Dailuaine

Dailuaine Distillery sign

Dailuaine Distillery sign


DAILUAINE
 


Location : Carron, Morayshire. Grampian Region. (At Ben Rinnes and the river Spey) not far from Aberlour.
Region : Highland – Speyside
Country : Scotland
Type : Scotch
Distillery :  Dailuaine Distillery
Carron, Aberlour, Banffshire AB38 7RE
Phone : 01340-810361
Fax : 01340-872504
Manager : Alan Barclay
Founded : 1852 and rebuilt several times (Expanded by Thomas Mackenzie in the start of the 1890's)
Other sources says it's established in 1851 (Some say 1815 but must be a type error)
Owner :  DCL (Dewar, DCL W.P. Lowrie and Johnnie Walker.)
Latest new : United Distillers
Producer :  ?
Water : Bailliemullich burn (River Spey ?)
Remark : Only Blending or endependent vintage. A component of the Johnnie Walker blends. 
They use ex-bourbon casks
The Dailuaine (Dale-yoo-in) distillery have 3 wash stills and 3 spirit stills.

From The Dailuaine distillery folder:
For more than 100 years distillery "pluggies" puffed through the Highland daily, talking supplies of barley and coal to the distilleries and returning loaded with casks of whisky.
At DAILUAINE an engine driver, fireman and railwayman were employed full-time to run the much-loved steam locomotive whose gleaming paintwork and polished brass and copper made her a "joy to behold".
The engine was one of the last to run and is now being restored by United Distillers.

William Mackenzie, a farmer at Carron and Rinnachat, founded the distillery in 1851 in hollow by the Carron Burn and named it from the Gaelic for "the green vale".
By 1863, the arrival of the Strathspey Railway at Carron, only some three miles away, opened up the outside world and influenced the long-term future of Dailuaine Distilllery which was eventually to be linked by its own siding into the network of the "whisky railway" of the Highlands.
When Mackenzie died in 1865 the distillery was let until 1879 when his son, Thomas Mackenzie, became a partner in the business and set out to rebuild Dailuaine in a larger and more modern style and, with an annual output of 160,000 gallons, making it one of the largest Highland distilleries.
In 1891, Mackenzie & Co was converted into a limited liability company, The Dailuaine-Glenlivet Distillery Ltd which seven years later amalgamated with The Talisker Distillery Ltd, Skye, to form Dailuaine-Talisker Distilleries Ltd.
Thomas Mackenzie, who had a substantial interest in the Talisker Distillery, became chairman and managing director of the new company, which also owned a grain whisky distillery in Aberdeen and Imperial Distillery, which Mackenzie had built on the Speyside railway at Carron Station.
By 1907 railway sidings linked Dailuaine with Imperial and Carron warehouses. Mackenzie was an ambitious entrepreneur who strove to develop the company's business in whisky blending as well as distilling, setting up agencies for their brands at home and abroad.

Not long afterwards the whisky industry was affected by a recession and in 1910 the company traded at a loss and went on to suffer a series of misfortunes, with heavily reduced demand, lawsuits and the destruction of the Aberdeen distillery by fire.
When Mackenzie died in 1915, a widower with no family, the business was bought by a consortium of customers, including James Buchanan & Co. Ltd, John Dewar & Sons Ltd and John Walker and Sons Ltd, all part of United Distillers.
Dailuaine was substantially rebuilt after a fire in 1917 which caused extensive damage and production resumed in 1920 after which, for the next 40 years, Dailuaine relied on diverse and ingenious sources of power for lighting and for driving the machinery.
Four steam engines were employed and two water wheels gave an alternative source of power for the maltings. These water wheels worked in tandem; one was sited next to the main engine so that it could be connected during a drought or other emergency, and the other was about 200 metres away, by the burn – the two were coupled by a continuous wire rope supported on overlead pulleys.
Dailuaine was connected to the national electric grid in 1950 and a major reconstruction took place in 1959-60. The stillhouse, which had been increased from four to six stills was modernised in 1965; a new mash tun was installed in 1993.
Two years later the Strathspey railway closed and the much-loved puggies ceased to run. An 0-4-0 saddletank locomotive, made by Barclay of Kilmarnock in 1897, had worked the line until 1939, when it was replaced by another Barclay engine, Dailuaine No. I, which a retired British Rail engine driver described as "truly a joy to behold", with well-cleaned paintwork and polished brass and copper.
Distillery employees gave Dailuaine's puggy its last unofficial run in 1970 when it was removed to the Strathspey Railway Association steam railway at Boat of Garten, Inverness-shire. However, No. I has now been returned to United Distillers and is being restored for display at Aberfeldy Distillery.
Today Dailuaine can be enjoyed as a single malt available at the distillery and selected outlets in bottles featuring the distillery symbol of a badger, a species associated with the surrounding area.


Dailuaine Pictures taken by AWA – Dufftown 2000 Whisky Festival.

A W A Photo strip A W A Photo strip A W A Photo strip
Dailuiane sign Dailuiane Spirit safe Dailuiane stills
A W A Photo strip A W A Photo strip A W A Photo strip

BOTTLINGS


Whisky bottling
Sorry no picture.  
Age : 22 years old.
Vol : 46%
Type : ?
Price ?
Taste : ?
Remark : None at present time.

LINKS………. to official Dailuaine or related web pages.
URL : None at present time.


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Cardhu

Cardhu Scotch whisky

Cardhu Scotch whisky


CARDHU (AKA Cardow)
 


Location : Knockando, Morayshire. Gramp Region.
Region : Highland – Gramp Region
Country : Scotland
Type : Highland Speyside. Single-Malt
Distillery :  John Walker & Sons Ltd. 
Producer : United Distillers.
Aberlour, Banffshire AB38, 7RY
Phone: 01340-810204
Fax: 01340-810491
Manager: Charlie Smith
Founded : 1824 by John Cummings. 
Rebuilt in 1872 by Elizabeth Cumming (Her son became director of Johnny Walker.)
Owner : United Distillers
Producer :  ?
Water : Mannoch Hill. Springs on the Mannoch Hill and the Lyne Burn.
Remark : Used in Johnnie Walker blend together with Talisker.
They use ex-bourbon and sherry cask.
Cardhu (Kaar-doo) have 3 wash still's and 3 spirit stills.


Rip from another site… (Source is unf. lost)

Cardhu

NEEDS TO BE EXPERIENCED

From its origins in a small farmhouse on the windswept braes below Dallas Moor to its international acclaim as a great Highland Single Malt Whisky, the history of the Cardhu is a classic of its kind. Distilling whisky was, in Scotland's history, a small-scale family affair.

The name of the farm in its anglicised spelling was Cardow Farm, but to the gaelic speaking locals, it was Cardhu -The Black Rock.

It is a unique characteristic of Cardhu that, in a whisky world dominated by men, women have played a major part in the history of the brand.

It was under Elizabeth Cumming's direction that Cardhu grew from a tiny, local distillery to one of the leading Speyside Single Malts.

The quality of Cardhu's product attracted many would be buyers. Finally in 1893, Elizabeth sold the distillery to John Walker & Sons of Kilmarnock and her son was installed as manager of the distillery, and a board member of Walker's with a substantial shareholding. Although a few bottles of Cardhu single malt became available over the years it was a key ingredient of the firm's famous "Johnnie Walker" that Cardhu was enjoyed, unknowingly, by Scotch drinkers the world over.

The history of the distillery, its treasured arts and traditions, the pure, clean flavour of the natural Highland ingredients, the care of making and the long, slow maturing are all to be tasted in a glass of Golden Cardhu – Truly a great Highland Single Malt.

A request from Chris:
Dear sir/madam
I am researching my family history.  My surname is cardow and i would like to know if you can give me any information on that family surname.


BOTTLINGS


Cardhu
Cardhu whisky bottle  
Age : 12 years old.
Vol : 40%
Type : Highland Malt
Price ?
Taste : A nice soft, bit sweet whisky – good for malt beginers
Remark : My mother like's it (Even my old dog did !)
Personal taste: CP GI MK FS FR Average. Remark Bemærkning…
Package/Info   07         Nice dark red box Flot mørkerød æske !
Bottle 08 08         Cool ! Cool ! – Fed flaske.
Label   07         Cool Cool
Cork/Prop ?    08         Wood and cork. Træ og kork.
Color   07            
Smell   07         Sweet  
Taste   07         A bit sweet with a light malt taste. Forresten, jeg smagte en ny whisky ude hos den gamle.. en Cardhu 12 års. Det er en single malt fra Speyside området… nærmere betagnet Knockando. 
Smager en anelse sprittet, vil tro den ligger i øverste halvdel af listen. 
Jeg havde godt nok ikke hørt om den før… /FS
Aftertaste   08         Not much but gentle and nice.  
Price/Quality   07       06    

Cardow
Sorry no picture.  
Age : ? years old.
Vol : ?%
Type : ?
Price ?
Taste : ?
Remark : None at present time.

Cardhu Scotch Whisky - The Cardhu whisky logoPicture delivered by : rasmus.n@vip.cybercity.dk


LINKS………. to official CARDHU (AKA Cardow) or related web pages.
URL : None at present time.


Home WhiskyLinks WhiskyShops WhiskyIndex WhiskyStills WhiskyBooks About Whisky News Jokes Test ContactForm


AWA – Alternative Whisky Academy is a private, none-commercial, no-profit, none-selling whisky society.