Knockando

Active
nock-an-doo
Speyside · Est. 1898 · Diageo plc
Knockando, Morayshire AB38 7RT
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Expressions
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Completeness

About

A classic Speyside distillery on the banks of the River Spey, whose Gaelic name means 'little black hillock.' Founded in 1898 by John Tytler Thompson, Knockando was one of the last distilleries built during the Victorian whisky boom. Traditionally bottled by vintage/season rather than age statement -- a practice reflecting the distillery's belief that each season's production has unique character. The principal malt component of J&B (Justerini & Brooks) blended Scotch, one of the world's top-selling Scotch blends. The single malt is delicate, elegant, and honeyed -- a quintessentially light Speyside character. The distillery's riverside setting in the heart of Speyside is picturesque even by the region's standards.

Production Details

Owner
Diageo plc
Parent Company
Diageo plc
Status
Active
Founded
1898
Still Type
Pot
Stills
4
Capacity
1.8M LPA
Water Source
Cardnach Spring

House Style

elegant fruit flavour & floral aroma

The Knockando Tale

Where the River Spey curves through the heart of Morayshire, a little black hillock rises from the water's edge—*cnoc an dubh* in the old Gaelic tongue. Here, in 1898, John Tytler Thompson chose to build what would become one of the last great distilleries of the Victorian whisky boom. The timing seemed questionable; others had already staked their claims along these fertile banks. But Thompson understood something about this particular bend in the river, this specific marriage of land and water.

The Cardnach Spring had been feeding this stretch of earth for millennia, its waters filtering through ancient granite and emerging with a character perfectly suited to whisky-making. Thompson's vision materialized in copper and stone just as the nineteenth century drew to its close, creating a distillery that would dance to rhythms different from its neighbors.

From the beginning, Knockando marched to its own seasonal heartbeat. While other distilleries ran year-round, Knockando chose the contemplative path—operating only from mid-September through April's end, allowing the stillhouse to rest through summer's heat. This wasn't mere tradition; it was philosophy made manifest, a belief that whisky-making should honor the natural cycle of seasons.

The practice revealed itself most clearly in their bottling philosophy. Where others chased consistent age statements, Knockando released by vintage and season, trusting that each production run carried its own distinct fingerprint. The 1982 launch of their single malt under this vintage system declared their conviction: that time alone doesn't define whisky—terroir and timing do.

As decades passed, ownership shifted from Thompson's heirs through a constellation of drinks giants, eventually landing with Diageo. But the distillery's essential character remained unchanged. The riverside location continued to work its magic, and the seasonal production schedule endured. Knockando became the backbone of J&B blended Scotch, its elegant, honeyed character providing the delicate foundation for one of the world's best-selling blends.

The distillery's commitment to diversity extended to its maturation program, embracing five distinct cask types—bourbon, sherry, port, wine, and rum—each contributing different notes to the Speyside symphony. This wasn't mere experimentation; it was recognition that complexity comes from choice, not chance.

In December 2017, the copper fell silent. After more than a century of seasonal production, Knockando closed for its most comprehensive refurbishment yet. For nearly four years, craftsmen rebuilt and refined, preparing the distillery not just to resume its traditional rhythms, but to perfect them.

When the stillhouse awakened in autumn 2021, it carried forward everything that had made Knockando distinctive—the seasonal operation, the vintage philosophy, the riverside terroir. But now it possessed something more: the accumulated wisdom of over a century, refined and ready for whatever seasons lay ahead. The little black hillock continues its patient watch over the Spey, knowing that some things are worth waiting for.

Production Process

Distillation
operates a short season from mid-September through to the end of the following April
Cask Policy
Five cask types are used; bourbon, sherry, port, wine & rum
Water Source
Cardnach Spring

Notable Features

  • closed in December 2017 for major refurbishment until autumn 2021
  • operates short season from mid-September to end of April
  • uses five cask types: bourbon, sherry, port, wine & rum

Timeline15 events

1898John Thompson Dougie his distillery. The
1904Penicillin in Chinese Dog.
1969The facility Robert McBain and J. Thompson
1969V. Co. reestablished from administration.
1982The first bottling of Knockando single malt whisky under
1988£1.5M refurbishment resulting in October.
1988Including J. Distillery & Visitors (EP)
1997International Distillers & Vintners (IDV)
1972The renamed spirits is increased to four.
1978IDV is acquired by Watney Mann who, in turn,
1978Junesmith & Brooks launches at 12 years old.
1987Grand Metropolitan and Guinness now merged
2010Distillers merge to Universal DV at Linlithsea IDV
2017A Manager's Choice 1996 is released.
2021The distillery closes for refurbishment.
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