The ReCollection Collection #3
Since 1895, Gordon & MacPhail has been pushed by a easy mission: To create Single Malt Scotch Whiskies of remarkable high quality in their very own casks. The Recollection Collection revives the spirit and character of now closed or very long time silent Scottish Distilleries. Collection #3 options six single cask whiskies from Rosebank, Glenlochy, Port Ellen, North Port, Imperial and Convalmore Distilleries, every bottled at cask power.
Working with Emmy award-winning illustrator, Bruno Mangyoku, these distilleries have been introduced again to life by means of artworks which rejoice their former glory. These vanishingly uncommon whiskies present a singular alternative to get pleasure from forgotten masterpieces
Rosebank Distillery 1991
32 12 months Previous
£2100.00
The historical past of Rosebank Distillery has been straight linked with the Forth & Clyde canal which sits in its shadow. The waterway linked Scotland’s west and east coasts, and due to this fact its two important cities, Glasgow and Edinburgh.
A distillery referred to as Rosebank was working as early as 1817. From 1840, below the possession of the Rankine household, Rosebank prospered. The canal, nonetheless, grew to become uncared for and the distillery ultimately closed its doorways in 1993. It was reopened below new possession to nice fanfare in 2024.
This launch, a misplaced murals, is among the oldest and rarest Rosebank single malts ever launched.
Convalmore 1984 39 12 months Previous
£2300.00
Opened because the fourth of Dufftown’s famed seven stills within the coronary heart of Speyside in 1894, Convalmore’s waxy, fruity spirit has very not often been seen as a single malt whisky. Devoted nearly fully to blended whiskies, manufacturing was interrupted in 1909 by a hearth.
The distillery expanded in 1964 however was mothballed in 1985. The unique buildings are nonetheless on the positioning however the manufacturing gear has been eliminated. This 39 yr outdated single malt, matured in a bespoke Gordon & MacPhail cask, is a forgotten masterpiece; a misplaced murals that revives the spirit of a bygone period
Glenlochy 1979 44 12 months Previous
£4000.00
Based in 1898, on the banks of the River Nevis shortly after the completion of the West Highland Railway, Glenlochy was effectively positioned to move its whisky to Glasgow. The majority of spirit from its stills was destined for blends so any launch that includes the distillery title is extraordinarily uncommon.
Glenlochy was ultimately closed in 1983 and bought for redevelopment as a resort in 1991. All the authentic buildings have since been demolished other than the kiln constructing, however inside this single malt,its spirit endures
North Port Distillery
1981 44 12 months Previous
£3850.00
Single malts that includes the distillery’s authentic title, Brechin Distillery, are vanishingly uncommon. Based in 1820 close to Scotland’s east coast by three brothers, David, John and Alexander Guthrie,the distillery stood half a mile from the River Esk.
It remained in household possession for over a century, renamed North Port Distillery, earlier than new homeowners closed its doorways in 1928. It reopened after the Second World Conflict solely to fall silent once more in 1983, with the positioning demolished in 1994.
Whisky author, Michael Jackson, described its spirit as ‘dry and fruity’ and this whisky, matured in a Gordon & MacPhail cask, is a forgotten masterpiece that revives the spirit of a bygone age.