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The
Cooley Distillery
was the brainchild of Irishman John
Teeling and was the first new whiskey
distillery to be set up in Ireland in
over 100 years.
Cooley was set up with a
clear vision to rescue some of the
famous old Irish whiskey brands and
distilleries that had been mothballed
during the previous 50 years.
The
Cooley Distillery was founded in
1987 when John Teeling bought the former
state owned alcohol plant on the Cooley
Peninsula. The plant was built in the 1950's to turn diseased
potatoes into industrial alcohol and was
converted in less than two years by John Teeling into two
distilleries - a pot still and a patent
still operation.
The Cooley Distillery takes its name from the
location of the distillery at the
foothills of the Cooley Mountains in
County Louth. Acquisitions included the
assets of the old Andrew A Watt Distillery
in Co. Derry which was established in 1762 and
John Locke and Co. of Kilbeggan which
was established in 1757; the latter is
the oldest licensed distillery in the
world.
The original distillery on the Cooley
peninsula was joined in 2007 by a micro
distillery in the old Locke's Distillery
in Kilbeggan.
Read
more about Kilbeggan here.
Today the distillery produces three styles of
Irish single malt whiskey, several blends, and
a small batch single grain. Distillation
continues to take place at the Cooley
Distillery with the cooperage and ageing
cellars in the John Locke’s Distillery
in Kilbeggan.

Cooley produces
Kilbeggan and
Lockes whiskeys, as well as
Connemara
single malt which is Ireland's only
peated single malt whiskey. It also
produces
Tyrconnell single malt and
Greenore,
Ireland's oldest single grain whiskey.
Other products include
Inishowen and
Millars blended whiskey, Michael Collins
single malt, and a Michael Collins
blended version.
Cooley uses only the finest Irish barley
and has its own spring water source
coming from the Sliabh na Gloch river
high up in the Cooley Mountains.
What makes Cooley's whiskey distillery
distinctive is their use of small copper
pot stills with very large necks. These
cause the spirits to take 50 percent
longer to pass through, and the
distillers believe that the result is a
more refined product. In addition, like
most Scotch whisky many
Cooley brand whiskeys are distilled only
twice as opposed to the more common
Irish method of distilling the spirits
three times. This gives Cooley's
products much more flavour than most
Irish whiskeys. The whiskeys are then matured
in the 200 year old granite warehouses
of Kilbeggan Distillery located in
County Westmeath, some 60 miles away. |