Glenmorangie 18 Year Old Single Malt Whisky – 70cl
Glenmorangie 23 Years CNY - 70cl
Glenmorangie A Tale of the Forest – 70cl
Glenmorangie Harrison Ford Limited Edition Single Malt Scotch Whisky - 70cl
Glenmorangie Signet Single Malt Whisky - 70cl
Glenmorangie The Lasanta 12 Year Old Single Malt Whisky - 70cl
Glenmorangie The Original 12 Year Old Single Malt Scotch Whisky - 70cl
Glenmorangie The Quinta Ruban 14 Year Old Single Malt Whisky - 70cl
Glenmorangie Whisky
The elegant Highland single malt — distilled in the tallest copper pot stills in Scotland, hand-crafted by the Sixteen Men of Tain on the Dornoch Firth, and pioneered through three decades of cask finishing innovation by Dr Bill Lumsden. The Original 10, Lasanta 12 sherry cask, Quinta Ruban 14 port cask, A Tale of the Forest, Signet and the rare 23 Year Old, delivered free across Singapore.
Buy Glenmorangie in Singapore
The Liquid Collection stocks the live Glenmorangie range available in Singapore — the iconic Original 10 Year Old, the sherry-cask-finished Lasanta 12, the port-cask-finished Quinta Ruban 14, the woodland-themed A Tale of the Forest, the celebrated Signet flagship, and the rare 23 Year Old Chinese New Year edition. Glenmorangie is one of the great Highland single malt distilleries and a defining innovator in our wider Single Malt and Scotch Whisky ranges.
Every bottle ships free across Singapore with no minimum order. Browse the range above, or explore the polar-opposite peated style at sister distillery Ardbeg, the wider Highland region, or the great Speyside houses at The Glenlivet, The Macallan and The Balvenie.
The tallest stills in Scotland
Glenmorangie sits on the southern shore of the Dornoch Firth, in the small Highland town of Tain — about an hour north of Inverness, where the firth opens out to the cold North Sea. The site has been used for distilling for centuries; the current distillery was founded in 1843 by William Matheson on the location of an older farm distillery, Morangie Farm. But what makes Glenmorangie distinct is not its age. It is the height of the stills.
Glenmorangie's copper pot stills measure over 26 feet — eight metres — from base to crown, with a neck portion alone of 5.14 metres. They are the tallest stills in Scotland, taller than an adult giraffe, and the height matters because of what physics does to the spirit during distillation. As the liquid is heated, only the lightest and most volatile aroma compounds — the floral, fruity, citrus-and-vanilla notes — have enough thermal energy to reach the top of the long necks and pass through to the condenser. The heavier, oilier compounds fall back into the still before they ever make the journey. The result is a uniquely delicate, light, fragrant Highland spirit — and the foundation of everything Glenmorangie does.
Why Glenmorangie — the craft
The Sixteen Men of Tain
Despite its global reach, Glenmorangie remains a deliberately small operation. The whisky is hand-crafted by a team of just sixteen distillers known as the Sixteen Men of Tain — a name that appears on every bottle and has become one of the most famous brand stories in Scotch whisky. The Sixteen Men are the human craft at the heart of Glenmorangie: a small team that preserves traditional methods, runs the tall stills with the same attention William Matheson would have recognised in 1843, and makes every batch by hand. The number is symbolic but also literal — Glenmorangie has remained one of the smallest crews of any major distillery.
Tarlogie Springs and Highland water
Glenmorangie owns the 600-plus acres of land surrounding the Tarlogie Springs — the source of all the water used in production. The water is unusual for malt whisky: hard, mineral-rich, drawn from beneath the Tarlogie Hills and naturally filtered through the limestone and sandstone bedrock. Most Highland and Speyside distilleries draw from soft, peaty, acidic water; Glenmorangie's harder, more mineral water gives the spirit a structural backbone that complements the lightness produced by the tall stills. The combination — hard water, tall stills, sixteen men — is unique to Glenmorangie and central to its house style.
Pioneers of cask finishing
Glenmorangie was one of the earliest distilleries to treat cask finishing as a serious art form rather than an occasional experiment. Under Dr Bill Lumsden — Director of Distilling, Whisky Creation and Whisky Stocks, a PhD in chemistry, and one of the most respected figures in modern single malt — Glenmorangie has run three decades of innovation in cask experimentation. The technique is deceptively simple: take whisky that has matured for many years in American oak ex-bourbon casks (which gives Glenmorangie its signature vanilla and citrus base) and transfer it for an additional period into a different cask type — port, sherry, sauternes, madeira, cognac, virgin oak — to layer in a new dimension of flavour.
The textbook examples from the Glenmorangie range are the Lasanta (Oloroso and PX sherry-finished), the Quinta Ruban (Port pipe-finished), and the Nectar D'Or (Sauternes-finished). The Signet — Glenmorangie's flagship NAS expression — pushes further, marrying Cadboll-estate single malt with chocolate-malted barley and finishing in bespoke American virgin oak, with elements of 35 to 40 year old reserve stocks. Lumsden has called Signet the culmination of a lifetime of experimentation. The cask finishing techniques Glenmorangie pioneered are now standard practice across the industry.
The Glenmorangie range
Glenmorangie and Ardbeg — sisters, opposites
Glenmorangie has been owned by LVMH Moët Hennessy since 2004, and the acquisition placed Glenmorangie alongside the smoky Islay distillery Ardbeg in the LVMH Wines & Spirits portfolio. The two distilleries are sister brands — both run under Dr Bill Lumsden's distilling direction — but represent the polar opposites of the Scotch whisky stylistic spectrum. Glenmorangie produces the most elegant, fruity, floral Highland single malt in Scotland; Ardbeg produces some of the most powerfully peated, smoky single malts on Islay. Lumsden's ability to operate masterfully at both ends of the flavour spectrum simultaneously — running the most floral and the most smoky distilleries in Scotland under the same hand — is one of the most remarkable feats of modern Scotch whisky distilling.
The Hilton of Cadboll Stone
The ornate square design that adorns every Glenmorangie bottle — known as the Glenmorangie Signet — is taken directly from the Hilton of Cadboll Stone, a Pictish carved stone slab that dates from approximately 800 AD and was found near the village of Hilton of Cadboll, just along the coast from the Glenmorangie distillery. The original stone is one of the most important pieces of Pictish art in Scotland, and the design's incorporation into the Glenmorangie brand identity reflects the distillery's deep connection to its specific Highland location. The Glenmorangie Signet whisky takes its name from this same source — the most direct expression of Glenmorangie's bond with the place that gave the distillery its name.
Awards and global recognition
Glenmorangie has been one of the most decorated single malt distilleries in the world for decades. The Original 10 Year Old has been recognised at every major international spirits competition and is consistently among the world's best-selling single malts. The Quinta Ruban has won the World's Best Wood Finish at the World Whiskies Awards on multiple occasions. The Signet is widely regarded as one of the great single malt whiskies produced this century — it has placed at the top of multiple ultra-premium single malt categories and was Whisky Magazine's Editor's Choice in its launch year. Beyond the awards, Glenmorangie's defining achievement is one of stylistic leadership: the cask-finishing techniques the distillery pioneered are now standard practice at single malt producers worldwide.
Glenmorangie FAQ
What is Glenmorangie?
Glenmorangie is a Highland single malt Scotch whisky distillery on the Dornoch Firth in Tain, Ross-shire — the northern Highlands of Scotland. Founded in 1843 by William Matheson on the site of an old farm distillery, Glenmorangie is famous for distilling its spirit in the tallest copper pot stills in Scotland — over 26 feet high. The exceptional height of the stills produces an unusually light, fruity, floral spirit, and the distillery's pioneering work in cask finishing under Dr Bill Lumsden has made Glenmorangie one of the most innovative single malt houses in the world.
Why are Glenmorangie's stills so tall?
Glenmorangie's copper pot stills are over 26 feet (8 metres) tall — the tallest in Scotland. The neck of the still alone measures 5.14 metres, roughly the height of an adult giraffe. The unusual height matters because only the lightest, most volatile aroma compounds can make it all the way up the long necks to the condenser; heavier compounds fall back down before reaching the top. The result is a uniquely delicate, fragrant, fruity and floral spirit — quite unlike the heavier styles produced by shorter, fatter stills. The tall stills are central to the Glenmorangie house style.
What does Glenmorangie taste like?
Glenmorangie's house style is light, fruity, floral and elegant — the natural product of the tallest stills in Scotland combined with thoughtful cask maturation. The Original 10 Year Old offers vanilla, citrus, ripe peaches and a clean orange finish. The Lasanta 12 (Oloroso and PX sherry cask finished) brings warm spices, chocolate-covered raisins, honeycomb, sherry sultanas and butterscotch. The Quinta Ruban 14 (Port cask finished) layers dark mint chocolate, Seville oranges, sandalwood, walnut and Turkish delight. The Signet — Glenmorangie's flagship — reaches espresso, chocolate, dates, lychee and an extraordinary depth from its chocolate malt and ultra-aged stocks.
Who are the Sixteen Men of Tain?
The Sixteen Men of Tain are the small, dedicated team that hand-crafts every drop of Glenmorangie at the distillery in Tain, Ross-shire. The number sixteen refers to the men historically employed in production — and the name has become one of the most famous brand stories in Scotch whisky, used on every Glenmorangie bottle. The Sixteen Men of Tain represent the human craft at the heart of Glenmorangie: a deliberately small operation that preserves traditional methods despite the global scale of the brand today.
What is Glenmorangie cask finishing?
Cask finishing is the technique of taking whisky that has matured for many years in one type of cask (typically American oak ex-bourbon) and transferring it for an additional period — often one to three years — into a different cask type (port, sherry, sauternes, madeira, cognac, virgin oak) to add complexity. Glenmorangie was one of the earliest pioneers of cask finishing as a serious art form, and under Dr Bill Lumsden has produced some of the most acclaimed cask-finished single malts in the world. The Lasanta (sherry-finished), Quinta Ruban (port-finished) and Nectar D'Or (sauternes-finished) are textbook examples of the technique.
Who is Dr Bill Lumsden?
Dr Bill Lumsden is Glenmorangie's Director of Distilling, Whisky Creation and Whisky Stocks — and one of the most respected figures in modern single malt Scotch whisky. A PhD in chemistry, Lumsden has overseen Glenmorangie's distilling and innovation for over three decades, and has been responsible for some of the most influential cask finishing experiments in the industry. He is also responsible for sister distillery Ardbeg on Islay. The Glenmorangie Signet — described by Lumsden as the culmination of a lifetime of experimentation and innovation — is widely considered his signature work.
Who owns Glenmorangie?
Glenmorangie has been owned by The Glenmorangie Company, a subsidiary of LVMH Moët Hennessy, since 2004. The acquisition placed Glenmorangie alongside the smoky Islay distillery Ardbeg in the LVMH Wines & Spirits portfolio — making the two distilleries sister brands that represent the polar opposites of the Scotch whisky stylistic spectrum: Glenmorangie's elegant, fruity, floral Highland style and Ardbeg's powerful, peated Islay character. Both distilleries operate under Dr Bill Lumsden's distilling direction.
Is Glenmorangie a good gift?
Yes — Glenmorangie is one of the most universally respected single malt gifts in Scotch whisky. The Original 10 is the entry gift bottle; the Lasanta 12 and Quinta Ruban 14 are the considered modern choices for cask-finishing enthusiasts; A Tale of the Forest is the conversation piece for Lumsden fans; the Signet is the standard premium gift; and the 23 Year Old CNY Edition is reserved for the most significant occasions. See our wider gifts selection for presentation options.
Do you deliver Glenmorangie across Singapore?
Yes. Free delivery anywhere in Singapore with no minimum order. Standard lead time is 3 working days.