The Ladyburn distillery was an expansion of the Girvan distillery, itself built in 1963 by William Grant & Sons Ltd. The Ladyburn distillery was created in 1966. The malt portion of the distillery was closed in 1975 and demolished in 1976.
The independent bottlers Signatory Vintage and Wilson and Morgan have released Ladyburn single malt under the name "Ayrshire", after the council area of Scotland in which Girvan is found.
The distillery of Lagavulin officially dates from 1816, when John Jonston and Archibald Campbell constructed two distilleries on the site. She is on the island of Islay. Lagavulin is produced by United Distillers & Vintners, which in turn is owned by Diageo plc.
The standard Lagavulin single malt is 16 years old (43%), though they regularly release a 12-year-old cask strength variety, a Distiller's edition finished in Pedro Ximenez casks, and 25 and 30-year-old varieties.
The Laphroaig distillery was established in 1825 by Donald and Alexander Johnston. She is an Islay single malt Scotch whisky distillery. Laphroaig is one of the most strongly flavoured of all Scotch whiskies, and is most frequently aged to 10 years. The Laphroaig Quarter Cask was introduced in 2004.
In 1994 the Friends of Laphroaig Club was established, members of which are granted a lifetime lease of 1 square foot (930 cm2) of Laphroaig land on the island of Islay. Have many miniatures with small differences in labeling.
Ledaig distillery was founded as Ledaig distillery in 1798 by John Sinclair, ten years after the founding of Tobermory. situated on the Hebridean island of Mull, Scotland in the village of Tobermory. She is currently owned by Burn Stewart Distillers under CL Financial.
Its main product, Tobermory single malt, is used in the blends "Scottish Leader" and "Black Bottle". The distillery also produces a smaller amount of peated whisky, which remains known under the former name, Ledaig.
Lindores Abbey Distillery, in the Lowlands whisky region, is directly opposite the Abbey. It started distilling whisky in December 2017, using three stills made by Forsyths of Rothes.
First Scotch single malt whisky was bottled in 2021. In the meantime, the distillery was selling its aqua vitae, since this type of alcoholic beverage does not require such long aging.
The Linkwood distillery is a whisky distillery in Elgin, in the Speyside region of Scotland. The distillery was built in 1821 by Peter Brown with two stills, and started production in 1825. The distillery was mothballed between 1985 to 1990.
In 1971 the a second distillery was build alongside the first, which became known as Linkwood B. But now they are mothballed.
Linlithgow or St. Magdalene was established at least by 1798. During its early life, it was known as "Linlithgow". Linlithgow is the name of the town where the distillery was located. The location was 10 miles west of Edinburgh.
The distillery was mothballed in 1983 and some of the buildings were converted into apartments.
Littlemill distillery was situated in Bowling, West Dunbartonshire. This is on the border of Lowlands and Highlands. It's products were generally classified as lowlands whisky. The distillery was dismantled in 1997, and the remnants of the distillery were destroyed in a fire in 2004.
The distillery produced three different kinds of whisky, peated variety under the name "Dumbuck", a full bodied whisky named "Dunglas" and a light traditional lowland whisky under name "Littlemill".
The Lochlea distillery in the Scottish Lowlands has been producing Single Malt Whisky since 2018.
Lochlea are grows their own grain for the Lochlea products on the approximately 90 hectares. They fill all casks on-site, approximately 30 per week, and they are stored in our 3 bonded warehouses.
Loch Lomond brand was founded in Glasgow in the 1840s by Gabriel Bulloch. She is a Highland Single Malt Scotch whisky distillery in Alexandria, Scotland, near Loch Lomond.
Loch Lomond's current single malts include the original Loch Lomond, Inchmurrin and Old Roshdhu. Lesser known products include Loch Lomond HP, Craiglodge, Croftengea, Glen Douglas and Inchmoan. Additionally Loch Lomond produces several blends.
The distillery started life as a brewery and the actual buildings were built in 1781 in Montrose, Angus that produced single malt scotch whisky and grain whisky. In the end in turn purchased by British drinks company Allied Distillers to form Allied Domecq, who were purchased by Pernod Ricard in 2005, the distillery was closed during 1992.
The majority of the spirit produced at this time was shipped to Spain for use in DYC Spanish whisky.
The Longmorn distillery Company was founded in 1893 by John Duff, Charles Shirres and George Thomson. She was bought by Chivas Brothers in 1978, and in 2001 Chivas Brothers was acquired by the French Pernod Ricard Group.
The Longmorn 16-year expression has received warm reviews at international spirit ratings competitions.
First distilled in 1973, Longrow is a double distilled, heavily peated single malt. The whisky is named after the old Longrow distillery which stood adjacent to Springbank. The first distillation was carried out as an experiment when the Springbank chairman set out to prove that it was possible to produce an Islay-style single malt whisky on the mainland.
The barley used in the production of Longrow is entirely peat dried, giving the whisky a wonderfully smokey, peaty character.