£375.00
GLEN ORD DISTILLERY 16yo
This 16 year old cask strength Highland single malt was laid to rest at the Glen Ord distillery in the mid-1970's and bottled for The Manager's Dram range in 1991. Drawn from refill cask at an eye-watering natural strength 66.2% ABV, this superlative malt scored 92 points on WhiskyFun and was signed by the Distillery Manager on the 20th June 1991.
The Manager's Dram was chosen annually in competition from United Distillers distillery Managers, where a blind nosing would eventually determine the overall winners from over 100 of the finest whiskies.
GLEN ORD DISTILLERY 16yo
The Black Isle was noted for being the site of Ferintosh, the four-strong distillery site which the Forbes family was allowed to operate on a dry free basis from 1688 to 1784 as a reward for supporting the Hanoverian kings. By the early 19th century, it had become the heartland of distillation, with moonshiners sharing the land with nine licensed sites.
The distillery at Muir of Ord was built later, in 1838, by the local laird Thomas MacKenzie, who then leased it out to a succession of owners who ran it with varying degrees of success. Things stabilised in 1896 when the Dundee-based blenders Jas. Watson took charge and expanded the site. Watson’s then sold it on to Dewar’s in 1923 and two years later was absorbed into the greater DCL (Diageo) estate.
It is one of only three distilleries currently which are self-sufficient in their malt requirements [the others are Roseisle and Springbank]. Its original floor maltings were replaced with Saladin boxes in 1961, which in turn were removed when the large drum maltings was built in 1968. Today it produces malt for all of Diageo’s northern plants, Talisker and, on occasion, makes heavily peated malt for Islay.
A recent rise in demand (from blenders and as single malt) has seen Glen Ord expanding twice. The first phase saw capacity rise to 5m LPA and a second (completed in 2014) saw that double to 10m LPA.
It has been available as single malt since the 1980s, although under a confusion of different names: Glen Ord, Glenordie, Ordie, Ord, and Muir of Ord. Diageo has now plumped for Singleton of Glen Ord and is promoting it heavily in the Asian market.
| Weight | 3 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 12 × 40 × 12 cm |

