Gooderham & Worts
From The Oxford Companion to Spirits & Cocktails
, the pioneering Canadian whisky maker, traces its beginnings to what is now Toronto in 1837, when William Gooderham (1790–1881), a Norfolk-born miller, built a small distillery to dispose of waste wheat and barley. In 1845, his nephew, James Gooderham Worts (1818–1882), installed copper pot stills to supplant the existing wooden one and added rye to the recipe to satisfy consumer demand for more flavor. See
See also Hiram Walker and Sons; and whisky, Canadian.
De Kergommeaux, Davin. Canadian Whisky, Second Edition: The New Portable Expert. Vancouver: Appetite by Random House, 2017.
By: Davin de KergommeauxSee
This definition is from The Oxford Companion to Spirits & Cocktails, edited by David Wondrich (Editor-in-Chief) and Noah Rothbaum (Associate Editor).