This bottling of a 50-year-old Glen Mhor single malt was produced by the independent bottler Signatory Vintage in the Cask Strength Collection series as a Rare Reserve. The whisky was distilled in 1965, matured in a refill butt, finished for 88 months in an ex-Oloroso sherry cask and was bottled at cask strength in 2016 in 353 individually numbered bottles.
Glen Mhor was a distillery in Inverness, Scotland, which was founded in 1892 by John Birnie and Charles Mackinlay. It was taken over by The Distillery Company Ltd (DCL) in 1972, but closed in 1983 and demolished in 1986.
Scotland and Scotch whisky is a global trend, a development that has led to a flourishing whisky scene in Scotland. There is hardly a week that goes by in which there is no news about another new distillery being built or the reopening of a distillery that has been closed for a long time.
Scotland, together with Ireland, is today considered the motherland of whisky, whose roots there go back to around 1500 AD.
This bottling of a 50-year-old Glen Mhor single malt was produced by the independent bottler Signatory Vintage in the Cask Strength Collection series as a Rare Reserve. The whisky was distilled in 1965, matured in a refill butt, finished for 88 months in an ex-Oloroso sherry cask and was bottled at cask strength in 2016 in 353 individually numbered bottles.
Glen Mhor was a distillery in Inverness, Scotland, which was founded in 1892 by John Birnie and Charles Mackinlay. It was taken over by The Distillery Company Ltd (DCL) in 1972, but closed in 1983 and demolished in 1986.
Scotland and Scotch whisky is a global trend, a development that has led to a flourishing whisky scene in Scotland. There is hardly a week that goes by in which there is no news about another new distillery being built or the reopening of a distillery that has been closed for a long time.
Scotland, together with Ireland, is today considered the motherland of whisky, whose roots there go back to around 1500 AD.