About
Inverness's first distillery, community-spirited operation whose name means 'monster' in Scottish Gaelic -- a nod to nearby Loch Ness. City-center location on the River Ness.
Production Details
The Uile-bheist Tale
The River Ness winds through the heart of the Highland capital, carrying centuries of Highland history past ancient stones and modern streets. Here, where the Great Glen splits the Scottish Highlands and whispers of monsters drift from the loch's dark waters, Inverness claimed its first distillery in 2023.
The founders of Uile-bheist chose their name with Highland mischief—"monster" in the old Gaelic tongue, a knowing wink to their famous neighbor lurking in Loch Ness's depths. But this monster would breathe copper and steam rather than myth, rising not from black water but from the ambitions of a community that had watched whisky flow from every glen except their own.
The city-center location speaks to something deeper than convenience. While Highland distilleries traditionally sought remote glens and hidden springs, Uile-bheist planted itself boldly in Inverness's beating heart, beside the river that has carried Highland fortunes for a thousand years. The River Ness becomes their partner here, its waters flowing past the distillery windows as they have past castle walls and clan gatherings, carrying the essence of the Great Glen itself.
This community-spirited operation emerged from a simple Highland truth: Inverness, gateway to the Highlands and keeper of Highland culture, had somehow never claimed a distillery of its own. The city that sent Highland regiments to distant battles, that welcomed clan chiefs and cattle drovers, that watched the last Jacobite hopes die at Culloden's nearby field—this Highland capital had remained curiously absent from Scotland's whisky story.
The stills at Uile-bheist now change that narrative, their copper forms reflecting not just Highland light but Highland pride. Each run of spirit carries the weight of rectifying history, of finally giving voice to a city that had long been whisky's crossroads but never its home.
The monster has awakened, not in the loch's mysterious depths but in the purposeful hum of Highland industry. As Highland water meets Highland grain under Highland skies, Uile-bheist writes the opening chapter of Inverness's whisky story—one that promises to grow as deep and enduring as the loch itself.