GLENMORANGIE

Casks maturing at The Glenmorangie Distillery

'Glenmorangie'—"the Glen of Tranquility"—is a distiller of single malt Scotch whisky, located on the south coast of the Dornoch Firth, one mile northwest of the town of Tain, Ross, Scotland and is a Highland Whisky. It is the best-selling single malt in the United Kingdom market, and has been best-selling single malt in Scotland for over 47 years—"Scotland's Favourite Malt".
Glenmorangie is distilled in the tallest pot stills in Scotland, at over 5.1 m (16 feet 10 inches) in height. The distillery claims that this produces the purest, lightest spirit possible, due to the high level of reflux the spirit undergoes during the distillation process. The whisky is distributed in 10-, 12-, 15-, and 18-year-old varieties, as well as older caskings in special releases. The Glenmorangie is initially aged in American bourbon casks made of white oak from the Ozark Mountains of Missouri.
Glenmorangie's quality standards dictate that these casks are made of specially selected, slow-growth wood and then air-dried for two years. Casks are then seasoned by either Heaven Hill or Jack Daniel's distillery for a further five years, to remove unwanted levels of wood tannins. Seven years since the trees were felled, casks are ready for Glenmorangie to age their spirit. Exclusive use of American white oak imparts delicate but complex aromas of vanilla, citrus orange and delicate floral hints. Glenmorangie 10 Years Old was tested by a French perfume house and found to contain at least 26 separate identifiable aromas.
Also released are a range of malts that, after aging in ex-bourbon white oak casks, are transferred to casks that have been used previously to mature wines. This process is known as ''finishing''.
Glenmorangie offers whisky finished in sherry, port wine, madeira, and burgundy casks as part of their permanently available portfolio. For the enthusiast, from time to time they also release rare, "Special" Wood Finishes. Examples from the past have been the award winning Sauterne Finish, the Tain l'Hermitage Finish and the most recent, Margaux Cask Finish (rumoured to have been finished in the very finest Château Margaux casks).
Another Glenmorangie innovation is their bottling of whisky that has matured in casks in the distillery's cellar, number 13, that lies closest to the sea. It is thought that this different environment gives the whisky a character distinct from the standard Glenmorangie.
Glenmorangie refuses to sell whisky for use in blends, fearing that casks will find their way to independent bottlers. Recently, the distillery has sold casks to blenders with a small amount of Glen Moray Single Malt added, so that the whisky is technically a vatted malt, and can not legally be bottled and sold as a single. Note that Glen Moray distillery is owned by the same parent company, Glenmorangie plc.

Contents
The Glenmorangie Company.
Pronunciation
Tasting Notes
References
See also
External links

The Glenmorangie Company.


Glenmorangie used to be controlled by the Macdonald family, who helped to found it in 1893. It is now no longer an independent distiller. In 2004, the family sold it to Moet Hennessy, which is owned by the French LVMH.[1]
The company also produces another successful single malt, Ardbeg, on the Island of Islay, which was revitalised by the company in 1997. Other brands are the Speyside single malt Glen Moray. They also handle Bailie Nicol Jarvie, Martin's Deluxe and Highland Queen blends. The bottling plant and Headquarters are currently in Broxburn, west of Edinburgh.

Pronunciation


The correct pronunciation of the name places the emphasis on "MORRangie" (as in the pronunciation of "orangey"),[2] not the "moRAN-gie", as commonly mis-pronounced by UK and U.S. consumers alike.

Tasting Notes


Glenmorangie Cellar 13 is a relatively rare whisky from the Glenmorangie distillery. It presents with strong complex spicey notes that are sharp on the nose with a hint of lemon icing. A warming honey and spice flavour with a backdraft of smoke leaves a lingering aftertaste.

References


1. Glenmorangie snapped up for £300m

2. Pronunciation John Butler

See also



Whisky

Scotch whisky

List of whisky brands

List of distilleries in Scotland

External links



Glenmorangie official website

Details of how to visit Glenmorangie distillery

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