Tomatin does not do tours on Sunday either, but they had their visitor's centre doors opened, so we could go in for a cup of coffee and a dram.
Back then we had promised ourselves to come back and this year, that time had come. Johanne had arranged a tour, but was not told what to expect, so the five of us came in and were ready to get surprised. And what a surprise they had in store for us...
It is about an hour drive from where we stayed in Craigellachie, following the A95 and A9, and a small detour following the A938 is worth your while if you ever get to take the trip. When entering the distillery site, we first thought to have entered a village of some sort, instead of a distillery. When passing warehouses it became more and more clear that we were on the right track, because we could see the distillery itself already. It is missing the characteristic Doig ventilator/ Pagoda chimney, but the large Tomatin sign on the wall gave it away. Tomatin is one of the last distilleries in Scotland where most of the employees live in the houses we passed on the way to the distillery buildings. In the visitors centre, we were welcomed by marketing manager Jennifer Nicol and distillery manager Graham Eunson.
Many years ago, Tomatin used to be the biggest distillery of Scotland, having two mills, two mashtuns, 24 washbacks and 23 stills. Since the mid 1970's, they have scrapped about half the stills and are operating on a lower capacity ever since, with only one operating mill and mashtun, 12 of the washbacks that are still in use (where some are unused, tucked away, but still there) and 12 stills, of which only ten are used at this point.
We really got our geek on during the tour, where we received an opportunity to ask about every detail of the process. From the type of the incoming malted barley and how to get the best yields out of it, about some of the experiments that are currently in place at some processes on the production floor, and where more balance can be put into the process by monitoring the washbacks and the timing of the distillation better. Every change at this moment is part of the job Graham has recently accepted where besides distillery manager, the job of master blender also fell into his lap - where the use of his own lab is one of the niceties that came with the job.
When walking through the warehouses, some of the casks had our birth years on them. Graham told us we could bring the cask home if we had our birth date in common with the selected cask, and Ansgar was only one day off... No luck there, but on the second floor of one of the warehouses, we could have a taste of some of the casks that are presented there for these types of tours. We received a taste of a 2006 distillate maturing in virgin oak, a 2005 virgin oak with peated cù bòcan spirit, where the difference between the two casks was really surprising, and a 1976 (or was it a 1974?) refilled hogshead that was simply sublime. A portpipe we wandered past when we came down again, was finishing a whisky for the past 14 months and was almost ready for bottling on the 2nd of June 2014. I am looking forward to a bottle of this...
Saying our last goodbyes to the cask that Johanne filled earlier that day, we entered Graham's lab where the adventure continued with a shared tasting of the oldest Tomatin that is currently found in the warehouse; a 1967 distillate that has recently been recasked. Great stuff that, too bad Graham tucked away the wee sample bottle before we got our chance of nicking it. Finishing the day with a sip of the Cù Bòcan 1989, after which it was time for us to spend some of our money in the well stocked store. Where one of the prices was the no. 1 bottle of the most recent ex-Bourbon - Fill your Own Bottle. A nice addition to our modest selection.
Many thanks go out to Graham and Jennifer for the five hours of their time - we all left with a big smile on our faces. Filled with the many wonderful experiences and highly emotional moments, we were actually quite sad to leave again for Craigellachie, where we would spend our last day in Speyside and would spend our Saturday driving down through one of the most beautiful roads of Scotland - until now, that is.
Many thanks go out to Graham and Jennifer for the five hours of their time - we all left with a big smile on our faces. Filled with the many wonderful experiences and highly emotional moments, we were actually quite sad to leave again for Craigellachie, where we would spend our last day in Speyside and would spend our Saturday driving down through one of the most beautiful roads of Scotland - until now, that is.
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