The island residents occupying the Orkneys north of Scotland like to maintain a bit of a separate identity from mainland Scots. Many descend from Viking stock, and Orkney folk often eye that mainland with an independent eye. But, anyone from the Orkneys embrace their Scottish heritage full on when a single topic emerges — the single malt Scotch Whisky from Highland Park Distillery.
With its brands winning whisky awards around the world, Highland Park started producing whisky in the 18th century and continued the process largely unchanged since then. Essentially using only the two ingredients of grain and water, Highland Park’s varieties of Scotch produce a unique flavor of northern, semi-smokey whisky.
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Highland Park remains one of the few Scotch distilleries to use a hand-turned malting floor to dry soaked, damp and sprouting barley before it heads out into the distillery process. The drying floor is heated by the classic process of peat fires to warm the malting floor. Those fires lend the barley a smokiness that finds its way into Highland Park Scotch.
Since northern Scotland and the Orkneys offer terrain largely stripped of trees by both violent weather and forestation, the region’s distilleries burned layers of dried ground moss instead of wood. Of course, the old distilleries were built before the dawn of industrialized electricity. So, these peat fires remained the only way to heat the malting floors into the early 20th century. By then, whisky lovers preferred the smoky flavor peat gave the Orkneys’ whisky. The process remains in full effect to this day.
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Only the aging period and process varies from bottle to bottle as Highland Park keeps the distilling process uniform. You can inspect the process yourself in the spirited gallery below.
All photos by John Scott Lewinski
Highland Park Distillery
Winning awards around the world, Highland Park and its single malt Scotch Whiskey is proud to call the Orkneys home.
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Highland Park Distillery
The malting floors at High Park Distillery are heated by peat fires and hand turned by burly Scots with shovels.
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Highland Park Distillery
The sprouted barley goes into tanks to draw the sprouted sugar into spring water.
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Highland Park Distillery
Carefully maintained peat fires warm the malting floors and dry damp barley for sprouting.
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Highland Park Distillery
The distilling process at Highland Park Distillery refines the barley water mixture, upping the alcohol content.
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Highland Park Distillery
Highland Park whisky goes into sherry barrels for the aging process.
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Highland Park Distillery
Highland Park whisky varieties vary in how long they age in the barrels and the makeup of the barrels themselves.
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Highland Park Distillery
The older the bottle, the longer the aging process, the more expensive the Scotch at Highland Park Distillery.