
English Whisky
The Journey from Grain to Glass
Pavilion (Publisher)
Published on 26. September 2024
Book
Hardback
192 pages
978-0-00-862155-1 (ISBN)
Description
Where once Scotland dominated the world of whisky, that's no longer the case. England is just one of many countries now challenging Scotland's historic lead.
'This could well be the definitive guide to English whisky.'
- METRO
Until recently, England has been quiet as far as whisky production goes. Gin has been widely produced here for several centuries, especially after the accession of William of Orange and Mary in 1688, but whisky was hardly produced at all, and then at the turn of the millennium everything changed.
More and more distilleries here in England, both large commercial ones and micro-distilleries, are exploring new and exciting flavours, playing around with different grains, shapes of stills and flavour profiles. Many of these distilleries are now becoming serious world-class operations, a far cry from the small craft distilleries of even 20 years ago.
This new book tells the exciting story of English whisky as it becomes established as a serious player on the world stage. Covering topics such as how the industry was kickstarted as recently as 20 years ago by the English Whisky Company, how rye is competing with barley as a grain of preference, the importance of sustainability, the use of peat and oak, and the huge increase in high-end tourism, with vast numbers of visitors enjoying learning about English whisky at distilleries up and down the country, from Cornwall to Cumbria. The book includes profiles of nearly 40 distilleries, with descriptions and tasting notes of key whiskies released so far.
'This could well be the definitive guide to English whisky.'
- METRO
Until recently, England has been quiet as far as whisky production goes. Gin has been widely produced here for several centuries, especially after the accession of William of Orange and Mary in 1688, but whisky was hardly produced at all, and then at the turn of the millennium everything changed.
More and more distilleries here in England, both large commercial ones and micro-distilleries, are exploring new and exciting flavours, playing around with different grains, shapes of stills and flavour profiles. Many of these distilleries are now becoming serious world-class operations, a far cry from the small craft distilleries of even 20 years ago.
This new book tells the exciting story of English whisky as it becomes established as a serious player on the world stage. Covering topics such as how the industry was kickstarted as recently as 20 years ago by the English Whisky Company, how rye is competing with barley as a grain of preference, the importance of sustainability, the use of peat and oak, and the huge increase in high-end tourism, with vast numbers of visitors enjoying learning about English whisky at distilleries up and down the country, from Cornwall to Cumbria. The book includes profiles of nearly 40 distilleries, with descriptions and tasting notes of key whiskies released so far.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
HarperCollins Publishers
Product notice
Laminated cover
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 163 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
668 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-00-862155-1 (9780008621551)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
09/2024
HarperCollins
€13.99
Available for download
Persons
Ted Bruning has been a writer and journalist since 1976, working in many fields including trade and consumer newspapers, websites, magazines and radio. He has also written and published several books including The Microbrewers' Handbook, Scotland: A Whisky Lover's Guide, Historic English Inns, The Publican's Manual and Historic Pubs of London. He recently updated The Craft Distillers' Handbook which is now in its third edition.
Rupert Wheeler has been involved in publishing for over 30 years and was previously the managing editor of Whisky Magazine. He is a judge in the annual World Whiskies Awards and, in 2020, he co-wrote with Ted Bruning Britain in a Bottle.
Rupert Wheeler has been involved in publishing for over 30 years and was previously the managing editor of Whisky Magazine. He is a judge in the annual World Whiskies Awards and, in 2020, he co-wrote with Ted Bruning Britain in a Bottle.