Information About Blended Scotch Whisky Whiskyy Is At The End Of This Page.

 

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Ballantine's Special Reserve 12 Year Blended Scotch Whisky $29.95
Chivas Century of Malts Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $99.99
Chivas Regal Blended Scotch Whisky 18 Years Old 750ml $64.95
Chivas Regal Blended Scotch Whisky 25 Years Old 750ml $299.95
Chivas Regal Blended Scotch Whisky 1 liter $39.99
Chivas Regal Blended Scotch Whisky 1.75 liter $49.99
Chivas Regal Blended Scotch Whisky 50ml $2.99
Chivas Regal Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $27.99
Chivas Royal Salute 21 Year Old Blended Scotch Whisky Blue Bottle 750ml $159.99
Cutty Sark Blended Scotch Whisky 1.75 liter $24.99
Dewar's Signature Scotch Whisky 750ml $179.99
Dewar's Special Reserve 12yr Blended Scotch Whisky 375ml $14.99
Dewar's Special Reserve 12yr Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $19.99
Dewar's White Label Blended Scotch Whisky 1.75 liter $34.99
Dewar's White Label Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $16.99
J & B J.E.T. Blended Scotch Whisky 1 liter $29.99
J & B Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $21.99
J & B Ultima Blended Scotch Whisky The Ultimate Blend of 128 Scotch Whiskies 86 proof 750ml $149.99
Johnnie Walker Black Blended Scotch Whisky 1.75 liter $59.99
Johnnie Walker Black Blended Scotch Whisky 1 liter $44.99
Johnnie Walker Black Blended Scotch Whisky 200ml $12.99
Johnnie Walker Black Blended Scotch Whisky 375ml $22.99
Johnnie Walker Black Blended Scotch Whisky 50ml $3.99
Johnnie Walker Black Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $29.99
Johnnie Walker Blue 200th Anniversary Baccarat Decanter Cask Strength Scotch Whisky 750ml $2499.99
Johnnie Walker Blue King George V Editions 750ml $699.99
Johnnie Walker Blue Blended Scotch Whisky 200ml $69.99
Johnnie Walker Blue Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $169.99
Johnnie Walker Blue Blended Scotch Whisky 1.75 liter $399.95
Johnnie Walker Gold Blended Scotch Whisky 200ml $24.99
Johnnie Walker Gold Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $69.99
Johnnie Walker Green Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $49.99
Johnnie Walker Red Blended Scotch Whisky 1.75 liter $37.99
Johnnie Walker Red Blended Scotch Whisky 200ml $8.99
Johnnie Walker Red Blended Scotch Whisky 375ml $16.99
Johnnie Walker Red Blended Scotch Whisky 50ml $2.99
Johnnie Walker Red Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $21.99
Johnnie Walker Swing Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $59.99
Old Pulteney 12 Year Single Malt Scotch Whisky 750ml $29.99
Passport Blended Scotch Whiskey 750ml $14.99
Peter Dawson Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $9.95
Pinch Dimple Blended Scotch Whisky 750ml $29.99
The Famous Grouse Gold Reserve 12 year Blended Scotch Whiskey 750ml $29.99
 
 

Arak / 
Ouzo

'Whisky has suffused the ethos of Scotland to a degree unequalled by any liquor in any other culture' (Derek Cooper, 1983)

Land of their birth
There are few products which are so closely related to the land of their birth than Scotch malt whisky.

First
It is made from only the most elemental Scottish ingredients - water and barley (often malted with a dash of peat).

Second
Successful maturation relies to a large extent on our cool, maritime northern climate.

Third
It cannot be made elsewhere, for reasons which have defied even German and Japanese scientists - both of whom have tried to replicate ingredients and processes in their own countries. Recently a Welsh whisky was launched. It is good, just as Irish whiskyey is good, but it is not Blended Scotch Whisky.

But there is more than this. Whisky is the lifeblood of Scotland: historically, socially and economically.

Historically
'Whisky and freedom gang thegither' wrote Robert Burns. Scottish history is much to do with 'freedom' - independence from England and centralised authority; independence of mind (one of the reasons why the country has produced such a phenomenal number of inventors and 'Fathers of' so many sciences); independence of spirit.

Socially
It is the drink of welcome and of farewell, and much in between. Babies are ushered into the world, and guests to the house, with a dram. In the days when distances were travelled only with difficulty, a jug of whisky was left out for any tradesmen who might call. Business deals were sealed with a dram. All manner of small ailments are eased with whisky - from children's teething, to colds and flu.

Departing guests were offered a deoch an doruis, the 'dram at the door' - in modern terms 'one for the road'. The dead-departed are remembered and wished Godspeed with large quantities of whisky.

Economically
Blended Scotch Whisky whisky is vital to the U.K. It is one of the top export earners, with exports over £2.2 billion. It is the backbone of the U.K. food and drinks industry, contributing some £1.8 billion to the trade balance. Without it the trade deficit in this sector would increase by 40%.

 

 

Arak / 
Ouzo

For as long as they have existed in Scotland, whisky was sold by taverns and hotels, wine and spirits merchants, grocers and provision merchants. The whiskies were sold under the merchants' or invented names, not branded by the distiller, although by the early 19th century Glenlivet had made such a reputation for itself that a huge number of malts - many of them remote from Glenlivet itself were using the name.

It is safe to suppose that some of these merchants mixed their whiskies - even diluted and adulterated them. Until legislation permitted weaker washes and smaller stills, illicit malt whisky was much superior to the legal variety; as we have seen, in the Lowlands pot-still grain distilleries were common. Young whiskies were mixed with old; grain with malt - all in the interests of profit.

This early 'blending' was a crude affair. There was little quality control, and little concern for consistent, repeatable, products.

Old Vatted Glenlivet
The first commercial blend - in the sense that it was offered for sale to a wider market, and thus had to be consistent - was made by Andrew Usher in 1853. Usher was the Edinburgh agent for Glenlivet, and he named his creation Old Vatted Glenlivet. By 1860 it was being advertised in London, and in 1864 he was selling it overseas, especially in India.

Others followed, spurred on by the fact that increases in tax (in 1853 and 1855) caused a slackening of demand for whisky in England, and also because there was such an over-production of grain whisky in the Lowlands that the six largest distillers agreed to divide their market to avoid a price war (1857). But these early blends were invariably re-labelled for the retailer Mighty encouragement to producing large volumes of blend came with Gladstone's Spirit Act of 1860, which allowed blending in bonded warehouses before duty had to be paid.