fbpx
Wikipedia

Irish whiskey

Irish whiskey (Irish: Fuisce or uisce beatha) is whiskey made on the island of Ireland. The word 'whiskey' (or whisky) comes from the Irish uisce beatha, meaning water of life.[1][2][3] Irish whiskey was once the most popular spirit in the world, though a long period of decline from the late 19th century onwards greatly damaged the industry,[4] so much so that although Ireland boasted at least 28 distilleries in the 1890s, by 1966 this number had fallen to just two, and by 1972 the remaining distilleries, Bushmills Distillery and Old Midleton Distillery (replaced by New Midleton Distillery), were owned by just one company, Irish Distillers.

Irish whiskey
Three Irish whiskeys: Knappogue Castle, Jameson, and Bushmills
TypeDistilled beverage
Country of origin Ireland
Introduced13th–15th century
Alcohol by volume 40–94.8%
Proof (US)80–189.6°
ColourPale gold to dark amber
Flavoursmooth, sharp, hint of vanilla
IngredientsMalt, water
Variants
  • Pot Still Irish Whiskey
  • Malt Irish Whiskey
  • Grain Irish Whiskey
  • Blended Irish Whiskey
Related productsScotch whisky

The monopoly situation was ended by an academically-conceived launch of the first new distillery in decades, Cooley Distillery, in 1987.[5] Since the 1990s, Irish whiskey has seen a resurgence in popularity and has been the fastest-growing spirit in the world every year since 1990. With exports growing by over 15% per annum, existing distilleries have been expanded and a number of new distilleries constructed. As of December 2019, Ireland has 32 distilleries in operation, with more either planned or under development.[6]

History edit

 
Erskine Nicol – A Nip Against the Cold – An Irishman pouring whiskey 1869. Part of Erskine Nicol Irish collection, painting of Irish life.

Irish whiskey was one of the earliest distilled drinks in Europe, arising around the 12th century.[7] It is believed that Irish monks brought the technique of distilling perfumes back to Ireland from their travels to southern Europe around 1000 AD. The Irish then modified this technique to obtain a drinkable spirit.[7]

Although termed "whiskey", the spirit produced during this period would have differed from what is currently recognised as whiskey, as it would not have been aged, and was often flavoured with aromatic herbs such as mint, thyme, or anise.[7] Irish Mist, a whiskey liqueur launched in 1963, is purportedly based on such a recipe.

Although known to have occurred for hundreds of years, records of whiskey production in Ireland can be difficult to come by, particularly in the earlier years when production was unregulated. Even in later years, as production was frequently illicit, official records bear little resemblance to reality.[7] In addition, as many Irish records were traditionally oral rather than written, details on early production are likely lost.[7]

The oldest known documented record of whiskey in Ireland was in 1405; in the Annals of Clonmacnoise it was written that the head of a clan died after "taking a surfeit of aqua vitae" at Christmas. Its first known mention in Scotland dates from 1494.[8] However, it is known that by 1556 whiskey was widespread, as an Act passed by the English Parliament declared whiskey to be "a drink nothing profitable to be drunken daily and used, is now universally throughout this realm made".[9] This Act also made it technically illegal for anyone other than "the peers, gentlemen and freemen of larger towns" to distil spirits without a licence from the Lord Deputy.[7] However, as Crown control did not extend far beyond the Pale, a fortified area around Dublin, this had little effect.[7] Irish whiskey is also described in The commodities of aqua vitae by Richard Stanihurst in 1547-1618[10]

Start of licensed distillation edit

In 1608, King James I granted a licence to Sir Thomas Phillips, a landowner in County Antrim.[11] Today Kilbeggan Distillery in Kilbeggan, County Westmeath, lays claim to the title of oldest distillery in Ireland, as the first distillery in Kilbeggan was established in 1757 (although not continuously operating since – e.g., the Kilbeggan Distillery was entirely shut down around 1917 and again between 1954 and 2007 and was "in rubble" and "totally derelict" by 1983).[12][13] Despite this the licence was continuously paid and whiskey is currently distilled in Kilbeggan using the original 1757 licence. Kilbeggan also has what is believed to be the oldest operational copper pot still in the world, first used in 2007 after being "last used in the 19th century".[13][14] However it is through the earlier 1608 licence that the Old Bushmills Distillery lays claim to being the oldest surviving grant of licence to distil in the world. However, the current Bushmills distillery and company was not registered to trade until 1784 and despite the promotion of the Phillips licence as its claimed founding date, the Bushmills distillery does not clearly descend from any distillery operated by Phillips through ownership or location.[11][15]

In 1661, the Crown introduced a tax on whiskey production in Britain and Ireland.[7] Therefore, in theory, all whiskey distillers in Ireland were to register and pay taxes. Although Crown control now extended far beyond the Pale, there is limited official record of whiskey distillation during this period. One reason for this is that, until 1761, registration was done on a voluntary basis.[7] Therefore, as registration entailed paying a tax, it was much avoided for obvious reasons.[7] Another reason is that those tasked with enforcing the law were frequently local landlords, and, if their tenants were the illicit distillers, it was not in their best interests to enforce the law.[7] It is known, however, that more distillation occurred than is officially recorded, as when registration later became compulsory, several registrations detail the use of existing facilities.[7]

From a regulatory perspective, the introduction of the Act is a historical milestone as it provides a clear distinction between licit and illicit whiskey distillation in Ireland. For many years following its introduction, whiskey produced by registered distillers was known as "parliament whiskey",[7] while that produced by illicit producers was, and still is referred to as Poitín, a Gaelic term meaning "small pot" (often anglicised as poteen) in reference to the small pot stills used by the illicit distillers. However, although traditionally the product of illicit production, many legal varieties of Poitín have come to market in recent years.

In the 18th century, demand for whiskey in Ireland grew significantly, driven both by strong population growth, and by displacing the demand for imported spirits.[16] Growth in the latter is very much visible in the share of Irish duties paid on legal spirits in the late 1700s. In 1770, whiskey only accounted for 25% of the total duty on spirits received by the exchequer, while duty on imported rum accounted for 51%, with the remainder divided equally between brandy and gin.[17] By 1790, however, whiskey's share accounted for 66%.[17]

As a consequence of this increased demand, some distillers prioritized quantity over quality, to the detriment of their product.[7] This prompted parliament to pass an Act in 1759 prohibiting distillers from using any ingredient other than malt, grain, potatoes or sugar in the production of whiskey, and specifically prohibiting several unsavory ingredients.[7] Another consequence was that the potential revenue lost to the exchequer through the under-reporting of output at legal distilleries and the tax avoidance of illicit producers became more significant, prompting parliament to introduce another Act of Parliament. This was enacted in 1779 and significantly reformed how the taxes payable on whiskey production were calculated.[7] Previously, taxes were payable on production volumes, which were subject to manipulation. However, this Act removed the potential for under-reporting by making taxes payable on a distillery's potential output (based on the capacity of its pot stills), rather than its actual, or reported, output.[16] In addition, the Act penalised smaller distillers in an attempt to reduce reporting fraud.[18]

Due to the stringency of this Act, which made assumptions about output (for instance, a 500-gallon pot still was assumed to produce 33,075 gallons a month)[19] and the minimum numbers of days which a still was in operation per annum (112),[16] many of the smaller or less efficient registered distilleries were forced underground. In 1779, when the Act was introduced, there were 1,228 registered distilleries in Ireland; however, by 1790, this number had fallen to 246, and by 1821, there were just 32 licensed distilleries in operation.[7][16] This had the effect of concentrating licit distillation in a smaller number of distilleries based mainly in the larger urban centres, such as Cork and Dublin, which offered better markets for legal producers.[16] In the rural areas distillation became a more illicit activity, in particular in the northwest of Ireland where agricultural lands were poorer and poitín provided a supplemental source of income to the tenant farmers, an income which landlords were again slow to curtail as it would have weakened their abilities to pay rent.[16] The scale of this illicit activity was such that one surveyor estimated that duty was paid on only 2% of the spirit consumed in the northwestern provinces of Ulster and Connaught,[20] while Aeneas Coffey (an excise officer at the time, and later inventor of the Coffey Still) estimated that there were over 800 illicit stills in operation in Inishowen, County Donegal alone.[7] By contrast, illicit distillation in Munster and Leinster was less extensive.[16]

By some measures the Act was successful, as the volume of whiskey on which excise was paid increased from 1.2 million to 2.9 million gallons.[16][20] In addition, it prompted capital investments in establishing larger distilleries (which were more easily regulated), due to the need for economies of scale to profit from legal distillation.[16] However, when demand for whiskey increased in the early 1800s, due to population growth, and changing consumption patterns (which saw it becoming more ingrained in Irish cultural activities),[16] much of the demand was initially met by small-scale illicit distillers who did not need to pay tax or comply with the restrictions of the 1779 Act.[16] In fact, so much illicit spirit was available during this period that the licensed distillers in Dublin complained that it could be obtained "as openly in the streets as they sell a loaf of bread".[21]

Reform and expansion edit

 
The Old Midleton Distillery, built in 1825, hosts a mammoth 31,618 gallon Pot still, so big that the still room needed to be built around it. Although no longer in use, it remains in place inside the old distillery building.[7]

In 1823, the authorities, acknowledging the problems with the licensing system, cut the duties by half,[16] and published an Excise Act which significantly reformed the existing legislation, making legal distillation much more attractive.[7] In particular, the reforms removed the need for distillers to rush production in order to produce as much (or more) whiskey than duties would be paid on, leading to improvements in fuel efficiency and product quality, as distillers could operate the stills at a more appropriate pace.[16] In addition, restrictions on the type and capacity of stills used were removed, granting distillers more freedom to tailor their equipment.[16] Another significant reform was a change to how duty was paid. Previously, duty was charged monthly, based on still output, meaning that distilleries paid tax on whiskey before it was sold.[16] However, under the reforms, duty was to be paid only when the whiskey was actually sold, making its storage in bond more attractive, as less of the distillery's working capital would be tied up in already-taxed stock.[16]

Together, these reforms greatly improved the distilling landscape, leading to a drop in illicit whiskey production and a boom in investment in legal distilleries. In 1821, two years before the reforms, there were 32 licensed distilleries in Ireland. Just four years later (in 1827), this number had risen to 82, and reached 93 by 1835, a 19th-century peak.[16] The increased attractiveness of legal distillation is evident in the scale of the equipment used. Prior to the Excise Act of 1823, the largest pot still in Ireland had a capacity of just 750 gallons. By 1825, however, the Midleton Distillery operated a 31,618-gallon pot still, which remains the largest ever built;[19] Note: the largest pot still in operation in the world (as of 2014), located next door in the New Midleton Distillery, are roughly half this size, at 16,498 gallons (75,000 litres).[22]

Domestic demand was reduced somewhat in the mid-1800s, due to the Temperance movement of the 1830s, and the Great Famine of the 1840s (during which a million Irish died and a million Irish emigrated). Between 1823 and 1900, however, whiskey output in Ireland still increased fourfold,[7] and with access to the overseas markets provided by the British Empire, Irish whiskey became the most popular spirit in the World. "Dublin whiskey" was particularly well regarded.[19]

Dublin whiskey peak edit

 
Jameson's Bow Street distillery pictured in Alfred Barnard's 1887 report on the distilleries of Britain and Ireland

In the early 1800s, Ireland was the largest spirit market in the United Kingdom, with demand for spirit exceeding that of more populous England.[16] Therefore, as capacities expanded, Ireland became the largest producer of spirits in the United Kingdom; and Dublin, then the largest market for spirits in Ireland, emerged as a major distilling centre. By 1823, Dublin boasted the five largest licensed distilleries in the country.[16][23] At their peak, the distilleries in Dublin would grow to become the largest in the world, with a combined output of almost 10 million gallons per annum, the largest of which, Roe's Thomas Street Distillery, had an output exceeding 2 million gallons per annum.[19] By 1878, the reputation of Dublin whiskey was such that Distillers Company Ltd., a Scottish distilling firm, having built a distillery in Dublin, claimed that Dublin whiskey could sell for a 25% premium over other Irish whiskeys, and that it had a demand five times that of Scotch at the time. Although these figures are likely inflated, they give an indication of the esteem in which Dublin whiskey was held, even by Scottish distillers.[19] During this period, the four largest Dublin distilling firms, of John Jameson, William Jameson, John Powers and George Roe (all family-run, and collectively known as the "Big Four") came to dominate the Irish distilling landscape. The chief output of these distilleries, known as single or "pure pot still" whiskey, was made from a mix of malted and unmalted barley, and solely distilled in pot stills. The style, having initially emerged as a means of avoiding a 1785 tax on malt, endured although the tax had been later repealed.[24] In fact, even by the late 1880s, only two of Ireland's then 28 existing distilleries were producing single malt whiskey, the rest steadfast in their devotion to "pure pot still".[24]

In this period, when Irish whiskey was at its zenith, it would have been difficult to imagine that Scotch, then produced by small-scale producers and almost unheard of outside of Scotland,[7] would soon become the world's preeminent drink, while Irish whiskey, then the world's most popular whiskey, would enter a century of decline, culminating with all of Dublin's great distilleries shutting their doors. By the late 20th century, the once-popular pure pot still whiskey had almost disappeared entirely, with only two specialist bottlings, Green Spot and Redbreast remaining in existence.[24] However, since 2010, several new single pot whiskeys have been launched.[24]

Coffey still edit

 
A Coffey still, installed at the old Tullamore Distillery in 1948, later lay unused outside the then closed Kilbeggan Distillery for several years.

There were a number of factors, both internal and external, which led to this decline. However, one of the main turning points was the patenting in 1832 of the Coffey still by Aeneas Coffey. Ironically, Coffey was both the former Inspector General of Excise in Ireland, and subsequently, after leaving the excise service, an Irish distiller himself.[18] His patent, the Coffey still, was a continuous distillation apparatus which offered an improvement on the traditional pot still. Although similar continuous stills had been proposed in the past, including by other Irish distillers themselves, the Coffey still was the most effective, and soon entered widespread use.[18]

Unlike traditional pot stills, which were operated in a batch manner, Coffey stills could be operated continuously. This made them cheaper to operate, as they required less fuel, and more efficient to run, producing a continuous, rapid output of spirit. In addition, because technically, continuous distillation entails the conduct of a series of distillation runs in sequence internally within a self-contained unit rather than the conduct of a single distillation within a pot still, Coffey stills were capable of producing a far higher strength output than pot stills. However, this advantage also came with a downside. As a consequence of increasing the alcohol concentration in the product, Coffey stills removed some of the other volatile components responsible for flavour.[18] As a result, their use proved extremely controversial when first introduced.

Ireland was the initial testing ground for the Coffey still, with Coffey showcasing them in his own distillery and offering them to other Irish distillers. Although there were seven in operation in Ireland by 1833,[16] their use did not become widespread amongst the larger distilleries. In particular, the big four Dublin distillers, proud of their existing produce, scoffed at its use, questioning if its product, grain whiskey, which they termed neutral or silent (i.e. tasteless) spirit, could even be termed whiskey.[7] It wasn't that the distillers were Luddites, afraid of change; their distilleries were among the most advanced in the world.[19] The distillers were simply steadfast in the belief that their existing methods yielded a superior whiskey.[18] For instance, John Jameson trialled a Coffey still at his distillery, but chose to not adopt the technology because he was not satisfied with the quality of product it produced.[18] Therefore, in the face of opposition in Ireland, Coffey offered his still to the English gin and Scottish whisky distillers, who proved more receptive, and where the technology gained widespread use.

The adoption of the Coffey still in Scotland was indirectly assisted by Ireland's Great Famine of the 1840s, which led to the repealing of the Corn Laws, which between 1815 and 1846 had restricted the import of cheaper foreign grain into Britain and Ireland. After the laws were repealed in 1846, cheap American corn could be imported and used to produce neutral spirit in Coffey stills. This spirit, though lacking in taste, could then be blended with traditional pot still derived spirit to produce a cheaper "blended whiskey". This blended whiskey, which was less intense in taste than pure pot still, was to prove popular in Britain, capturing much market share from Irish pure pot still whiskey.

Despite changing tastes and falling market share, the adoption of Coffey stills was stubbornly resisted by Irish distillers for many years, with some arguing for restrictions on their use. For instance, in 1878, the big Dublin distillers jointly published a pamphlet entitled "Truths about Whisky", in which they referred to the output of Coffey stills as "Good, bad or indifferent; but it cannot be whiskey, and it ought not to be sold under that name".[25] In 1904, almost seventy years after the Coffey still had been patented, the Senior Manager of Ireland's largest rural distillery, Allman's of Bandon, placed an outright ban on the introduction of Coffey stills at his distillery, in the face of opposition from a director.[7]

The issue came to a head in 1908, when a royal commission was appointed to investigate the issue. By this point, 60% of all whiskey produced in Britain and Ireland was made in Coffey stills.[26] In 1909, the royal commission settled the argument, declaring that whiskey could refer to the output of either Coffey or pot stills.[26] By comparison, a similar debate occurred in France, such that under French law, Cognac must be double-distilled in pot stills,[27][28] whereas Coffey stills are permissible in the production of armagnac.

An industry in decline edit

In addition to the introduction of blended whiskeys and the Irish distillers' failure to account for its appeal to changing tastes, there were a number of additional issues which placed further pressure on the Irish distillers: the Irish War of Independence, the subsequent civil war, and trade war with Britain (which cut off whiskey exports to Britain and all Commonwealth countries, then Irish whiskey's biggest market); prohibition in the United States (1920-1933), which severely curtailed exports to Irish whiskey's second-biggest market (Irish whiskey had accounted for more than 60% of whiskey sales in the US in the 1800s[29]); widespread counterfeiting of Irish whiskeys in America and Britain; protectionist policies introduced by the Irish Free State government, which significantly capped whiskey exports in the hope of taxing domestic consumption; and finally, over-expansion and mismanagement at several Irish distilleries. Together, these factors greatly hampered exports and forced many distilleries into economic difficulties and out of business, and by the early 20th century Scotland had surpassed Ireland to become the world's largest whiskey producer.

When British historian Alfred Barnard published his account of the distilleries of Britain and Ireland in 1887, there were 28 distilleries in operation in Ireland. By the 1960s, there were only a handful of these remaining in operation, and in 1966 three of these (John Jameson, Powers, and Cork Distilleries Company) chose to amalgamate their operations under the name of Irish Distillers and to close their existing facilities and concentrate their operations in a new purpose-built facility to be constructed beside the Old Midleton Distillery in County Cork. In 1972, these were joined by the only other remaining Irish operation, Bushmills, so that by the mid-1970s there were only two whiskey distilleries in operation in Ireland, the New Midleton Distillery and the Old Bushmills Distillery, both owned by Irish Distillers, and with only one of these having operated during Irish whiskey's golden years.

Production reached a nadir at about 400,000–500,000 cases per annum during the consolidation period, down from a peak of 12 million cases around 1900.[4]

Resurgence edit

The late 1980s saw the beginnings of a long and slow resurgence in the Irish whiskey industry, with the establishment of the Cooley Distillery in 1987 by John Teeling,[5] and then Pernod Ricard's takeover of Irish Distillers in 1988, which led to increased marketing of Irish whiskeys, in particular Jameson, overseas.

Since the 1990s, Irish whiskey has undergone a major resurgence, and for the next twenty years it was the fastest growing spirit in the world, with annual growth of approximately 15–20% per annum. In 2010, the Kilbeggan Distillery, which had closed in 1954, was reopened fully by Teeling. Irish distillers, who operated under rules less strict than those applying to Scottish producers, experimented with new flavours, methods and cocktails.[29]

By June 2019, the number of operating distilleries had grown to 25, and several more were in the planning stages.[30][31][32][33] As of 2017, roughly 750 people were employed on a full-time basis in the whiskey industry in Ireland.[34] In addition, it is estimated that the industry provides support to a further 4,200 jobs across agriculture and other sectors of the economy.[34] As of 2018, sales of Irish whiskey stood at 10.7 million 9-litres cases, up from 4.4 million cases in 2008, with sales projected to exceed 12 million cases (its historical peak) by 2020, and 24 million by 2030.[35][30] In 2021, annual sales were 14 million cases (168&million bottles), and in 2022, there were 42 distilleries on the island.[29]

Process edit

 
Bushmills Distillery, County Antrim, said to be the world's oldest licensed distillery

Irish whiskey has a smoother finish as opposed to the smoky, earthy overtones common to Scotch whisky, which come largely from drying the malted barley using peat smoke.[29][36] Peat is rarely used in the malting process outside of Scotland. There are notable exceptions to these rules in both countries. Examples include Connemara peated Irish malt whiskey from the Cooley Distillery in Cooley, County Louth; Pearse Whiskey from Pearse Lyons Distillery, Dublin a Dunville's peated from Echlinville Distillery.

Regulations and labelling edit

Legal definition edit

Irish whiskey is a protected European Geographical Indication (GI) under Regulation (EC) No 110/2008.[37] As of 29 January 2016, production, labelling and marketing of Irish whiskey must be verified by the Irish revenue authorities as conforming with the Department of Agriculture's 2014 technical file for Irish whiskey.[38]

Key requirements include specifications that Irish whiskey must:[39]

  • Be distilled and matured on the island of Ireland (comprising the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland) from a mash of malted cereals with or without whole grains of other cereals and which has been:
    • saccharified by the diastase of malt contained therein, with or without other natural enzymes;
    • fermented by the action of yeast;
    • distilled at an alcoholic strength of less than 94.8% alcohol by volume in such a way that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the materials used and only plain water and caramel colour is added to it;
    • subject to the maturation of the final distillate for at least three years in wooden casks, such as oak, not exceeding 700 litres (185 US gal; 154 imp gal) capacity
  • Retain the colour, aroma and taste derived from the production process referred to above
  • Have a minimum alcoholic by volume content of 40%

Individual technical specifications for the three varieties of Irish whiskey, "single pot still", "single malt", "single grain", plus "blended" whiskey (a mix of two or more of these varieties) are also outlined in the technical file.[39] The use of the term "single" in the aforementioned varieties being permissible only if the whiskey is totally distilled on the site of a single distillery.[39]

Labelling edit

There are several regulations governing the labelling of Irish whiskeys, in particular:[39]

  • Spirit drinks must not be labelled, packaged, sold, advertised or promoted in such a way to suggest they are Irish whiskey or any of the sub-varieties unless they meet the relevant requirements;
  • Any age statement must refer to the age of the youngest whiskey used;
  • Although traditionally spelled with an 'e', Irish whiskey may also be marketed as "Irish whisky".

Distilleries in Ireland edit

 
 
West Cork
 
Rademon Estate
 
Blackwater
 
Great Northern
 
Echlinville
 
Shed
 
Waterford
 
Royal Oak
 
Connacht Whiskey
 
Slane
 
Pearse Lyons
 
Clonakilty
 
Dublin Liberties
 
Ballykeefe
 
Powerscourt
 
Killowen
 
Achill Island
 
Burren
 
Lough Gill
 
Lough Mask
 
Crolly
class=notpageimage|
Distilleries operating in Ireland (as of Dec. 2019)

Current distilleries edit

According to the Irish Whiskey Association, as of December 2019, there were 32 whiskey distilleries in operation in Ireland.[40] However, many of these were recently established and had not yet aged their own spirits for sale as whiskey:

  • Achill Island Distillery, County Mayo (est. 2015) – produces the Irish American brand whiskey.[41]
  • Ballykeefe Distillery, County Kilkenny (est. 2017) – released its own whiskey in March 2021.[42] Also produces vodka, gin and poitín.
  • Baoilleach Distillery, County Donegal (est. 2019) – produces gin and poitín, will start production of whiskey in early 2022.
  • Blacks of Kinsale, County Cork (est. 2015) – produces whiskey, gin and rum.
  • Blackwater Distillery, County Waterford (est. 2014) – currently produces a range of gins.[43] Due to release its own whiskey in 2022.[44]
  • Boann Distillery, County Meath (est. 2019)[45]
  • Boatyard Distillery, County Fermanagh (est. 2016) – currently produces gin and vodka, whiskey is maturing.
  • Burren Whiskey Distillery, County Clare (est. 2019)[46]
  • Clonakilty Distillery, County Cork (est. 2016) – opened to the public in March 2019.[47]
  • Connacht Whiskey Company, County Mayo (est. 2014) – released its first whiskey in June 2021.[48] Also produces gin, vodka and poitín; and markets a single malt sourced from other distilleries.[49]
  • Cooley Distillery, County Louth (est. 1987) – when opened it was the only independent distillery in Ireland.[50] Along with its sister distillery in Kilbeggan, it produces the Connemara, Tyrconnell, Kilbeggan and 2Gingers whiskeys. It has been owned by Beam Suntory since 2011.
  • Copeland Distillery, County Down (est. 2019) – currently produces gin, rum and whiskey.
  • Crolly Distillery , County Donegal (est. 2020) – will produce single malt whiskey, production began in November 2020.
  • Dingle Distillery, County Kerry (est. 2012) – distills gin, vodka and whiskey. The first batches of whiskey were released in late 2016.[51] A single pot still whiskey was released in 2017.[52]
  • Dublin Liberties Distillery, Dublin (est. 2018) – opened to the public in February 2019.[31]
  • Echlinville Distillery, County Down (est. 2013) – the first Northern Irish distillery to be granted a distilling licence in almost 125 years.[53] The distillery relaunched the Dunville's brand, previously produced at the Royal Irish Distillery in Belfast. The distillery also produces gin and poitín.[54]
  • Glendalough Distillery, County Wicklow (est. 2013) – it currently ages and finishes whiskeys from other distilleries, and also markets gin and poitín.[55] It is in the process of building a new distillery.[56]
  • Glendree Distillery, County Clare (est. 2019) – currently produces vodka, whiskey is maturing.
  • Great Northern Distillery, County Louth (est. 2015) – John Teeling, founder of the Cooley distillery developed two distilleries on the site of the Great Northern Brewery in Dundalk. The distilleries began operations in 2015, have a capacity of 50 million bottles per annum.[57]
  • Hinch Distillery, County Down (est. 2020) – production began in November 2020.
  • Kilbeggan Distillery, County Westmeath (est. 1757, re-commissioned 2007) – the distillery re-opened in 2007, 54 years to the day after it closed, and 250 years after it was first established.[58] A sister distillery of the Cooley Distillery, both were bought by Beam Suntory in 2011.
  • Killowen Distillery, County Down (est. 2019) – the distillery will produce double-distilled peated whiskey, single pot still whiskey, and gin.[33][59]
  • Lough Gill Distillery, County Sligo (est. 2019)
  • Lough Mask Distillery, County Mayo (est. 2019)[60]
  • Micil Distillery, Galway (est. 2016) – produces poitín and gin
  • New Midleton Distillery, County Cork (est. 1975) – produces Jameson, Powers, Paddy, Midleton, Redbreast, and others, including the independently sold Green Spot. Owned by Pernod Ricard since 1988
  • Old Bushmills Distillery, County Antrim (est. 1784) – through a 1608 licence to distil, lays claim to be the oldest licensed distillery in the world.[61] Produces a range of blends (Bushmills Original, Black Bush) and single malts (Bushmills 10, 16 and 21 year olds). Previously owned by Pernod Ricard, and Diageo, since 2014 it has been owned by Proximo Spirits.
  • Pearse Lyons Distillery, Dublin (est. 2017) – opened in a converted church on Dublin's Thomas Street in September 2017.[62][63] Alltech previously operated Alltech Craft Distillery in Carlow from 2012 to 2016.
  • Powerscourt Distillery, County Wicklow (est. 2018) – located on the grounds of Powerscourt Estate, the distillery will market whiskey previously distilled by its Head Distiller, Noel McSweeney, at the Cooley Distillery, until its own stock is mature enough for release.[64][65]
  • Rademon Estate Distillery, County Down (est. 2015) – the distillery plans to release malt whiskey, its first mature stocks became available in August 2018. The distillery also produces gin.[66]
  • Roe & Co Distillery, Dublin (est. 2019) – located in refurbished building which formerly housed the power station of the Guinness Brewery, the distillery sits alongside the site of George Roe's original Thomas Street Distillery.[32] The distillery opened in June 2019, following a €25 million investment by Diageo, owners of the Guinness Brewery.[67]
  • Royal Oak Distillery, County Carlow (est. 2016) – previously called Walsh Whiskey Distillery. An Irish-Italian venture, since January 2019 100% owned by Illva Saronno the makers of Tia Maria. The distillery is expected to have a capacity of 500,000 cases per year.[68]
  • Shed Distillery, County Leitrim (est. 2014) – production began in December 2014, and the whiskey has been on sale since 2019.[69] The distillery also produces a gin "Gunpowder Gin".[70][71]
  • Slane Distillery, County Meath (est. 2018) – developed and owned by Brown-Forman Corporation, in partnership with Henry and Alex Conyngham, the new distillery was built at the historic Slane Castle estate in the original stable buildings dating back to the early 1700s. Distilling began in early 2018. Slane Irish Whiskey is a blended whiskey aged in a unique triple cask maturation process.
  • Sliabh Liag Distillery, County Donegal (est. 2016) – produces whiskey, gin and vodka.
  • Tipperary Distillery, County Tipperary (est. 2020) – production of their own distillate began in November 2020 after having bottled sourced spirit since 2016.
  • Teeling Distillery, Dublin (est. 2015) – the first new distillery built in Dublin city for over 125 years,[72] it was founded by the Teeling family, who previously established the Cooley Distillery. When the Cooley Distillery was sold in 2011, the Teelings negotiated the purchase of mature stock, which is being used in their whiskeys until mature stock from the new distillery becomes available.[73]
  • Tullamore Distillery, County Offaly (est. 2014) – opened in September 2014, returning production of Tullamore D.E.W. to Tullamore after a break of sixty years. The distillery has a capacity of 1.5 million cases per year, and is owned by William Grant & Sons.[74][75]
  • Waterford Distillery, Waterford (est. 2016) – a craft distillery established in a converted Diageo facility. Production of spirit began in January 2016. The distillery will produce a single malt.[76]
  • West Cork Distillers, County Cork (est. 2003) – produces single malt, whiskey, whiskey liqueur, vodka, gin and poitín.[77]

Planned or under construction edit

Further distilleries are either planned or in development across Ireland. In addition, to the Glendalough distillery mentioned above, which had previously distilled spirit, planned distilleries include:[30][6]

Name County
Ballymore Distillers County Kildare
Belfast Distillery County Antrim
Cape Clear Distillery County Cork
Fore Distillery County Westmeath
Gortinore County Waterford
Irish Whitetail Distillery County Louth
Killarney Distillery County Kerry
Kinnitty Castle Distillery County Offaly
Lough Neagh Distillery County Armagh
Lough Ree County Longford
Matt D'Arcy & Co. County Down
McAllister Distillery County Galway
Monasterevin Distillery County Kildare
Nephin Distillery County Mayo [78]
Old Carrick Mill County Monaghan
Scotts Irish Whiskey County Fermanagh
Skellig Six18 County Kerry
Stewart's Mill Distillery County Roscommon
Wayward Irish Spirits County Kerry

In addition, work began on a further distillery, the Quiet Man Craft Distillery, in Derry in 2017. However, the project was subsequently cancelled in late November 2018.[79][80]

Historical distilleries edit

 
Kilbeggan Distillery, pictured here c. 1905 was just one of many Irish distilleries which closed in the 20th century.

Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, around 1,000 registered distilleries opened and closed across Ireland – with multiples of this number operating illegally.[19] Most of these have disappeared without a trace, only to be remembered by local street names e.g. Bond Street in Dublin. For instance, the excise return for 1800 lists 40 distilleries operating in Dublin city alone, while Drogheda is estimated to have had 15 distilleries in the 1780s, with as many as ten operating in Cork city in the 19th century.[19] Of these numerous ventures, only one, Bushmills, has remained in continuous operation until the present day. However, the Kilbeggan Distillery (est. 1757) which closed in 1954, reopened in recent years, while a new distillery was constructed in Tullamore to replace an existing distillery which also closed in 1954. Some of the notable distilleries previously in operation across Ireland are listed below.[19]

  • Avoniel, Belfast, County Antrim (1882–1929)
  • Belfast Distillery, Belfast, County Antrim (1823–1868)
  • Cromac Distillery, Belfast, County Antrim (1776–1930)
  • Irish Distillery, Connswater, Belfast, County Antrim (1886–1929)
  • Royal Irish Distillery, Belfast, County Antrim (1868–1938 or later) – Among Ireland's largest distilleries in the 1890s, the Royal Irish was the home of Dunville's whisky. Although the distillery is now gone, Dunville's was resurrected as an Irish whiskey brand by the Echlinville Distillery in 2013.
  • Bandon Distillery, Bandon, County Cork (1826–1929) – At its peak, Allman's distillery in Bandon was the largest rural distillery in Ireland, with an output of over 500,000 gallons per annum.[19]
  • Glen Distillery, Kilnap, County Cork (1802–1925)
  • Hackett's Distillery, Midleton, County Cork (1824 – c. 1845)
  • Old Midleton Distillery, Midleton. County Cork (1825–1975) – Home to the World's largest pot still, the Old Midleton Distillery closed in 1975 when Irish Distillers concentrated production in a new purpose-built facility constructed along the distillery. It now operates as a visitor centre.
  • North Mall Distillery, Cork, County Cork (1779–1920)
  • Watercourse Distillery, Cork, County Cork (1795–1975)
  • Green Distillery, Blackpool, County Cork (1796–1870)
  • Daly's Distillery, County Cork (1807–1869)
  • Burt Distillery, County Donegal (1814–1841)
  • Comber Distilleries, County Down (1825–1953)
  • Bow Street Distillery, Dublin (1780–1971) – Run by John Jameson & Son, Bow Street was one of the "big four" Dublin distilleries and the original home of Jameson Irish Whiskey. At its peak Bow Street was the second largest distillery in Ireland and one of the largest in the World, with an output of one million gallons per annum. In the 1970s, production was moved to the New Midleton Distillery, County Cork and the Bow Street Distillery now operates as a visitors' centre.
  • Dodder Bank Distilleries, Dublin
  • John's Lane Distillery, Dublin (1796–1976) – Run by James Power & Son, John's Lane was one of the "big four" Dublin distilleries, and the original home of Power's Irish Whiskey. The distillery had an output of 900,000 gallons per annum in the 1880s.[25] Production was moved to Midleton in the 1970s.
  • Jones Road Distillery, Dublin (1873 – c. 1945)
  • Marrowbone Lane Distillery, Dublin (late 1700s–1920s) – One of the "big four" Dublin distilleries, Marrowbone Lane was run by William Jameson & Co. (not to be confused with John Jameson & Son above). At its peak Marrowbone Lane had some of the largest capital equipment of any whiskey distillery worldwide.[19]
  • Phoenix Park, Chapelizod, Dublin (1878–1921)
  • Thomas Street Distillery, Dublin (1757–1926) – Run by the Roe Family, one of the "big four" Dublin Distilling Dynasties, Thomas Street Distillery was once the largest in the Britain and Ireland, with an output of two million gallons per annum at its peak.[19] It was located opposite Guinness' St. James' Gate brewery, which itself was the largest brewery in the world at one point. After the distillery was closed, some of its buildings were purchased and incorporated into the Guinness Brewery. In particular, the landmark St. Patrick's Tower, which dates from 1757 and is one of the oldest smock windmills in Europe,[19] is still visible on the site of the Guinness brewery. In 2017, Diageo announced plans to relaunch the Roe & Co whiskey brand, and to establish a new distillery in an old power plant building at the Guinness Brewery, meters from the site of the original Thomas Street Distillery.[67]
  • Burke's Distillery, County Galway (mid-1820s – c. 1850)
  • Nun's Island Distillery, County Galway (1846 or earlier–1915)
  • Monasterevan, County Kildare (1784 – c. 1921)
  • White Horse Distillery, Mountrath, County Laois – named after a local river, this distillery is notable as local folklore suggests that either the distillery or its name were purchased by a Scottish whisky firm in the 1800s.[19] If true, this would mark an interesting turning point in the rise and fall of the whiskey industries in the respective countries.
  • Walker's/Thomand Gate, County Limerick (c. 1820 – c. 1905)
  • Abbey Street, County Londonderry (c. 1790 – 1925)
  • Waterside, County Londonderry (1820–1925)
  • Coleraine, County Londonderry (1820–1978)
  • Limavady Distillery, County Londonderry (1805–1914)
  • Drogheda Distillery, County Louth (1782–1850 or later)
  • Dundalk Distillery, County Louth (1708–1926) – one of the oldest distilleries in Ireland, Dundalk Distillery had the distinction of having Ireland's largest chimney.[19]
  • Westport Distillery, County Mayo (1826–c.1860)
  • Birr Distillery, County Offaly (1805–1889)
  • Old Tullamore Distillery, County Offaly (1829–1954) – once one of Ireland's most successful distilleries, Tullamore D.E.W., one of Ireland's most well known whiskeys was originally produced here.
  • Marlfield Distillery, Clonmel, County Tipperary (1817–1856)
  • Bishop's Water Distillery, Wexford (1827–1915)

Types edit

 
Irish whiskeys
 
More Irish whiskeys

Irish whiskey comes in several forms, with the name of the style depending on the type of grain used and the distillation process. Traditionally, Irish whiskey was produced in pot stills. Irish whiskeys made in a pot still fall into two categories.

Single malt Irish whiskey edit

Whiskeys made entirely from malted barley distilled in a pot still within a single distillery are referred to as single malt whiskeys, a style also very commonly associated with Scotch whisky. These may be double or triple distilled.[24]

Single pot still whiskey edit

Single pot still whiskey is made from a mixture of malted and unmalted barley completely distilled in a pot still within a single distillery. This differs from single malt whiskey through the inclusion of raw, unmalted grain in the mash. This style has also historically been referred to as "pure pot still" whiskey and "Irish pot still whiskey", with older bottlings and memorabilia often bearing these names. Single pot whiskeys were the most common style of Irish whiskey until the emergence of blends in the 20th century.[24]

Grain whiskey edit

Whiskey produced from continuous distillation in a column or Coffey still, rather than a pot still, is referred to as grain whiskey. This may be produced from a variety of grains. Lighter and more neutral in taste, this spirit is rarely found on its own, though some examples exist. The vast majority of grain whiskey is used to make blended whiskey, a product made by mixing column still product with richer and more intense pot still product.

Blended whiskey edit

A mixture of the above styles. Regardless of whether the blended whiskey is made from combining grain whiskey with either single malt whiskey or with single pot still whiskey or both, it is labelled with the same terminology. Blended whiskeys are now the most common style of both Irish and Scotch whiskeys.[24]

Examples edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "'Whiskey' and 'Whisky' and Alchemy". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  2. ^ Micallef, Joseph V. "Is It Whisky Or Whiskey And Why It Matters". Forbes. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  3. ^ Sood, Suemedha. "A guide to the lingo and history of whiskey". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b Barry O'Halloran (8 November 2013). "Distillers in high spirits as the whiskey sector enters golden era". www.irishtimes.com. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
  5. ^ a b Allan, M. Carrie (16 March 2018). "Irish whiskey is back from the abyss – and booming. Here's why". The Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 30 October 2020. So did John Teeling, who in the late 1980s, after years of planning and work, ended Irish Distillers' longtime monopoly when he launched Cooley Distillery.
  6. ^ a b Association, Irish Whiskey (11 June 2019). "Congratulations to IWA member @DiageoIreland..." @IrishWhiskeyAsc. Retrieved 13 June 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Mulryan, Peter (2002). The Whiskeys of Ireland. Dublin, Ireland: O'Brien Press. ISBN 0-86278-751-3.
  8. ^ "Whisky or Whiskey". MasterOfMalt.Com. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  9. ^ Lees, Frederic Richard (1864). The Condensed Argument for the Legislative Prohibition of the Liquor Traffic. United Kingdom: J. Caudwell. p. 54.
  10. ^ "Richard Stanyhurst (1547-1618)".
  11. ^ a b "The Bushmills History". Bushmills.com. Bushmills. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  12. ^ "We Are Kilbeggan". Kilbeggan Distilling Co. Retrieved 31 March 2022. 1757: Matthias McManus establishes Kilbeggan's first distillery under the patronage of Gustavus Lambert." ... "1917: Owing to food shortages throughout Great Britain, the distilling of whiskey in Ireland is suspended." ... 1983: "We got the key and walked in one Saturday morning in 1983. Every place was covered in rubble and falling timbers. Totally derelict. All the roofs had fallen in, all the windows were blown out. It was a huge, sprawling complex of dilapidated buildings and we had absolutely nothing. (per Kitty Flynn, the town historian)
  13. ^ a b . 28 September 2007. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  14. ^ . www.irelandwhiskeytrail.com. Archived from the original on 2 September 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2017.[dead link]
  15. ^ Muldoon, Sean; McGarry, Jack; Herlihy, Tim; Kelly, Conor (2019). From Barley to Blarney: A Whiskey Lover's Guide to Ireland. Kansas City, Missouri: Andrews McMeel. pp. 215–217. ISBN 978-1-4494-8993-9. It is true that a royal permit to distill was granted by King James I to a local landowner waaay back in 1608. But to this very spot? Well ... The original distillery was built in 1784 (when the pot still symbol seen on every label was first registered as a trademark). ... At a Glance: First distillation: 1784
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Bielenberg, Andy (2009). Ireland and the Industrial Revolution: The impact of the industrial revolution on Irish industry, 1801-1922. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415448468.
  17. ^ a b Malcolm, Elizabeth (1986). Ireland Sober, Ireland Free. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press. p. 23.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Booth, John (1995). A Toast to Ireland. Belfast: The Black Staff Press. pp. 33. ISBN 9780856405365.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Townsend, Brian (1997–1999). The Lost Distilleries of Ireland. Glasgow, Scotland: Neil Wilson Publishing. ISBN 1-897784-87-2.
  20. ^ a b Maguire, Edward B. (1973). Irish Whiskey: A history of distilling, the spirit trade, and excise controls in Ireland. Barnes & Noble. pp. 127–128, 148. ISBN 9780064947015.
  21. ^ Connell, Kenneth H. (1968). Irish Peasant Society: Four Historical Essays. Clarendon P.
  22. ^ "€200m expansion project helps Midleton to brew up a storm". Engineers Journal (Engineers Ireland). 2014.
  23. ^ "Seventh Report on Excise in Ireland". BPP: 233–234. 1836.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g O'Connor, Fionnán (2015). A Glass Apart: Irish Single Pot Still Whiskey. Images Publishing. ISBN 978-1864705492.
  25. ^ a b Truths about Whisky. London, England. 1878. ISBN 9781906000028.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  26. ^ a b "The Royal Commission on Whisky and Other Potable Spirits". The British Medical Journal. 2 (2537): 399–404. 1909. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.2537.399. PMC 2320549. PMID 20764620.
  27. ^ "Cognac – How cognac is made and what from".
  28. ^ "What You Need to Know About Cognac vs Armagnac". 17 October 2019.
  29. ^ a b c d Carroll, Rory (4 July 2022). "Irish whiskey roaring back after decades of decline". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  30. ^ a b c "Whiskey industry in Ireland". abfi.ie. Alcoholic Beverage Federation of Ireland. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  31. ^ a b "Dublin Liberties Distillery eyes sales of 50,000 cases". The Irish Times. 20 February 2019.
  32. ^ a b Hopkins, Amy (11 June 2019). "Roe & Co distillery starts production in Dublin". The Spirits Business. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  33. ^ a b Woodard, Richard (19 March 2019). "Killowen out to dispel Irish whiskey myths". Scotchwhisky.com. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  34. ^ a b "Economic Impact". Alcoholic Beverage Federation of Ireland. Retrieved 24 February 2018.
  35. ^ (PDF). Alcohol Beverages Federation of Ireland. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  36. ^ "The Difference Between Scotch and Whiskey". www.theirishplace.com. 21 December 2019.
  37. ^ "Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 January 2008 on the definition, description, presentation, labelling and the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks and repealing Council Regulation (EEC) No 1576/89" (PDF). www.fsai.ie. Food Safety Authority of Ireland. 15 January 2008. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  38. ^ "Revenue Verification of Irish Whiskey". www.revenue.ie. Irish Tax and Customs. December 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  39. ^ a b c d (PDF). www.agriculture.gov.ie. Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Marine. October 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 October 2016. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  40. ^ "Whiskey industry in Ireland". DrinksIreland.ie. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  41. ^ "Irish American Whiskeys". The Brand. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  42. ^ "4 companies raising spirits and brewing new ideas during lockdown". RTÉ News. 27 March 2021. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  43. ^ "Who We Are". blackwaterdistillery.ie. Blackwater Distillery. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  44. ^ "Wanted: Distiller at Blackwater Distillery". Blackwaterdistillery.ie. 4 July 2018. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  45. ^ Taylor, Charlie (2 September 2015). "Over 80 jobs for Drogheda with new distillery and brewery". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  46. ^ Deegan, Gordon (9 May 2015). "Contentious plans for Burren distillery get go-ahead". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  47. ^ "New €10m distillery founded by local farming family opens in west Cork". Irish Independent. 4 March 2019.
  48. ^ . Sunday business Post. 30 May 2021. Archived from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  49. ^ . connachtwhiskey.com. Archived from the original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  50. ^ "Whiskey industry in Ireland". abfi.ie. Alcohol Beverage Federation of Ireland. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  51. ^ "Dingle Releases First Whiskey Batches". 1 December 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2016 – via fft.ie.
  52. ^ Carruthers, Nicola (9 November 2017). "Dingle Distillery to Double Spirits Production". The Spirits Business. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  53. ^ Newenham, Pamela (23 January 2014). "Irish Whiskey brand returns 80 years after Prohibition". The Irish Times. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  54. ^ "Echlinville – Brands". echlinville.com. The Echlinville Distillery. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  55. ^ Dromey, Trish (18 May 2015). "Toasting success of craft distillery". The Irish Examiner. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  56. ^ "Contact Glendalough". www.glendaloughdistillery.com. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  57. ^ . www.gndireland.com. Great Northern Distilery. 25 September 2015. Archived from the original on 21 October 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  58. ^ "Our Heritage". www.kilbeggandistillingcompany.com/. Kilbeggan Distilling Company. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  59. ^ "There's whiskey in the Mournes.... Killowen distillery". BusinessFirstOnline.co.uk. 6 February 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  60. ^ "Lough Mask Distillery Website". Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  61. ^ "History". www.bushmills.com. Bushmills. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  62. ^ "Alltech Announce Pearse Lyons Distillery". global.alltech.com. 18 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  63. ^ "Alltech's Irish distillery goes Gothic with restoration of Anglican church". www.kentucky.com. 3 February 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  64. ^ Taylor, Charlie (30 November 2018). "Powerscourt investors raise a glass to Irish whiskey". The Irish Times. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  65. ^ "Welcome to the Powerscourt Distillery – History in the Making". Powerscourt Distillery. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  66. ^ "Rademon Estate Begins Whiskey Production". www.drinksindustryireland.ie. 23 September 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  67. ^ a b O'Halloran, Barry (31 January 2017). "Diageo to spend €25m on developing whiskey brand". Irish Times. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  68. ^ Kenny, Ciara (16 October 2013). "Whiskey Distillery to create 55 jobs for Carlow". The Irish Times. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  69. ^ "The Shed Distillery Introduced Connacht's First Whiskey in 104 Years". The Taste. 22 December 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  70. ^ "Drumshambo Gunpowder Gin". www.celticwhiskeyshop.com. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  71. ^ Hancock, Ciarán (14 December 2014). "Final touches to Rigney spirits distillery in Drumshanbo". Irish Times. Retrieved 27 December 2016 – via IrishTimes.com.
  72. ^ "Teeling Distillery – Who We Are". TeelingDistillery.com. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  73. ^ Greeley, Brendan (16 May 2014). "Teeling Irish Whiskey's Pots O' Gold". Bloomberg. Retrieved 12 January 2017 – via Bloomberg.com.
  74. ^ (PDF). www.abfi.ie. Alcoholic Beverage Federation of Ireland. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  75. ^ Sod is turned on Tullamore Dew distillery, TheJournal.ie, 14 September 2013.
  76. ^ "Waterford Distillery – About". waterforddistillery.ie. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  77. ^ "Our brands". www.westcorkdistillers.com and www.westcorkirishwhiskey.com. West Cork Distillers. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  78. ^ McNulty, Anton (20 January 2015). "Planning Permission granted for Lahardaun distillery". The Mayo News. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  79. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 July 2013. Retrieved 4 August 2013.
  80. ^ "Plans for £12m whiskey distillery scrapped". 22 November 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • Amber, Kate (May 2019). "Ireland's Whiskey Guide". Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  • Barry, Aoife (9 April 2014). "Whiskey's going to be bringing a lot of dosh to Ireland over the next 10 years…". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Birdsall, Ben (2018). Whiskey Burn – The Distilleries of Ireland by Vespa. The Netherlands: Wittenborg University Press. ISBN 978-94-93066-00-7.
  • Buecheler, Christopher (2013). "An Introduction to Irish Whiskey". Primer Magazine. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Clarke, Jim (April 2004). "Irish Whiskey Shows Its Independent Side". Starchefs.com. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Cohen, Brad (22 October 2013). "We're Bringing Whiskey Back". The Atlantic. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Curran, Richard (19 December 2013). "A re-invigorated Irish whiskey industry is distilling a new golden age". Irish Independent. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Hallock, Betty (13 March 2014). "9 Irish whiskeys to try right now". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • McDonald, Henry (14 December 2013). "Irish whiskey industry launches fresh assault on Scotland's dominance". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • McFarland, Ben; Sandham, Tom (15 March 2014). "A beginner's guide to Irish whiskey". The Daily Telegraph (London). Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • McGarry, Jack (19 February 2014). "The 5 Biggest Irish Whiskey Myths". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • O'Shea, James (26 February 2014). "Sales of Irish whiskey in North America up 17.5 percent". IrishCentral website. IrishCentral LLC. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Paskin, Becky (17 March 2014). "Ireland's new Irish whiskey distilleries". The Spirits Business. Union Press Ltd. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Phelps, David (17 March 2014). "Twin Cities pub master is taking his Irish whiskey on the road". Star Tribune (Minneapolis). Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Ramirez, Mark (15 March 2014). . The Dallas Morning News. Archived from the original on 27 May 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Smyth, Jamie (8 September 2013). "Irish distillers order a triple as whiskey flows". The Financial Times. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Spain, William (15 March 2014). "America is awash with Irish whiskey". USA Today. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Toland, Bill (13 March 2014). "Spirits: Irish whiskey is going 'through the roof'". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Townsend, Brian (1997–1999). The Lost Distilleries of Ireland. Glasgow: Angels' Share (Neil Wilson Publishing). ISBN 1897784872.
  • Viera, Lauren (5 May 2013). "Irish whiskey's growth spurt". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  • Wondrich, David (January 2014). "Why you're drinking Irish whiskey all of a sudden". Esquire. Retrieved 27 May 2014.

External links edit

  • The Difference Between Scotch and Whiskey
  • The Irish Whiskey Society—Irish Whiskey discussion forum
  • Poteen Making / Déantús an Phoitín DVD – 'Singling' & Story from John William Seoige, YouTube – documentary on the origins and process of whiskey making
  • Irish Whiskey Act, 1980, Government of Ireland
  • "Why Irish Whiskey Is Experiencing a Resurgence". All Things Considered. National Public Radio. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 19 March 2018.

irish, whiskey, novel, irish, whiskey, novel, irish, fuisce, uisce, beatha, whiskey, made, island, ireland, word, whiskey, whisky, comes, from, irish, uisce, beatha, meaning, water, life, once, most, popular, spirit, world, though, long, period, decline, from,. For the novel see Irish Whiskey novel Irish whiskey Irish Fuisce or uisce beatha is whiskey made on the island of Ireland The word whiskey or whisky comes from the Irish uisce beatha meaning water of life 1 2 3 Irish whiskey was once the most popular spirit in the world though a long period of decline from the late 19th century onwards greatly damaged the industry 4 so much so that although Ireland boasted at least 28 distilleries in the 1890s by 1966 this number had fallen to just two and by 1972 the remaining distilleries Bushmills Distillery and Old Midleton Distillery replaced by New Midleton Distillery were owned by just one company Irish Distillers Irish whiskeyThree Irish whiskeys Knappogue Castle Jameson and BushmillsTypeDistilled beverageCountry of origin IrelandIntroduced13th 15th centuryAlcohol by volume 40 94 8 Proof US 80 189 6 ColourPale gold to dark amberFlavoursmooth sharp hint of vanillaIngredientsMalt waterVariantsPot Still Irish WhiskeyMalt Irish WhiskeyGrain Irish WhiskeyBlended Irish WhiskeyRelated productsScotch whiskyThe monopoly situation was ended by an academically conceived launch of the first new distillery in decades Cooley Distillery in 1987 5 Since the 1990s Irish whiskey has seen a resurgence in popularity and has been the fastest growing spirit in the world every year since 1990 With exports growing by over 15 per annum existing distilleries have been expanded and a number of new distilleries constructed As of December 2019 Ireland has 32 distilleries in operation with more either planned or under development 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Start of licensed distillation 1 2 Reform and expansion 1 3 Dublin whiskey peak 1 4 Coffey still 1 5 An industry in decline 1 6 Resurgence 2 Process 3 Regulations and labelling 3 1 Legal definition 3 2 Labelling 4 Distilleries in Ireland 4 1 Current distilleries 4 2 Planned or under construction 4 3 Historical distilleries 5 Types 5 1 Single malt Irish whiskey 5 2 Single pot still whiskey 5 3 Grain whiskey 5 4 Blended whiskey 5 5 Examples 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Erskine Nicol A Nip Against the Cold An Irishman pouring whiskey 1869 Part of Erskine Nicol Irish collection painting of Irish life Irish whiskey was one of the earliest distilled drinks in Europe arising around the 12th century 7 It is believed that Irish monks brought the technique of distilling perfumes back to Ireland from their travels to southern Europe around 1000 AD The Irish then modified this technique to obtain a drinkable spirit 7 Although termed whiskey the spirit produced during this period would have differed from what is currently recognised as whiskey as it would not have been aged and was often flavoured with aromatic herbs such as mint thyme or anise 7 Irish Mist a whiskey liqueur launched in 1963 is purportedly based on such a recipe Although known to have occurred for hundreds of years records of whiskey production in Ireland can be difficult to come by particularly in the earlier years when production was unregulated Even in later years as production was frequently illicit official records bear little resemblance to reality 7 In addition as many Irish records were traditionally oral rather than written details on early production are likely lost 7 The oldest known documented record of whiskey in Ireland was in 1405 in the Annals of Clonmacnoise it was written that the head of a clan died after taking a surfeit of aqua vitae at Christmas Its first known mention in Scotland dates from 1494 8 However it is known that by 1556 whiskey was widespread as an Act passed by the English Parliament declared whiskey to be a drink nothing profitable to be drunken daily and used is now universally throughout this realm made 9 This Act also made it technically illegal for anyone other than the peers gentlemen and freemen of larger towns to distil spirits without a licence from the Lord Deputy 7 However as Crown control did not extend far beyond the Pale a fortified area around Dublin this had little effect 7 Irish whiskey is also described in The commodities of aqua vitae by Richard Stanihurst in 1547 1618 10 Start of licensed distillation edit In 1608 King James I granted a licence to Sir Thomas Phillips a landowner in County Antrim 11 Today Kilbeggan Distillery in Kilbeggan County Westmeath lays claim to the title of oldest distillery in Ireland as the first distillery in Kilbeggan was established in 1757 although not continuously operating since e g the Kilbeggan Distillery was entirely shut down around 1917 and again between 1954 and 2007 and was in rubble and totally derelict by 1983 12 13 Despite this the licence was continuously paid and whiskey is currently distilled in Kilbeggan using the original 1757 licence Kilbeggan also has what is believed to be the oldest operational copper pot still in the world first used in 2007 after being last used in the 19th century 13 14 However it is through the earlier 1608 licence that the Old Bushmills Distillery lays claim to being the oldest surviving grant of licence to distil in the world However the current Bushmills distillery and company was not registered to trade until 1784 and despite the promotion of the Phillips licence as its claimed founding date the Bushmills distillery does not clearly descend from any distillery operated by Phillips through ownership or location 11 15 In 1661 the Crown introduced a tax on whiskey production in Britain and Ireland 7 Therefore in theory all whiskey distillers in Ireland were to register and pay taxes Although Crown control now extended far beyond the Pale there is limited official record of whiskey distillation during this period One reason for this is that until 1761 registration was done on a voluntary basis 7 Therefore as registration entailed paying a tax it was much avoided for obvious reasons 7 Another reason is that those tasked with enforcing the law were frequently local landlords and if their tenants were the illicit distillers it was not in their best interests to enforce the law 7 It is known however that more distillation occurred than is officially recorded as when registration later became compulsory several registrations detail the use of existing facilities 7 From a regulatory perspective the introduction of the Act is a historical milestone as it provides a clear distinction between licit and illicit whiskey distillation in Ireland For many years following its introduction whiskey produced by registered distillers was known as parliament whiskey 7 while that produced by illicit producers was and still is referred to as Poitin a Gaelic term meaning small pot often anglicised as poteen in reference to the small pot stills used by the illicit distillers However although traditionally the product of illicit production many legal varieties of Poitin have come to market in recent years In the 18th century demand for whiskey in Ireland grew significantly driven both by strong population growth and by displacing the demand for imported spirits 16 Growth in the latter is very much visible in the share of Irish duties paid on legal spirits in the late 1700s In 1770 whiskey only accounted for 25 of the total duty on spirits received by the exchequer while duty on imported rum accounted for 51 with the remainder divided equally between brandy and gin 17 By 1790 however whiskey s share accounted for 66 17 As a consequence of this increased demand some distillers prioritized quantity over quality to the detriment of their product 7 This prompted parliament to pass an Act in 1759 prohibiting distillers from using any ingredient other than malt grain potatoes or sugar in the production of whiskey and specifically prohibiting several unsavory ingredients 7 Another consequence was that the potential revenue lost to the exchequer through the under reporting of output at legal distilleries and the tax avoidance of illicit producers became more significant prompting parliament to introduce another Act of Parliament This was enacted in 1779 and significantly reformed how the taxes payable on whiskey production were calculated 7 Previously taxes were payable on production volumes which were subject to manipulation However this Act removed the potential for under reporting by making taxes payable on a distillery s potential output based on the capacity of its pot stills rather than its actual or reported output 16 In addition the Act penalised smaller distillers in an attempt to reduce reporting fraud 18 Due to the stringency of this Act which made assumptions about output for instance a 500 gallon pot still was assumed to produce 33 075 gallons a month 19 and the minimum numbers of days which a still was in operation per annum 112 16 many of the smaller or less efficient registered distilleries were forced underground In 1779 when the Act was introduced there were 1 228 registered distilleries in Ireland however by 1790 this number had fallen to 246 and by 1821 there were just 32 licensed distilleries in operation 7 16 This had the effect of concentrating licit distillation in a smaller number of distilleries based mainly in the larger urban centres such as Cork and Dublin which offered better markets for legal producers 16 In the rural areas distillation became a more illicit activity in particular in the northwest of Ireland where agricultural lands were poorer and poitin provided a supplemental source of income to the tenant farmers an income which landlords were again slow to curtail as it would have weakened their abilities to pay rent 16 The scale of this illicit activity was such that one surveyor estimated that duty was paid on only 2 of the spirit consumed in the northwestern provinces of Ulster and Connaught 20 while Aeneas Coffey an excise officer at the time and later inventor of the Coffey Still estimated that there were over 800 illicit stills in operation in Inishowen County Donegal alone 7 By contrast illicit distillation in Munster and Leinster was less extensive 16 By some measures the Act was successful as the volume of whiskey on which excise was paid increased from 1 2 million to 2 9 million gallons 16 20 In addition it prompted capital investments in establishing larger distilleries which were more easily regulated due to the need for economies of scale to profit from legal distillation 16 However when demand for whiskey increased in the early 1800s due to population growth and changing consumption patterns which saw it becoming more ingrained in Irish cultural activities 16 much of the demand was initially met by small scale illicit distillers who did not need to pay tax or comply with the restrictions of the 1779 Act 16 In fact so much illicit spirit was available during this period that the licensed distillers in Dublin complained that it could be obtained as openly in the streets as they sell a loaf of bread 21 Reform and expansion edit nbsp The Old Midleton Distillery built in 1825 hosts a mammoth 31 618 gallon Pot still so big that the still room needed to be built around it Although no longer in use it remains in place inside the old distillery building 7 In 1823 the authorities acknowledging the problems with the licensing system cut the duties by half 16 and published an Excise Act which significantly reformed the existing legislation making legal distillation much more attractive 7 In particular the reforms removed the need for distillers to rush production in order to produce as much or more whiskey than duties would be paid on leading to improvements in fuel efficiency and product quality as distillers could operate the stills at a more appropriate pace 16 In addition restrictions on the type and capacity of stills used were removed granting distillers more freedom to tailor their equipment 16 Another significant reform was a change to how duty was paid Previously duty was charged monthly based on still output meaning that distilleries paid tax on whiskey before it was sold 16 However under the reforms duty was to be paid only when the whiskey was actually sold making its storage in bond more attractive as less of the distillery s working capital would be tied up in already taxed stock 16 Together these reforms greatly improved the distilling landscape leading to a drop in illicit whiskey production and a boom in investment in legal distilleries In 1821 two years before the reforms there were 32 licensed distilleries in Ireland Just four years later in 1827 this number had risen to 82 and reached 93 by 1835 a 19th century peak 16 The increased attractiveness of legal distillation is evident in the scale of the equipment used Prior to the Excise Act of 1823 the largest pot still in Ireland had a capacity of just 750 gallons By 1825 however the Midleton Distillery operated a 31 618 gallon pot still which remains the largest ever built 19 Note the largest pot still in operation in the world as of 2014 located next door in the New Midleton Distillery are roughly half this size at 16 498 gallons 75 000 litres 22 Domestic demand was reduced somewhat in the mid 1800s due to the Temperance movement of the 1830s and the Great Famine of the 1840s during which a million Irish died and a million Irish emigrated Between 1823 and 1900 however whiskey output in Ireland still increased fourfold 7 and with access to the overseas markets provided by the British Empire Irish whiskey became the most popular spirit in the World Dublin whiskey was particularly well regarded 19 Dublin whiskey peak edit nbsp Jameson s Bow Street distillery pictured in Alfred Barnard s 1887 report on the distilleries of Britain and IrelandIn the early 1800s Ireland was the largest spirit market in the United Kingdom with demand for spirit exceeding that of more populous England 16 Therefore as capacities expanded Ireland became the largest producer of spirits in the United Kingdom and Dublin then the largest market for spirits in Ireland emerged as a major distilling centre By 1823 Dublin boasted the five largest licensed distilleries in the country 16 23 At their peak the distilleries in Dublin would grow to become the largest in the world with a combined output of almost 10 million gallons per annum the largest of which Roe s Thomas Street Distillery had an output exceeding 2 million gallons per annum 19 By 1878 the reputation of Dublin whiskey was such that Distillers Company Ltd a Scottish distilling firm having built a distillery in Dublin claimed that Dublin whiskey could sell for a 25 premium over other Irish whiskeys and that it had a demand five times that of Scotch at the time Although these figures are likely inflated they give an indication of the esteem in which Dublin whiskey was held even by Scottish distillers 19 During this period the four largest Dublin distilling firms of John Jameson William Jameson John Powers and George Roe all family run and collectively known as the Big Four came to dominate the Irish distilling landscape The chief output of these distilleries known as single or pure pot still whiskey was made from a mix of malted and unmalted barley and solely distilled in pot stills The style having initially emerged as a means of avoiding a 1785 tax on malt endured although the tax had been later repealed 24 In fact even by the late 1880s only two of Ireland s then 28 existing distilleries were producing single malt whiskey the rest steadfast in their devotion to pure pot still 24 In this period when Irish whiskey was at its zenith it would have been difficult to imagine that Scotch then produced by small scale producers and almost unheard of outside of Scotland 7 would soon become the world s preeminent drink while Irish whiskey then the world s most popular whiskey would enter a century of decline culminating with all of Dublin s great distilleries shutting their doors By the late 20th century the once popular pure pot still whiskey had almost disappeared entirely with only two specialist bottlings Green Spot and Redbreast remaining in existence 24 However since 2010 several new single pot whiskeys have been launched 24 Coffey still edit nbsp A Coffey still installed at the old Tullamore Distillery in 1948 later lay unused outside the then closed Kilbeggan Distillery for several years There were a number of factors both internal and external which led to this decline However one of the main turning points was the patenting in 1832 of the Coffey still by Aeneas Coffey Ironically Coffey was both the former Inspector General of Excise in Ireland and subsequently after leaving the excise service an Irish distiller himself 18 His patent the Coffey still was a continuous distillation apparatus which offered an improvement on the traditional pot still Although similar continuous stills had been proposed in the past including by other Irish distillers themselves the Coffey still was the most effective and soon entered widespread use 18 Unlike traditional pot stills which were operated in a batch manner Coffey stills could be operated continuously This made them cheaper to operate as they required less fuel and more efficient to run producing a continuous rapid output of spirit In addition because technically continuous distillation entails the conduct of a series of distillation runs in sequence internally within a self contained unit rather than the conduct of a single distillation within a pot still Coffey stills were capable of producing a far higher strength output than pot stills However this advantage also came with a downside As a consequence of increasing the alcohol concentration in the product Coffey stills removed some of the other volatile components responsible for flavour 18 As a result their use proved extremely controversial when first introduced Ireland was the initial testing ground for the Coffey still with Coffey showcasing them in his own distillery and offering them to other Irish distillers Although there were seven in operation in Ireland by 1833 16 their use did not become widespread amongst the larger distilleries In particular the big four Dublin distillers proud of their existing produce scoffed at its use questioning if its product grain whiskey which they termed neutral or silent i e tasteless spirit could even be termed whiskey 7 It wasn t that the distillers were Luddites afraid of change their distilleries were among the most advanced in the world 19 The distillers were simply steadfast in the belief that their existing methods yielded a superior whiskey 18 For instance John Jameson trialled a Coffey still at his distillery but chose to not adopt the technology because he was not satisfied with the quality of product it produced 18 Therefore in the face of opposition in Ireland Coffey offered his still to the English gin and Scottish whisky distillers who proved more receptive and where the technology gained widespread use The adoption of the Coffey still in Scotland was indirectly assisted by Ireland s Great Famine of the 1840s which led to the repealing of the Corn Laws which between 1815 and 1846 had restricted the import of cheaper foreign grain into Britain and Ireland After the laws were repealed in 1846 cheap American corn could be imported and used to produce neutral spirit in Coffey stills This spirit though lacking in taste could then be blended with traditional pot still derived spirit to produce a cheaper blended whiskey This blended whiskey which was less intense in taste than pure pot still was to prove popular in Britain capturing much market share from Irish pure pot still whiskey Despite changing tastes and falling market share the adoption of Coffey stills was stubbornly resisted by Irish distillers for many years with some arguing for restrictions on their use For instance in 1878 the big Dublin distillers jointly published a pamphlet entitled Truths about Whisky in which they referred to the output of Coffey stills as Good bad or indifferent but it cannot be whiskey and it ought not to be sold under that name 25 In 1904 almost seventy years after the Coffey still had been patented the Senior Manager of Ireland s largest rural distillery Allman s of Bandon placed an outright ban on the introduction of Coffey stills at his distillery in the face of opposition from a director 7 The issue came to a head in 1908 when a royal commission was appointed to investigate the issue By this point 60 of all whiskey produced in Britain and Ireland was made in Coffey stills 26 In 1909 the royal commission settled the argument declaring that whiskey could refer to the output of either Coffey or pot stills 26 By comparison a similar debate occurred in France such that under French law Cognac must be double distilled in pot stills 27 28 whereas Coffey stills are permissible in the production of armagnac An industry in decline edit In addition to the introduction of blended whiskeys and the Irish distillers failure to account for its appeal to changing tastes there were a number of additional issues which placed further pressure on the Irish distillers the Irish War of Independence the subsequent civil war and trade war with Britain which cut off whiskey exports to Britain and all Commonwealth countries then Irish whiskey s biggest market prohibition in the United States 1920 1933 which severely curtailed exports to Irish whiskey s second biggest market Irish whiskey had accounted for more than 60 of whiskey sales in the US in the 1800s 29 widespread counterfeiting of Irish whiskeys in America and Britain protectionist policies introduced by the Irish Free State government which significantly capped whiskey exports in the hope of taxing domestic consumption and finally over expansion and mismanagement at several Irish distilleries Together these factors greatly hampered exports and forced many distilleries into economic difficulties and out of business and by the early 20th century Scotland had surpassed Ireland to become the world s largest whiskey producer When British historian Alfred Barnard published his account of the distilleries of Britain and Ireland in 1887 there were 28 distilleries in operation in Ireland By the 1960s there were only a handful of these remaining in operation and in 1966 three of these John Jameson Powers and Cork Distilleries Company chose to amalgamate their operations under the name of Irish Distillers and to close their existing facilities and concentrate their operations in a new purpose built facility to be constructed beside the Old Midleton Distillery in County Cork In 1972 these were joined by the only other remaining Irish operation Bushmills so that by the mid 1970s there were only two whiskey distilleries in operation in Ireland the New Midleton Distillery and the Old Bushmills Distillery both owned by Irish Distillers and with only one of these having operated during Irish whiskey s golden years Production reached a nadir at about 400 000 500 000 cases per annum during the consolidation period down from a peak of 12 million cases around 1900 4 Resurgence edit The late 1980s saw the beginnings of a long and slow resurgence in the Irish whiskey industry with the establishment of the Cooley Distillery in 1987 by John Teeling 5 and then Pernod Ricard s takeover of Irish Distillers in 1988 which led to increased marketing of Irish whiskeys in particular Jameson overseas Since the 1990s Irish whiskey has undergone a major resurgence and for the next twenty years it was the fastest growing spirit in the world with annual growth of approximately 15 20 per annum In 2010 the Kilbeggan Distillery which had closed in 1954 was reopened fully by Teeling Irish distillers who operated under rules less strict than those applying to Scottish producers experimented with new flavours methods and cocktails 29 By June 2019 the number of operating distilleries had grown to 25 and several more were in the planning stages 30 31 32 33 As of 2017 roughly 750 people were employed on a full time basis in the whiskey industry in Ireland 34 In addition it is estimated that the industry provides support to a further 4 200 jobs across agriculture and other sectors of the economy 34 As of 2018 sales of Irish whiskey stood at 10 7 million 9 litres cases up from 4 4 million cases in 2008 with sales projected to exceed 12 million cases its historical peak by 2020 and 24 million by 2030 35 30 In 2021 annual sales were 14 million cases 168 amp million bottles and in 2022 there were 42 distilleries on the island 29 Process edit nbsp Bushmills Distillery County Antrim said to be the world s oldest licensed distilleryIrish whiskey has a smoother finish as opposed to the smoky earthy overtones common to Scotch whisky which come largely from drying the malted barley using peat smoke 29 36 Peat is rarely used in the malting process outside of Scotland There are notable exceptions to these rules in both countries Examples include Connemara peated Irish malt whiskey from the Cooley Distillery in Cooley County Louth Pearse Whiskey from Pearse Lyons Distillery Dublin a Dunville s peated from Echlinville Distillery Regulations and labelling editLegal definition edit Irish whiskey is a protected European Geographical Indication GI under Regulation EC No 110 2008 37 As of 29 January 2016 production labelling and marketing of Irish whiskey must be verified by the Irish revenue authorities as conforming with the Department of Agriculture s 2014 technical file for Irish whiskey 38 Key requirements include specifications that Irish whiskey must 39 Be distilled and matured on the island of Ireland comprising the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from a mash of malted cereals with or without whole grains of other cereals and which has been saccharified by the diastase of malt contained therein with or without other natural enzymes fermented by the action of yeast distilled at an alcoholic strength of less than 94 8 alcohol by volume in such a way that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the materials used and only plain water and caramel colour is added to it subject to the maturation of the final distillate for at least three years in wooden casks such as oak not exceeding 700 litres 185 US gal 154 imp gal capacity Retain the colour aroma and taste derived from the production process referred to above Have a minimum alcoholic by volume content of 40 Individual technical specifications for the three varieties of Irish whiskey single pot still single malt single grain plus blended whiskey a mix of two or more of these varieties are also outlined in the technical file 39 The use of the term single in the aforementioned varieties being permissible only if the whiskey is totally distilled on the site of a single distillery 39 Labelling edit There are several regulations governing the labelling of Irish whiskeys in particular 39 Spirit drinks must not be labelled packaged sold advertised or promoted in such a way to suggest they are Irish whiskey or any of the sub varieties unless they meet the relevant requirements Any age statement must refer to the age of the youngest whiskey used Although traditionally spelled with an e Irish whiskey may also be marketed as Irish whisky Distilleries in Ireland edit nbsp nbsp Midleton nbsp West Cork nbsp Dingle nbsp Cooley nbsp Bushmills nbsp Kilbeggan nbsp Rademon Estate nbsp Blackwater nbsp Great Northern nbsp Echlinville nbsp Teeling nbsp Tullamore nbsp Shed nbsp Waterford nbsp Royal Oak nbsp Connacht Whiskey nbsp Slane nbsp Pearse Lyons nbsp Clonakilty nbsp Dublin Liberties nbsp Ballykeefe nbsp Powerscourt nbsp Killowen nbsp Roe amp Co nbsp Achill Island nbsp Burren nbsp Lough Gill nbsp Lough Mask nbsp Bushmills nbsp Crollyclass notpageimage Distilleries operating in Ireland as of Dec 2019 Current distilleries edit According to the Irish Whiskey Association as of December 2019 there were 32 whiskey distilleries in operation in Ireland 40 However many of these were recently established and had not yet aged their own spirits for sale as whiskey Achill Island Distillery County Mayo est 2015 produces the Irish American brand whiskey 41 Ballykeefe Distillery County Kilkenny est 2017 released its own whiskey in March 2021 42 Also produces vodka gin and poitin Baoilleach Distillery County Donegal est 2019 produces gin and poitin will start production of whiskey in early 2022 Blacks of Kinsale County Cork est 2015 produces whiskey gin and rum Blackwater Distillery County Waterford est 2014 currently produces a range of gins 43 Due to release its own whiskey in 2022 44 Boann Distillery County Meath est 2019 45 Boatyard Distillery County Fermanagh est 2016 currently produces gin and vodka whiskey is maturing Burren Whiskey Distillery County Clare est 2019 46 Clonakilty Distillery County Cork est 2016 opened to the public in March 2019 47 Connacht Whiskey Company County Mayo est 2014 released its first whiskey in June 2021 48 Also produces gin vodka and poitin and markets a single malt sourced from other distilleries 49 Cooley Distillery County Louth est 1987 when opened it was the only independent distillery in Ireland 50 Along with its sister distillery in Kilbeggan it produces the Connemara Tyrconnell Kilbeggan and 2Gingers whiskeys It has been owned by Beam Suntory since 2011 Copeland Distillery County Down est 2019 currently produces gin rum and whiskey Crolly Distillery County Donegal est 2020 will produce single malt whiskey production began in November 2020 Dingle Distillery County Kerry est 2012 distills gin vodka and whiskey The first batches of whiskey were released in late 2016 51 A single pot still whiskey was released in 2017 52 Dublin Liberties Distillery Dublin est 2018 opened to the public in February 2019 31 Echlinville Distillery County Down est 2013 the first Northern Irish distillery to be granted a distilling licence in almost 125 years 53 The distillery relaunched the Dunville s brand previously produced at the Royal Irish Distillery in Belfast The distillery also produces gin and poitin 54 Glendalough Distillery County Wicklow est 2013 it currently ages and finishes whiskeys from other distilleries and also markets gin and poitin 55 It is in the process of building a new distillery 56 Glendree Distillery County Clare est 2019 currently produces vodka whiskey is maturing Great Northern Distillery County Louth est 2015 John Teeling founder of the Cooley distillery developed two distilleries on the site of the Great Northern Brewery in Dundalk The distilleries began operations in 2015 have a capacity of 50 million bottles per annum 57 Hinch Distillery County Down est 2020 production began in November 2020 Kilbeggan Distillery County Westmeath est 1757 re commissioned 2007 the distillery re opened in 2007 54 years to the day after it closed and 250 years after it was first established 58 A sister distillery of the Cooley Distillery both were bought by Beam Suntory in 2011 Killowen Distillery County Down est 2019 the distillery will produce double distilled peated whiskey single pot still whiskey and gin 33 59 Lough Gill Distillery County Sligo est 2019 Lough Mask Distillery County Mayo est 2019 60 Micil Distillery Galway est 2016 produces poitin and gin New Midleton Distillery County Cork est 1975 produces Jameson Powers Paddy Midleton Redbreast and others including the independently sold Green Spot Owned by Pernod Ricard since 1988 Old Bushmills Distillery County Antrim est 1784 through a 1608 licence to distil lays claim to be the oldest licensed distillery in the world 61 Produces a range of blends Bushmills Original Black Bush and single malts Bushmills 10 16 and 21 year olds Previously owned by Pernod Ricard and Diageo since 2014 it has been owned by Proximo Spirits Pearse Lyons Distillery Dublin est 2017 opened in a converted church on Dublin s Thomas Street in September 2017 62 63 Alltech previously operated Alltech Craft Distillery in Carlow from 2012 to 2016 Powerscourt Distillery County Wicklow est 2018 located on the grounds of Powerscourt Estate the distillery will market whiskey previously distilled by its Head Distiller Noel McSweeney at the Cooley Distillery until its own stock is mature enough for release 64 65 Rademon Estate Distillery County Down est 2015 the distillery plans to release malt whiskey its first mature stocks became available in August 2018 The distillery also produces gin 66 Roe amp Co Distillery Dublin est 2019 located in refurbished building which formerly housed the power station of the Guinness Brewery the distillery sits alongside the site of George Roe s original Thomas Street Distillery 32 The distillery opened in June 2019 following a 25 million investment by Diageo owners of the Guinness Brewery 67 Royal Oak Distillery County Carlow est 2016 previously called Walsh Whiskey Distillery An Irish Italian venture since January 2019 100 owned by Illva Saronno the makers of Tia Maria The distillery is expected to have a capacity of 500 000 cases per year 68 Shed Distillery County Leitrim est 2014 production began in December 2014 and the whiskey has been on sale since 2019 69 The distillery also produces a gin Gunpowder Gin 70 71 Slane Distillery County Meath est 2018 developed and owned by Brown Forman Corporation in partnership with Henry and Alex Conyngham the new distillery was built at the historic Slane Castle estate in the original stable buildings dating back to the early 1700s Distilling began in early 2018 Slane Irish Whiskey is a blended whiskey aged in a unique triple cask maturation process Sliabh Liag Distillery County Donegal est 2016 produces whiskey gin and vodka Tipperary Distillery County Tipperary est 2020 production of their own distillate began in November 2020 after having bottled sourced spirit since 2016 Teeling Distillery Dublin est 2015 the first new distillery built in Dublin city for over 125 years 72 it was founded by the Teeling family who previously established the Cooley Distillery When the Cooley Distillery was sold in 2011 the Teelings negotiated the purchase of mature stock which is being used in their whiskeys until mature stock from the new distillery becomes available 73 Tullamore Distillery County Offaly est 2014 opened in September 2014 returning production of Tullamore D E W to Tullamore after a break of sixty years The distillery has a capacity of 1 5 million cases per year and is owned by William Grant amp Sons 74 75 Waterford Distillery Waterford est 2016 a craft distillery established in a converted Diageo facility Production of spirit began in January 2016 The distillery will produce a single malt 76 West Cork Distillers County Cork est 2003 produces single malt whiskey whiskey liqueur vodka gin and poitin 77 Planned or under construction edit Further distilleries are either planned or in development across Ireland In addition to the Glendalough distillery mentioned above which had previously distilled spirit planned distilleries include 30 6 Name CountyBallymore Distillers County KildareBelfast Distillery County AntrimCape Clear Distillery County CorkFore Distillery County WestmeathGortinore County WaterfordIrish Whitetail Distillery County LouthKillarney Distillery County KerryKinnitty Castle Distillery County OffalyLough Neagh Distillery County ArmaghLough Ree County LongfordMatt D Arcy amp Co County DownMcAllister Distillery County GalwayMonasterevin Distillery County KildareNephin Distillery County Mayo 78 Old Carrick Mill County MonaghanScotts Irish Whiskey County FermanaghSkellig Six18 County KerryStewart s Mill Distillery County RoscommonWayward Irish Spirits County KerryIn addition work began on a further distillery the Quiet Man Craft Distillery in Derry in 2017 However the project was subsequently cancelled in late November 2018 79 80 Historical distilleries edit nbsp Kilbeggan Distillery pictured here c 1905 was just one of many Irish distilleries which closed in the 20th century Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries around 1 000 registered distilleries opened and closed across Ireland with multiples of this number operating illegally 19 Most of these have disappeared without a trace only to be remembered by local street names e g Bond Street in Dublin For instance the excise return for 1800 lists 40 distilleries operating in Dublin city alone while Drogheda is estimated to have had 15 distilleries in the 1780s with as many as ten operating in Cork city in the 19th century 19 Of these numerous ventures only one Bushmills has remained in continuous operation until the present day However the Kilbeggan Distillery est 1757 which closed in 1954 reopened in recent years while a new distillery was constructed in Tullamore to replace an existing distillery which also closed in 1954 Some of the notable distilleries previously in operation across Ireland are listed below 19 Avoniel Belfast County Antrim 1882 1929 Belfast Distillery Belfast County Antrim 1823 1868 Cromac Distillery Belfast County Antrim 1776 1930 Irish Distillery Connswater Belfast County Antrim 1886 1929 Royal Irish Distillery Belfast County Antrim 1868 1938 or later Among Ireland s largest distilleries in the 1890s the Royal Irish was the home of Dunville s whisky Although the distillery is now gone Dunville s was resurrected as an Irish whiskey brand by the Echlinville Distillery in 2013 Bandon Distillery Bandon County Cork 1826 1929 At its peak Allman s distillery in Bandon was the largest rural distillery in Ireland with an output of over 500 000 gallons per annum 19 Glen Distillery Kilnap County Cork 1802 1925 Hackett s Distillery Midleton County Cork 1824 c 1845 Old Midleton Distillery Midleton County Cork 1825 1975 Home to the World s largest pot still the Old Midleton Distillery closed in 1975 when Irish Distillers concentrated production in a new purpose built facility constructed along the distillery It now operates as a visitor centre North Mall Distillery Cork County Cork 1779 1920 Watercourse Distillery Cork County Cork 1795 1975 Green Distillery Blackpool County Cork 1796 1870 Daly s Distillery County Cork 1807 1869 Burt Distillery County Donegal 1814 1841 Comber Distilleries County Down 1825 1953 Bow Street Distillery Dublin 1780 1971 Run by John Jameson amp Son Bow Street was one of the big four Dublin distilleries and the original home of Jameson Irish Whiskey At its peak Bow Street was the second largest distillery in Ireland and one of the largest in the World with an output of one million gallons per annum In the 1970s production was moved to the New Midleton Distillery County Cork and the Bow Street Distillery now operates as a visitors centre Dodder Bank Distilleries Dublin John s Lane Distillery Dublin 1796 1976 Run by James Power amp Son John s Lane was one of the big four Dublin distilleries and the original home of Power s Irish Whiskey The distillery had an output of 900 000 gallons per annum in the 1880s 25 Production was moved to Midleton in the 1970s Jones Road Distillery Dublin 1873 c 1945 Marrowbone Lane Distillery Dublin late 1700s 1920s One of the big four Dublin distilleries Marrowbone Lane was run by William Jameson amp Co not to be confused with John Jameson amp Son above At its peak Marrowbone Lane had some of the largest capital equipment of any whiskey distillery worldwide 19 Phoenix Park Chapelizod Dublin 1878 1921 Thomas Street Distillery Dublin 1757 1926 Run by the Roe Family one of the big four Dublin Distilling Dynasties Thomas Street Distillery was once the largest in the Britain and Ireland with an output of two million gallons per annum at its peak 19 It was located opposite Guinness St James Gate brewery which itself was the largest brewery in the world at one point After the distillery was closed some of its buildings were purchased and incorporated into the Guinness Brewery In particular the landmark St Patrick s Tower which dates from 1757 and is one of the oldest smock windmills in Europe 19 is still visible on the site of the Guinness brewery In 2017 Diageo announced plans to relaunch the Roe amp Co whiskey brand and to establish a new distillery in an old power plant building at the Guinness Brewery meters from the site of the original Thomas Street Distillery 67 Burke s Distillery County Galway mid 1820s c 1850 Nun s Island Distillery County Galway 1846 or earlier 1915 Monasterevan County Kildare 1784 c 1921 White Horse Distillery Mountrath County Laois named after a local river this distillery is notable as local folklore suggests that either the distillery or its name were purchased by a Scottish whisky firm in the 1800s 19 If true this would mark an interesting turning point in the rise and fall of the whiskey industries in the respective countries Walker s Thomand Gate County Limerick c 1820 c 1905 Abbey Street County Londonderry c 1790 1925 Waterside County Londonderry 1820 1925 Coleraine County Londonderry 1820 1978 Limavady Distillery County Londonderry 1805 1914 Drogheda Distillery County Louth 1782 1850 or later Dundalk Distillery County Louth 1708 1926 one of the oldest distilleries in Ireland Dundalk Distillery had the distinction of having Ireland s largest chimney 19 Westport Distillery County Mayo 1826 c 1860 Birr Distillery County Offaly 1805 1889 Old Tullamore Distillery County Offaly 1829 1954 once one of Ireland s most successful distilleries Tullamore D E W one of Ireland s most well known whiskeys was originally produced here Marlfield Distillery Clonmel County Tipperary 1817 1856 Bishop s Water Distillery Wexford 1827 1915 Types edit nbsp Irish whiskeys nbsp More Irish whiskeysIrish whiskey comes in several forms with the name of the style depending on the type of grain used and the distillation process Traditionally Irish whiskey was produced in pot stills Irish whiskeys made in a pot still fall into two categories Single malt Irish whiskey edit Whiskeys made entirely from malted barley distilled in a pot still within a single distillery are referred to as single malt whiskeys a style also very commonly associated with Scotch whisky These may be double or triple distilled 24 Single pot still whiskey edit Single pot still whiskey is made from a mixture of malted and unmalted barley completely distilled in a pot still within a single distillery This differs from single malt whiskey through the inclusion of raw unmalted grain in the mash This style has also historically been referred to as pure pot still whiskey and Irish pot still whiskey with older bottlings and memorabilia often bearing these names Single pot whiskeys were the most common style of Irish whiskey until the emergence of blends in the 20th century 24 Grain whiskey edit Whiskey produced from continuous distillation in a column or Coffey still rather than a pot still is referred to as grain whiskey This may be produced from a variety of grains Lighter and more neutral in taste this spirit is rarely found on its own though some examples exist The vast majority of grain whiskey is used to make blended whiskey a product made by mixing column still product with richer and more intense pot still product Blended whiskey edit A mixture of the above styles Regardless of whether the blended whiskey is made from combining grain whiskey with either single malt whiskey or with single pot still whiskey or both it is labelled with the same terminology Blended whiskeys are now the most common style of both Irish and Scotch whiskeys 24 Examples edit Blends J J Corry The Gael Black Bush Bushmills Original Clontarf Inishowen Jameson Kilbeggan Locke s Blend Midleton Very Rare Millars Paddy Powers Tullamore Dew Single pot still Green Spot Redbreast 12 15 21 27 years Single malt Bushmills 10 12 16 21 years Connemara Peated Malt Regular Cask Strength and 12 years Locke s Single Malt 8 years Knappogue Castle Irish Whiskey 12 14 16 years Tullamore Dew Single Malt 10 year Tyrconnell Single grain Kilbeggan Single Grain 8 10 15 18 years Teeling s Single GrainSee also editIrish Cream liqueur made from Irish whiskey and cream Irish whiskey brands Outline of whiskyReferences editNotes edit Whiskey and Whisky and Alchemy www merriam webster com Retrieved 18 February 2021 Micallef Joseph V Is It Whisky Or Whiskey And Why It Matters Forbes Retrieved 18 February 2021 Sood Suemedha A guide to the lingo and history of whiskey www bbc com Retrieved 18 February 2021 a b Barry O Halloran 8 November 2013 Distillers in high spirits as the whiskey sector enters golden era www irishtimes com Retrieved 8 November 2013 a b Allan M Carrie 16 March 2018 Irish whiskey is back from the abyss and booming Here s why The Australian Financial Review Retrieved 30 October 2020 So did John Teeling who in the late 1980s after years of planning and work ended Irish Distillers longtime monopoly when he launched Cooley Distillery a b Association Irish Whiskey 11 June 2019 Congratulations to IWA member DiageoIreland IrishWhiskeyAsc Retrieved 13 June 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Mulryan Peter 2002 The Whiskeys of Ireland Dublin Ireland O Brien Press ISBN 0 86278 751 3 Whisky or Whiskey MasterOfMalt Com Retrieved 27 December 2016 Lees Frederic Richard 1864 The Condensed Argument for the Legislative Prohibition of the Liquor Traffic United Kingdom J Caudwell p 54 Richard Stanyhurst 1547 1618 a b The Bushmills History Bushmills com Bushmills Retrieved 22 December 2016 We Are Kilbeggan Kilbeggan Distilling Co Retrieved 31 March 2022 1757 Matthias McManus establishes Kilbeggan s first distillery under the patronage of Gustavus Lambert 1917 Owing to food shortages throughout Great Britain the distilling of whiskey in Ireland is suspended 1983 We got the key and walked in one Saturday morning in 1983 Every place was covered in rubble and falling timbers Totally derelict All the roofs had fallen in all the windows were blown out It was a huge sprawling complex of dilapidated buildings and we had absolutely nothing per Kitty Flynn the town historian a b Kilbeggan Distillery re activated after 53 years 28 September 2007 Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 2 September 2017 The Kilbeggan Distillery Experience Kilbeggan www irelandwhiskeytrail com Archived from the original on 2 September 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2017 dead link Muldoon Sean McGarry Jack Herlihy Tim Kelly Conor 2019 From Barley to Blarney A Whiskey Lover s Guide to Ireland Kansas City Missouri Andrews McMeel pp 215 217 ISBN 978 1 4494 8993 9 It is true that a royal permit to distill was granted by King James I to a local landowner waaay back in 1608 But to this very spot Well The original distillery was built in 1784 when the pot still symbol seen on every label was first registered as a trademark At a Glance First distillation 1784 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Bielenberg Andy 2009 Ireland and the Industrial Revolution The impact of the industrial revolution on Irish industry 1801 1922 Routledge ISBN 978 0415448468 a b Malcolm Elizabeth 1986 Ireland Sober Ireland Free Syracuse N Y Syracuse University Press p 23 a b c d e f Booth John 1995 A Toast to Ireland Belfast The Black Staff Press pp 33 ISBN 9780856405365 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Townsend Brian 1997 1999 The Lost Distilleries of Ireland Glasgow Scotland Neil Wilson Publishing ISBN 1 897784 87 2 a b Maguire Edward B 1973 Irish Whiskey A history of distilling the spirit trade and excise controls in Ireland Barnes amp Noble pp 127 128 148 ISBN 9780064947015 Connell Kenneth H 1968 Irish Peasant Society Four Historical Essays Clarendon P 200m expansion project helps Midleton to brew up a storm Engineers Journal Engineers Ireland 2014 Seventh Report on Excise in Ireland BPP 233 234 1836 a b c d e f g O Connor Fionnan 2015 A Glass Apart Irish Single Pot Still Whiskey Images Publishing ISBN 978 1864705492 a b Truths about Whisky London England 1878 ISBN 9781906000028 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b The Royal Commission on Whisky and Other Potable Spirits The British Medical Journal 2 2537 399 404 1909 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 2537 399 PMC 2320549 PMID 20764620 Cognac How cognac is made and what from What You Need to Know About Cognac vs Armagnac 17 October 2019 a b c d Carroll Rory 4 July 2022 Irish whiskey roaring back after decades of decline The Guardian Retrieved 7 July 2022 a b c Whiskey industry in Ireland abfi ie Alcoholic Beverage Federation of Ireland Retrieved 12 June 2019 a b Dublin Liberties Distillery eyes sales of 50 000 cases The Irish Times 20 February 2019 a b Hopkins Amy 11 June 2019 Roe amp Co distillery starts production in Dublin The Spirits Business Retrieved 12 June 2019 a b Woodard Richard 19 March 2019 Killowen out to dispel Irish whiskey myths Scotchwhisky com Retrieved 26 May 2019 a b Economic Impact Alcoholic Beverage Federation of Ireland Retrieved 24 February 2018 Irish Whiskey Tourism Strategy 2017 PDF Alcohol Beverages Federation of Ireland Archived from the original PDF on 15 November 2017 Retrieved 12 June 2018 The Difference Between Scotch and Whiskey www theirishplace com 21 December 2019 Regulation EC No 110 2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 January 2008 on the definition description presentation labelling and the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks and repealing Council Regulation EEC No 1576 89 PDF www fsai ie Food Safety Authority of Ireland 15 January 2008 Retrieved 28 December 2016 Revenue Verification of Irish Whiskey www revenue ie Irish Tax and Customs December 2015 Retrieved 28 December 2016 a b c d Technical file setting out the specifications with which Irish whiskey Uisce Beatha Eireannach Irish Whisky must comply PDF www agriculture gov ie Department of Agriculture Forestry and Marine October 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 18 October 2016 Retrieved 28 December 2016 Whiskey industry in Ireland DrinksIreland ie Retrieved 21 June 2020 Irish American Whiskeys The Brand Retrieved 25 November 2020 4 companies raising spirits and brewing new ideas during lockdown RTE News 27 March 2021 Retrieved 3 June 2021 Who We Are blackwaterdistillery ie Blackwater Distillery Retrieved 27 December 2016 Wanted Distiller at Blackwater Distillery Blackwaterdistillery ie 4 July 2018 Retrieved 17 August 2018 Taylor Charlie 2 September 2015 Over 80 jobs for Drogheda with new distillery and brewery The Irish Times Retrieved 2 September 2015 Deegan Gordon 9 May 2015 Contentious plans for Burren distillery get go ahead Irish Examiner Retrieved 17 August 2018 New 10m distillery founded by local farming family opens in west Cork Irish Independent 4 March 2019 Mayo distiller set to launch first whiskey of the west Sunday business Post 30 May 2021 Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 3 June 2021 Our Spirits connachtwhiskey com Archived from the original on 16 January 2017 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Whiskey industry in Ireland abfi ie Alcohol Beverage Federation of Ireland Retrieved 12 January 2017 Dingle Releases First Whiskey Batches 1 December 2016 Retrieved 19 December 2016 via fft ie Carruthers Nicola 9 November 2017 Dingle Distillery to Double Spirits Production The Spirits Business Retrieved 12 February 2018 Newenham Pamela 23 January 2014 Irish Whiskey brand returns 80 years after Prohibition The Irish Times Retrieved 23 January 2014 Echlinville Brands echlinville com The Echlinville Distillery Retrieved 12 January 2017 Dromey Trish 18 May 2015 Toasting success of craft distillery The Irish Examiner Retrieved 2 September 2015 Contact Glendalough www glendaloughdistillery com Retrieved 12 January 2017 Distilling Sunshine www gndireland com Great Northern Distilery 25 September 2015 Archived from the original on 21 October 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Our Heritage www kilbeggandistillingcompany com Kilbeggan Distilling Company Retrieved 12 January 2017 There s whiskey in the Mournes Killowen distillery BusinessFirstOnline co uk 6 February 2019 Retrieved 26 May 2019 Lough Mask Distillery Website Retrieved 12 August 2019 History www bushmills com Bushmills Retrieved 12 January 2017 Alltech Announce Pearse Lyons Distillery global alltech com 18 March 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Alltech s Irish distillery goes Gothic with restoration of Anglican church www kentucky com 3 February 2014 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Taylor Charlie 30 November 2018 Powerscourt investors raise a glass to Irish whiskey The Irish Times Retrieved 27 May 2019 Welcome to the Powerscourt Distillery History in the Making Powerscourt Distillery Retrieved 27 May 2019 Rademon Estate Begins Whiskey Production www drinksindustryireland ie 23 September 2015 Retrieved 12 January 2017 a b O Halloran Barry 31 January 2017 Diageo to spend 25m on developing whiskey brand Irish Times Retrieved 1 February 2017 Kenny Ciara 16 October 2013 Whiskey Distillery to create 55 jobs for Carlow The Irish Times Retrieved 16 October 2013 The Shed Distillery Introduced Connacht s First Whiskey in 104 Years The Taste 22 December 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2018 Drumshambo Gunpowder Gin www celticwhiskeyshop com Retrieved 12 January 2017 Hancock Ciaran 14 December 2014 Final touches to Rigney spirits distillery in Drumshanbo Irish Times Retrieved 27 December 2016 via IrishTimes com Teeling Distillery Who We Are TeelingDistillery com Retrieved 27 December 2016 Greeley Brendan 16 May 2014 Teeling Irish Whiskey s Pots O Gold Bloomberg Retrieved 12 January 2017 via Bloomberg com Vision for Irish Whiskey May 2015 PDF www abfi ie Alcoholic Beverage Federation of Ireland Archived from the original PDF on 18 January 2017 Retrieved 12 January 2017 Sod is turned on Tullamore Dew distillery TheJournal ie 14 September 2013 Waterford Distillery About waterforddistillery ie Retrieved 27 December 2016 Our brands www westcorkdistillers com and www westcorkirishwhiskey com West Cork Distillers Retrieved 12 January 2017 McNulty Anton 20 January 2015 Planning Permission granted for Lahardaun distillery The Mayo News Retrieved 30 July 2015 Niche Cream Alcoholic Drinks Whiskey Producers Ireland Archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Retrieved 4 August 2013 Plans for 12m whiskey distillery scrapped 22 November 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Bibliography edit Amber Kate May 2019 Ireland s Whiskey Guide Retrieved 27 May 2019 Barry Aoife 9 April 2014 Whiskey s going to be bringing a lot of dosh to Ireland over the next 10 years TheJournal ie Retrieved 27 May 2014 Birdsall Ben 2018 Whiskey Burn The Distilleries of Ireland by Vespa The Netherlands Wittenborg University Press ISBN 978 94 93066 00 7 Buecheler Christopher 2013 An Introduction to Irish Whiskey Primer Magazine Retrieved 27 May 2014 Clarke Jim April 2004 Irish Whiskey Shows Its Independent Side Starchefs com Retrieved 27 May 2014 Cohen Brad 22 October 2013 We re Bringing Whiskey Back The Atlantic Retrieved 27 May 2014 Curran Richard 19 December 2013 A re invigorated Irish whiskey industry is distilling a new golden age Irish Independent Retrieved 27 May 2014 Hallock Betty 13 March 2014 9 Irish whiskeys to try right now Los Angeles Times Retrieved 27 May 2014 McDonald Henry 14 December 2013 Irish whiskey industry launches fresh assault on Scotland s dominance The Guardian Retrieved 27 May 2014 McFarland Ben Sandham Tom 15 March 2014 A beginner s guide to Irish whiskey The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 27 May 2014 McGarry Jack 19 February 2014 The 5 Biggest Irish Whiskey Myths The Huffington Post Retrieved 27 May 2014 O Shea James 26 February 2014 Sales of Irish whiskey in North America up 17 5 percent IrishCentral website IrishCentral LLC Retrieved 27 May 2014 Paskin Becky 17 March 2014 Ireland s new Irish whiskey distilleries The Spirits Business Union Press Ltd Retrieved 27 May 2014 Phelps David 17 March 2014 Twin Cities pub master is taking his Irish whiskey on the road Star Tribune Minneapolis Retrieved 27 May 2014 Ramirez Mark 15 March 2014 Return of the king Irish whiskey on the rise aiming to rise above bar shot status The Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on 27 May 2014 Retrieved 27 May 2014 Smyth Jamie 8 September 2013 Irish distillers order a triple as whiskey flows The Financial Times Retrieved 27 May 2014 Spain William 15 March 2014 America is awash with Irish whiskey USA Today Retrieved 27 May 2014 Toland Bill 13 March 2014 Spirits Irish whiskey is going through the roof Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved 27 May 2014 Townsend Brian 1997 1999 The Lost Distilleries of Ireland Glasgow Angels Share Neil Wilson Publishing ISBN 1897784872 Viera Lauren 5 May 2013 Irish whiskey s growth spurt Chicago Tribune Retrieved 27 May 2014 Wondrich David January 2014 Why you re drinking Irish whiskey all of a sudden Esquire Retrieved 27 May 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Whiskey from Ireland The Difference Between Scotch and Whiskey The Irish Whiskey Society Irish Whiskey discussion forum Poteen Making Deantus an Phoitin DVD Singling amp Story from John William Seoige YouTube documentary on the origins and process of whiskey making Irish Whiskey Act 1980 Government of Ireland Why Irish Whiskey Is Experiencing a Resurgence All Things Considered National Public Radio 16 March 2018 Retrieved 19 March 2018 Portals nbsp Business and Economics nbsp Liquor nbsp Technology nbsp Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irish whiskey amp oldid 1184608262, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.