Lauder's
Lauder's
Archibald Lauder was one of the first Scots who happened to become explorers of the then new frontiers of the Celtic great drink. After England passed the malt tax law, the usual malt whiskey was incredibly expensive. It was then that the idea was born to mix malt distillation products with grain alcohols. And so the now well-known category of Blended Whiskey scotch tape turned out. That is a blend of malt whiskeys from different distilleries with grain whiskey.
The main task of the blenders at that time was as follows: to mix malt and grain whiskey so that the taste and aroma as a result did not yield to the drink familiar to the Scots. Archibald Lauder ensured that Lauder's became the most popular blended whiskey not only in the homeland, among the Scots, but also in the whole united kingdom, and in the future beyond.

