About
Ireland's first modern whiskey bonder since the 1930s, founded by Louise McGuane. Sources new-make spirit from Irish distilleries and matures it in a purpose-built bonded rackhouse on the McGuane family farm in Cooraclare, County Clare. Named after a 19th-century Clare whiskey bonder. McGuane is the only solo female founder of an Irish whiskey brand, with prior experience at LVMH, Pernod Ricard, and Diageo. Note: bonder, not distiller — does not distil on-site.
Production Details
The J.J. Corry Tale
On the windswept coast of County Clare, where the Atlantic crashes against the Cliffs of Moher and ancient stone walls divide emerald fields, Louise McGuane returned to her family farm in Cooraclare with a vision rooted in Ireland's forgotten past. In 2015, she became the country's first whiskey bonder since the 1930s, reviving a tradition that had vanished with the industry's near-collapse.
The name she chose carried weight—J.J. Corry, after a 19th-century Clare bonder who once walked these same limestone roads, selecting and maturing spirits for discerning drinkers. Like her namesake, McGuane would not distill but bond, an art requiring different skills: the ability to read young spirit's potential, to match it with the right wood, to coax time and terroir into harmony.
Her purpose-built bonded rackhouse rises from the McGuane family land like a cathedral to patience. Here, the salt-tinged air of the Wild Atlantic Way mingles with the sweet exhalations of aging whiskey. The building breathes with the seasons—Clare's maritime climate providing the gentle temperature swings that encourage the slow dance between spirit and oak.
McGuane brought credentials from the global spirits world—years at LVMH, Pernod Ricard, and Diageo—but chose to plant her flag in the soil of home. She sources new-make spirit from Irish distilleries, then applies her own philosophy to maturation, each cask a calculated risk, each warehouse turn a decision that will echo for years.
As Ireland's only solo female founder of a whiskey brand, she stands at the intersection of ancient craft and modern innovation. The bonder's trade requires no copper stills or mash tuns, only an understanding of how time transforms spirit in the hands of someone who truly knows their place.
In Cooraclare, where the land meets the sea and tradition meets ambition, McGuane tends her sleeping casks, carrying forward a craft that predates the great distilleries, proving that sometimes the most profound innovation lies in remembering what was almost lost.