SMWS 6.80
Aeroplane Elevation
Single Malt Whisky
59.2% • 700ml • Highland

Macduff is one of those quietly industrious distilleries that seems rather happier working behind the curtain than taking a bow. Built in 1960 beside the fishing town of Macduff, near where the River Deveron meets the Moray Firth, it belongs to that post-war generation of Scotch distilleries created less from romance than from blending need. Yet there is romance here all the same: sea air, granite, gulls, and the practical bustle of a town that looks outward to water rather than inward to myth.
The distillery was founded by a small consortium that included Brodie Hepburn, a name that also winds its way through Deanston and Tullibardine. Production began in the early 1960s, expanded quickly, and by 1972 Macduff had passed to William Lawson Distillers. Through Martini & Rossi it eventually came under Bacardi, and today sits within the John Dewar & Sons stable, where its spirit remains an important contributor to blends.
Its whisky is often seen as The Deveron in official single malt form, though independent bottlers tend to use the Macduff name. Production has its quirks: five stills, arranged as two wash stills and three spirit stills, a pleasingly lopsided setup in a world fond of symmetry. The style is generally clean, nutty, gently fruity, and coastal without becoming theatrically maritime. It is not a grandstanding malt, but a useful reminder that Scotch is built as much by dependable craftsmen as by peacocks.
Founded in 1988 by Andrew Symington, Signatory Vintage Scotch Whisky Company emerged during a period when independent bottling was still a relatively understated part of the Scotch whisky landscape. Symington’s approach was clear from the outset: to source individual casks and present them with minimal interference, often at natural cask strength, allowing the character of both distillery and maturation to remain fully intact. It was a philosophy rooted not in consistency, but in variation, and in the belief that each cask had something distinct to say.
Over time, the company built a reputation for both breadth and depth. Its releases have spanned an extraordinary range of distilleries, from well-known names to those long since closed, preserving liquid that might otherwise have disappeared into blends or obscurity. This archival instinct has become one of Signatory’s defining traits, offering drinkers access to styles and profiles that no longer exist in active production. The acquisition of Edradour Distillery in 2002 added a physical anchor to its operations, while leaving its core identity as a bottler unchanged.
What distinguishes Signatory most clearly is its transparency and structure. Bottlings typically carry detailed information, including distillation and bottling dates, cask type, and outturn, presented without embellishment. Much of the range is released without chill filtration or added colouring, reinforcing a sense of fidelity to the cask. Alongside its single cask releases, the introduction of the 100 Proof range has provided a more structured offering, where whiskies are selected and batched to be bottled at a consistent strength of 57.1% ABV. These releases retain the company’s emphasis on clarity and integrity, while offering a slightly more approachable framework for regular availability, balancing individuality with a degree of continuity.
Across series such as the Un-Chillfiltered Collection, Cask Strength releases, and the 100 Proof range, the underlying principle remains consistent: each bottle represents a moment in time, shaped by wood, spirit, and patience, and presented with a minimum of intervention.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.