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Simon King's avatar

There’s a good book on this called Scotland the Brand by David McCrone. Tax changes in the early 1820s, along with improved transport to London, also enabled the industrialisation and expansion of the whisky industry. Previously, the physical and fiscal landscape meant that lowland whisky was made at scale but with poor ingredients and tended to be awful and only drunk by the working classes (like C18th gin in England) and highland whisky, made in small illegal stills with better ingredients and processes, was better, but only made in tiny quantities.

Ian's avatar

As regards Tennants Super, about 20-25 years ago I spent a few nights in Naples. We ended up in a large Piazza in the city centre that was ringed by bars, with lots of young folks (including me) milling - you could go to a bar, get a pint (500mls), and then take it to the middle of the square to drink.

Anyway, I fell in with some locals, as you do, and one of them noticed I was drinking Peroni. "Peroni!" he says, with disgust, and spits. "Why do you drinka thisa shit?"

I calmly explained to him that Peroni was a Premium beer in the UK. "Premium, ahhh, I will ashow you a premium beer!", and he literally manhandles me to a different bar on the opposite side of the square that is rammed. Lots of pushing, shoving, and gesticulations later, we get to the front of the bar, and he says, grandly, whilst pointing to the giant red illuminated 'T' on the tap in front of us "This, my friend, is a PREMIUM beer".

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