner, producer and distributor of a range of Scotch whiskies and gins.
Dormant brewing company with Scotch whisky blending and bottling interests.
Cumbria-based brewer that created blended Scotch whisky brand, The Glenlivet-Blend.
Exporter of bulk blended whiskies to the US, Italy, Germany and the Far East.
Early 20th century blender with a focus on brands that reflected the Scottish countryside.
Renfrewshire-based producer of the Glen Ranoch Highland single malt.
Now dissolved whisky exporter and former owner of the Glen Rossie blended Scotch whisky brand.
Swiss wine and spirits importer and retailer located near Aargau.
German independent retailer specialising in rum and whisky, as well as whisky perfume.
One of Europe’s largest budget grocery retailers, with its own line of Scotch whiskies.
Scotch whisky specialist in Frankfurt, Germany known for its ‘whisky seasons calendars’.
Danish whisky events organiser with its own range of limited edition Scotch whiskies.
The global supermarket chain has been selling Scotch under its own label for more than a decade.
A world-renowned whisky bar in Singapore with a selection of whiskies bottled under its name.
The historic Dutch chain of wine and spirits retailers sells whiskies under its own label.
A high-end grocer and delicatessen based in Munich, Germany with its own line of own-label whiskies.
Bar, grill, bottle shop and independent bottler of single malt whiskies in Milan, Italy.
International charge card organisation that occasionally bottled whiskies for its members.
Speyside hotel and bar, located in Craigellachie at the heart of Scotland’s Malt Whisky Trail.
The London-based luxury department store has had several Scotch whiskies bottled under its name.
The historic London wine merchant and bar chain has bottled its own whiskies since the 1980s.
Edinburgh whisky specialist offering ‘try before you buy’ service, with on-site bar and bistro.
A specialist whisky retailer based on the German, tax-exempt archipelago of Heligoland.
James Devereaux was a wholesaler of alcoholic beverages based in London, UK.
German tobacconist selling a range of single malt Scotch whiskies bottled under its own label.
One of Germany’s largest supermarket chains owns Mc Intyre blended Scotch whisky.
Danish whisky retailer owned by Brian Toft, which also offers its own independent bottlings.
A whisky and tobacco merchant founded in Glasgow in 1874, now with stores across the UK.
This Switzerland-based duty free retailer has been bottlings its own whiskies since 2013.
John Milroy’s company under which the Frisky Whisky range was bottled.
Small Cumbria-based indie bottler with a number of interesting but obscure whiskies to its name.
Young Italian independent bottler with a meticulous focus on single cask whiskies.
American bottler specialising in Scotch and world whiskies under the Single Cask Nation label.
California-based wine merchant and auctioneer that bottles single malts under the Faultline label.
Village grocer, ironmonger and wine and spirits merchant that became known for its whisky.
This family-owned independent bottler specialises in cask strength whiskies.
Small, family-owned Scottish company specialising in independent and novelty whisky bottlings.
Britain’s largest wine merchant also bottles whiskies under the Old Harry and First Cask labels.
Subsidiary of The Glenmorangie Company Ltd that once bottled the notorious 80:20 blend.
One of London’s oldest wine merchants with an opaque history and some legendary bottlings.
Small German whisky shop specialising in rare bottles and some in-house independent bottlings.
Whisky and wine specialist based in the Netherlands, which occasionally offers its own bottlings.
Small German distillery and shop with a few independent Scotch whisky bottlings to its name.
Edinburgh-based independent bottler and producer of the whisky cask-rested Firkin Gin.
Independent bottler with a focus on well-matured single cask single malts.
Family-run German spirits importer that regularly bottles its own Scotch whiskies.
German independent whisky bottler dedicated to simple packaging and fair pricing.
Italian bottler with strong historical connections to recent whisky history in Italy.
A small independent Belgian bottler and importer run by whisky writer Bert Bruyneel.
Stuttgart-based whisky retailer with its own small range of independent bottlings.
A family-run German deli and wine merchant chain that also offers its own single cask bottlings.
Indie bottler of luxury whisky expressions aimed exclusively at collectors and investors.