Tomatin 5 Year Old - 1980s ml bottle - Scotch Whisky whisky
Scotch Whisky Highland Whisky

Tomatin

Tomatin 5 Year Old 1980s

0
(0 reviews)

Volume

ml

ABV

43%

Retailers

3

A 5 year old Tomatin, bottled in the 1980s, which was an interesting time for the distillery. Tomatin went into liquidation in 1985 and was the first Scotch distillery to be taken ...

Compare prices from £175 to £175

Available at 3 Retailers

Best Price
Whisky Exchange
In Stock

Tomatin 5 Year Old 1980s

Whisky Exchange
In Stock

Tomatin 5 Year Old 1980s

Whisky Exchange
In Stock

Tomatin 5 Year Old 1980s

Customer Reviews

Share your thoughts on Tomatin 5 Year Old 1980s or read reviews from other whisky enthusiasts. Note: CasKompare does not verify product purchases.

0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Product Information

Product Details

Name Tomatin 5 Year Old 1980s
Brand Tomatin
Average Price £175.00

Product Properties

Volume ml
Alcohol Content (ABV) 43%
Country of Origin Scotland
Created On CasKompare 05-17-2022

Product Description

A 5 year old Tomatin, bottled in the 1980s, which was an interesting time for the distillery. Tomatin went into liquidation in 1985 and was the first Scotch distillery to be taken into Japanese ownership in 1986, a country where it remains one of the top ten selling Scotch brands.
~ Master of Malt

Ready to buy?

Compare prices from 3 trusted retailers and find the best deal

About The Brand: Tomatin

In the hamlet of Tomatin, there is a single malt Scotch whisky distillery. Given that it is located 25 minutes south of Inverness, its whiskey is considered to be from the Highland area. The distillery wasn't built until 1897, going by the name Tomatin Spey Distillery Co Ltd, even though it is believed that whiskey has been produced on the site since the 16th century when cattle drivers would purchase it from a nearby still. The business filed for bankruptcy in 1906 and reopened in 1909 under new management. It was acquired by the Japanese company Takara Shuzo in 1986 after the liquidation of its owners, and the name was changed to Tomatin Distillery Co Ltd. Up until 1958, the distillery ran on just two stills. They started adding stills to improve production capacity at that point, and by the 1970s, they were producing 12.5 million gallons of whiskey annually. Tomatin was formerly thought to be the biggest malt distillery in Scotland,[3] but as of 2007, they were only producing 2.5 million liters of alcohol, and since the mid-1980s, stills have been removed, reducing its total capacity to just over 5 million liters. Eighty percent of Tomatin's whiskey, including its own labels Antiquary and Talisman, is used to make blended whiskies. The distillery is currently increasing its core range and working to strengthen its reputation as a single malt producer. The 12-year-old was introduced in 2003 to replace Tomatin's standard 10-year-old malt. There are also often created single-cask, 32-year, and 40-year restricted releases. Cù Bcan, a single malt that is just minimally peated and produced at the distillery for one week a year, has just recently started to be made.

Visit Tomatin website

Related Video