About
Pioneer of the American single malt category, using Pacific Northwest barley and Belgian-style pot stills. Known for innovative cask programs including Garryana (native oak), peated, and sherry cask expressions. Key advocate for the new American Single Malt Whiskey standard.
Production Details
The Westland Tale
In the shadow of the Cascade Range, where Douglas firs climb toward snow-capped peaks and the Puget Sound stretches westward, Seattle's industrial Georgetown district harbors an unlikely revolution. Here, in 2010, Westland Distillery began rewriting America's whisky story, one mash bill at a time.
The water flows down from the Cascade watershed, carrying the mineral memory of ancient volcanic rock and Pacific Northwest rainfall. It arrives at Westland's copper pot stills—Belgian-designed vessels that stand like sentinels in the converted warehouse, their European engineering married to American ambition. These aren't bourbon column stills or Scottish swan necks, but something altogether different, reflecting the distillery's refusal to simply copy tradition.
Matt Hofmann and his founding team understood that American single malt couldn't merely mimic Scotland. The Pacific Northwest demanded its own expression. Local barley grows in the maritime climate, developing flavors unknown to Highland moors. The native Quercus garryana oak—Garry oak—offers tannins and aromatics that French and American cooperage cannot replicate. Westland named their native oak program Garryana, claiming this forgotten wood for American whisky.
The stills work through Pacific Northwest seasons, steam rising as Seattle rain drums against the roof. Inside, the Belgian pot still design creates a different conversation between copper and spirit than traditional Scottish shapes. The distillery's innovative cask program extends beyond Garryana to include peated expressions and sherry cask maturation, each barrel a deliberate choice rather than inherited practice.
By the time Rémy Cointreau recognized Westland's vision and acquired the distillery, the Georgetown operation had become something larger than itself—a standard-bearer for American single malt whiskey, advocating for federal recognition of the category. The stills that once represented one distillery's experiment now embody an entire movement.
Standing in that stillhouse today, surrounded by the hum of fermentation and the patient breathing of copper, you witness more than whisky production. You see American craft distilling at its most ambitious—rooted in place, respectful of tradition, yet unafraid to chart new territory. The Cascade water keeps flowing, the native oak keeps growing, and Westland keeps proving that American single malt has stories yet to tell.