Teaninich
Carn Mor 2010
Single Malt Whisky
47.5% • 700ml • Highlands

Hugh Munro, laird of Teaninich and later famed as the Blind Captain after an unfortunate musket shot in the Nepoleonic war, turned adversity into enterprise on the banks of the River Alness. He straightened watercourses, set out a village plan, and offered fairer leases to the people who worked his land. In 1817 he added a legal outlet for their barley, a distillery by the estate that would take the name Teaninich. The place sits in that lucid light of Easter Ross, where sea air travels up the firth and the farmland rises in quiet folds toward heather and hill. It feels practical rather than picturesque, a working landscape with the still house as its metronome.
Teaninich’s character is made in the details. The mash house employs a plate-and-frame mash filter, yielding particularly clear worts that ferment cleanly. The resulting spirit comes off the stills with a bright, grassy lift, often evoking green tea, crisp apple and lemon peel, yet there is pleasing waxy weight on the palate. That combination of freshness and gentle oiliness gives blenders a reliable backbone. When a recipe seeks the wax-and-citrus register more commonly associated with Clynelish, Teaninich can be utilized as a similar alternative.
Time in refill and bourbon casks tends to keep the orchard fruit and meadow notes at the fore, while longer aging teases out almond, oatmeal and a subtle wax glow. Teaninich may not court attention, yet its quiet engineering of flavour has underpinned many a beloved blend, and rewards patient drinkers with clarity, texture and a very Highland poise.
The below is the average score out of 5 from our members, and the flavour profile which was voted to be the most prominent.