About
Founded by sixth-generation Tasmanian farmer Peter Bignell, who started production at the end of 2010 after a bumper rye crop he could not sell. Australia's first rye distillery and the only bio-fueled distillery in the world -- all equipment powered by recycled cooking oil bio-diesel collected from local businesses. One of very few whisky distilleries globally that grows all its own grain, malts, ferments, distils, and barrel-ages on site. Peter hand-built the still from new copper and repurposed dairy and chocolate factory equipment. Known for experimental approaches including sheep-poo-smoked spirit and home-coopered barrels.
Production Details
The Belgrove Distillery Tale
In the rolling farmland of Kempton, where the Midland Highway cuts through Tasmania's agricultural heart, Peter Bignell faced a problem that would reshape Australian whisky. The sixth-generation farmer stood among rows of golden rye in 2010, surveying a bumper crop with nowhere to go. The grain buyers weren't interested. But Bignell saw possibility where others saw surplus.
What emerged from that moment of agricultural frustration became Australia's first rye distillery, and something far more radical—a completely self-contained whisky operation powered by the island's abundance. Bignell hand-built his copper still from scratch, marrying new metal with repurposed equipment salvaged from dairy farms and chocolate factories. The patchwork of machinery tells Tasmania's industrial story in brass fittings and steel tanks.
Water flows from the farm itself, drawn from the same land that nurtures the grain. This is whisky-making stripped to its essence—every kernel of rye grown in Kempton soil, malted in Kempton air, fermented with Kempton water. The circle closes completely on Bignell's property, from seed to spirit without leaving the farm gates.
But perhaps most remarkably, the entire operation runs on recycled cooking oil collected from local businesses, transformed into bio-diesel that powers every piece of equipment. Steam rises from stills fueled by yesterday's fish and chips, making Belgrove the world's only bio-fueled distillery. It's a distinctly Australian approach—pragmatic, resourceful, slightly mad.
Bignell's experimental spirit extends beyond sustainable power. He's smoked grain with sheep manure, coopered his own barrels, and pushed boundaries with the fearless creativity that defines Tasmania's whisky renaissance. In a state where clean air and extreme temperature swings accelerate maturation, where former hop farmers and fruit growers have become whisky pioneers, Belgrove represents the ultimate expression of terroir-driven distilling.
The stillhouse hums with repurposed machinery and radical ideas, where a farmer's ingenuity meets Tasmania's pristine environment. Here, sustainability isn't a marketing term—it's the foundation of everything, from the bio-diesel generators to the grain growing outside the door. Bignell continues pushing forward, proving that innovation often springs from the simplest problems: what to do with too much rye.