Whisky Guide > Distillery Profiles > Ardmore Distillery

Ardmore
Ardmore is not widely known as a single malt. With its pungent
peaty taste, Ardmore has always been a vital element in a
famous and distinguished blended Scotch Whisky, Teachers Highland
Cream and, as we discovered during our visit to the distillery,
almost all of its production does actually go for blending.
Fortunately, with the authority of the distillery owners,
Allied Distillers, some of this distinctive whisky is bottled
and sold as a single malt by Gordon & MacPhail.
Ardmore comes from a distillery set deep in the hills of
Aberdeenshire, close to the village of Kennethmont. The rolling
hills in this area are covered with fertile farmland. The
elegant National Trust Leith Hall is situated on the outskirts
of Kennethmont and the main railway line from Inverness to
Aberdeen runs beside the distillery itself.
It was William Teacher’s son, Adam who organised the
construction of Ardmore in 1898. These were the years when
there was a boom in the whisky industry. Over the intervening
years Ardmore has continued to prosper and is now one of the
larger and most modern Scotch Whisky distilleries, with a
total capacity reaching some three million litres.
Walking around the distillery, there are a great many reminders
of the past. The original steam engine, that used to power
the whole operation, still stands proudly gleaming, somewhat
incongruous, behind the modern malting plant used to grind
the grain. Mounted on the wall in the Mash Room, is the side
plate of the distillery’s original mash tun, while the
walls of the Manager’s office are decorated with the
portraits of the original workforce.
When the distillery was established and for many years thereafter,
supplies of barley and coal were transported to the distillery
by rail. The distillery had its own siding which was also
used to load the casks of mature whisky when they were being
dispatched to Teachers in the south. Today some of the buildings,
which formed the station, still stand and mark a bygone era.
Ardmore draws its water from 14 springs on the Knockandy
Hill, which lies to the south of the distillery, cooling water
comes from the burns nearby. Until the late 1970s, barley
was malted at the distillery itself, but in recent years supplies
have come from local commercial maltsters. The fuller more
pungent flavour of the whisky produced here, in contrast to
many other Highland malts, is due to the relatively high peating
levels of the barley.
Malt storage is about 1,000 tonnes and the traditional copper
domed mash tun of a notable 25 feet in diameter mashes 12.0
tonnes. There are 14 wooden wash backs, which have a total
capacity of 90,000 litres. The wash remains here for approximately
48 hours until the fermentation process is complete and is
then fed to the four wash stills.
Ardmore was initially built with two stills, it was extended
in 1958, when a further two stills were added. In 1975, the
capacity was doubled with another four stills, all copies
of the original stills. The stillroom today is the distillery’s
pride and joy and the reasoning for this becomes self-evident.
Viewed from the high-level entrance to the stillroom, the
stills present a magnificent sight - a row of eight elegantly
shaped copper stills, each with an equal capacity of 15,000
litres. The spirit stills vary slightly in shape from the
wash stills in that they have a slightly taller neck.
One of the most striking factors about this stillroom, however,
is that the stills are heated in the traditional manner, direct
with coal furnaces. This is quite unusual as there are not
many distilleries remaining now, which use coal. The stills
have thick bases and chain rummagers inside which stop the
content from burning. The condensers are situated inside the
still house and a heat recovering system has been in operation
for many years.
The old distillery maltings have been converted into a filling
store. Casks are stored in the extensive warehouses, which
are adjacent to the distillery.
The distillery has its own cooperage, where casks are prepared
prior to filling with new whisky. On occasions this entails
the firing or charring of the inside of the cask to help with
the maturing of the whisky.
The fact that Ardmore is very much a traditional distillery
was evident throughout - even to the point of the customary
distillery cat - this one being three legged - warming itself
by the heat of the glowing coals in the still room. But perhaps
the reminders of the past that are found all over the distillery
are significant in so far as they suggest a continued commitment
to the quality of fine malt that has been produced there for
so many years.
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