Caol Ila

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Caol Ila distillery
Enlarge
Caol Ila distillery
The most common bottlings of Caol Ila: 12 and 18 years old, 43% ABV.
Enlarge
The most common bottlings of Caol Ila: 12 and 18 years old, 43% ABV.

Caol Ila is a distillery near Port Askaig on Islay, Scotland, famed for its single malt Scotch whisky of the same name.

Contents

[edit] History

Caol Ila (Gaelic for “Sound of Islay” and pronounced cull eela) was founded in 1846 by Hector Henderson. The distillery did not fare well, and changed hands in 1854 when Norman Buchanan, owner of the Isle of Jura Distillery, took over.

In 1863 the business was acquired by Bulloch Lade & Co, of Glasgow, traders in whisky stocks. By the 1880s over 147,000 gallons of whisky were produced there each year.

In 1920 Bulloch Lade went into voluntary liquidation, and a consortium of businessmen formed the Caol Ila Distillery Company Ltd. In 1927 the Distillers Company Limited acquired a controlling interest in Caol Ila, and in 1930 Scottish Malt Distillers Ltd obtained ownership of all the shares. The company eventually became part of Diageo.

The distillery closed during World War II, from 1941–1945, because of wartime restrictions on the supply of barley to distillers. From then, production continued until 1972, when the entire structure of the distillery was demolished. A larger distillery was built in the same original architectural style, and production resumed in 1974.

[edit] The whisky

Caol Ila is one of the lighter Islay whisky, pale in colour, with peaty, floral and peppery notes.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

In other languages