Mannochmore

Active
man•och•moor
Speyside · Est. 1971 · Diageo plc
Elgin, Morayshire IV30 8SS
0
Expressions
0
With Tasting Notes
0%
Completeness

About

A modern Speyside distillery built in 1971 alongside its older neighbor Glenlossie, sharing the same water source and site. Produces a light, floral, grassy Speyside malt that feeds principally into Haig blends and Diageo's blending portfolio. Perhaps most famous (or infamous) for Loch Dhu -- 'The Black Whisky' -- a 10-year-old matured in double-charred casks that produced an almost black-colored whisky, released in 1996 and quickly discontinued but now a collector's curiosity. The Flora & Fauna 12-year-old is the standard official bottling. Mannochmore represents the workhorse blending malts that sustain Scotland's whisky industry -- rarely glamorous, always essential.

Production Details

Owner
Diageo plc
Parent Company
Diageo plc
Status
Active
Founded
1971
Still Type
Pot
Stills
6
Capacity
3.2M LPA
Water Source
Bardon Burn springs

The Mannochmore Tale

In 1971, while the world watched the first moon landing footage and Britain prepared for decimalization, the Distillers Company Limited was making a different kind of calculation in the heart of Speyside. They needed more whisky—much more—to feed the growing appetite for Scottish blends. Their solution stood on familiar ground: the same Elgin site where Glenlossie had been drawing from Bardon Burn springs since 1876.

Mannochmore rose as whisky's answer to industrial pragmatism, built not for romance but for volume. Where its century-old neighbor embodied Victorian craftsmanship, this newcomer embraced modern efficiency. The engineers installed an 11.1-ton Briggs full lauter mash tun—a workhorse capable of extracting every sugar from the barley with mechanical precision. Sixteen washbacks, split between traditional wood and practical stainless steel, could handle fermentation cycles stretching up to 100 hours, coaxing every flavor compound from the bubbling wash.

The Bardon Burn springs that had sustained Glenlossie for nearly a century now fed both distilleries, their soft Highland water carrying the same mineral signature through copper and steel. But Mannochmore's mission was different. This was whisky built for the Haig dynasty—a family whose distilling bloodline stretched back to the 17th century, whose name graced bottles in drawing rooms across the Empire.

The 1980s brought harsh lessons in market reality. In 1985, as whisky demand stumbled, Mannochmore's stills fell silent. For four years, the modern stillhouse echoed empty while its older neighbor continued working. When production resumed in 1989, it was with renewed purpose and eventually, expanded ambition.

By 2013, confidence had returned in the form of doubling down—literally. The still count jumped to eight, transforming Mannochmore into a true production powerhouse capable of 6 million liters annually. Today, the distillery operates with a sustainability that would have puzzled its 1970s architects: a biomass burner converts draff into steam that powers the entire site, while a dark grains plant transforms pot ale into cattle feed. Nothing is wasted.

The Bardon Burn still flows past both distilleries, carrying Highland snowmelt and spring rain through the same granite channels it has carved for millennia. But now it feeds a operation planning 26 mashes per week, producing 5 million liters of alcohol destined primarily for Haig blends—nearly 5 million bottles annually bearing that aristocratic name.

Mannochmore never sought the spotlight that finds single malt darlings. Its brief moment of fame came through infamy: the black-as-coal Loch Dhu of 1996, quickly discontinued but now a collector's curiosity. Instead, this distillery found its calling as whisky's essential supporting player—the reliable ensemble cast member whose light, grassy Speyside character enhances countless blends without demanding individual recognition.

In an industry built on heritage and mystique, Mannochmore represents something equally vital: the honest craft of making excellent whisky at scale, where tradition meets efficiency beside the eternal Bardon Burn.

Equipment

Mash Tun
11.1 ton Briggs full lauter mash tun

Production Process

Fermentation
up to 100 hours
Water Source
Bardon Burn springs

Notable Features

  • Built almost 100 years after sister distillery Glenlossie
  • Has a dark grains plant which converts pot ale into cattle feed
  • Equipped with a biomass burner which generates draff into steam that powers the entire site
  • Plan for 2021 is to mash 26 times per week and produce 5 million litres of alcohol
  • Signature malt for Haig brand which sells almost 5 million bottles per year
  • Haig family belonged to the elite of Scottish whisky aristocracy and had been involved in distilling since the middle of the 17th century

Timeline8 events

1971Distillers Company Limited (DCL) founds the distillery on the site of their sister distillery Glenlossie. It is managed by John Haig & Co Ltd.
1985The distillery is mothballed.
1989In production again.
1992A Flora & Fauna series 12 years old becomes the first official bottling.
2009An 18 year old is released.
2010A Manager's Choice 1998 is released.
2013The number of stills is increased to eight.
2016A 25 year old cask strength is released.
No expressions collected
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