Reccomend me a good scotch

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Riverhound777

Diamond Member
Aug 13, 2003
3,363
61
91
Any comments on the Costco Kirkland 20 year Speyside? I picked up a bottle and it tastes great to me, but I have little to compare it to.
 

Rakehellion

Lifer
Jan 15, 2013
12,182
35
91
Some good stuff here. I'm not really a scotch drinker, so this is helpful.

I was in a little townie bar in France once, in the middle of the day. The local rep was making a delivery to the bar and gave me a sample of a scotch that he had. It had a little sweetness to it, which was very surprising. Of course I forgot the name almost as soon as I left the bar, and I've never been able to find any scotch like it since.

Any idea what scotch, or types of scotch, would have a slightly sweet taste?

Some of them are aged in wine barrels. Look for a "double aged" blend.
 

Delita

Senior member
Jan 12, 2006
931
0
76
This website has a bunch of good scotch reviews: http://scotchnoob.com/reviews/

Have to agree that Islays probably aren't a good scotch to start out with. Something a little less intense might be better, such as a Highland Park, Oban, Glenmorangie, or Macallan. Possibly even a blended, like Johnny Walker, to get you introduced, then move onto a single malt.
 

Ayrahvon

Senior member
Aug 7, 2007
683
4
81
For beginners? Royal Lochnagar if you can get your hands on it. My go to used to be the Laphroaig 10 for price, but unfortunately on the west coast here it is now ungodly expensive (over $60 a bottle for something that I used to regularly get under $40).

I recommend going to a bar and trying a few before you buy. Nothing is worse than buying a pricey bottle of booze only to find out you hate the stuff.

Others to potentially try that are readily available:

Balvanie Doublewood 12 year old (Great for people new to scotch)

Glenlivet, Glenfiddich, or Glenmorangie (not really my thing, but must tries that are classics)

Speyburn or Bowmore Legend (for wonderfully low prices)

Dalwhinnie (great for beginners, painful on your pocketbook)

Ardbeg Uigeadail (if you want to spend the money to try what people in Edinburgh consider to be the best for price scotch, and they are not rong)

Laphroaig 15 or Longrow CV (if you want to get lucky and find a discountinued whisky still worth getting your hands on)
 
Feb 6, 2007
16,432
1
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Glenfiddich and Glenlivet are the "standard" introductory scotches. Macallan is very tasty, and pretty good for a beginner as well, as is Balvenie (although it's generally slightly more expensive). Once your palate gets used to scotch, venture into the Islays, as Lagavulin and Talisker have a heavenly combination of flavors going on with an abundance of peat (technically Talisker is from the Isle of Skye and doesn't qualify as an Islay, but the taste profile has a lot more in common with Lagavulin and Laphroaig than the Highland scotches). The point of scotch is a whisky with a lot of complexity stemming from the balance and interplay between peat, wood, grains and salt, which means that a lot of "high end" scotches are going to taste pretty nasty until you get used to the flavor (hence avoiding the Islay scotches until your palate is ready). I'm a big fan of Islay scotches personally, although I hated them when I first tried them; my fiancee still insists they taste like bog water.
 

Puppies04

Diamond Member
Apr 25, 2011
5,909
17
76
OP whiskey is like wine, I could tell you about this amazing single malt that is the best in the world and you might fucking hate it.

Unless you want to tell us what other whiskeys you have tried that you liked any advice you get here can be taken with a grain of salt.
 

DigDog

Lifer
Jun 3, 2011
13,622
2,189
126
Scotch is a word generally used to describe blended whisky, so we don't really like using it.

Any good single malt is fine for a newbie, but generally speaking, true single malt begins with cask-strength whisky. And if you can find any (its quite cheap here in scotland, but can be deadly expensive in the states), any will do.

TLDR

buy a whisky thats 50o or more (100 proof)
 

Apex

Diamond Member
Oct 11, 1999
6,511
1
71
www.gotapex.com
I don't understand all the peat hate. Isn't that the whole point of Scotch?

It doesn't seem like hate to me. I think many people simply don't like drinking whisky that approximates the flavor of sucking on an ashtray. There are plenty of balanced choices that allow you to takes a whole range of flavors.

Looking up a flavor map may be a good idea, just to get an idea where the different choices fall.

 
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jupiter57

Diamond Member
Nov 18, 2001
4,600
3
71
Don't know what you mean by "Good" Scotch.

Scotch, Whiskey, Bourbon, etc. all all vile, nasty, disgusting tasting liquids.
What you seem to be asking is what is the least nasty tasting Scotch?
 

child of wonder

Diamond Member
Aug 31, 2006
8,307
175
106
If you're a beginning Scotch drinker I'd recommend Glenmorangie Original or Quinta Ruban, Glenfiddich 12 year, Glenlivet 12 year, or Johnny Walker Black.
 

FerrelGeek

Diamond Member
Jan 22, 2009
4,670
271
126
Uh, no, not for a beginner. Laphroaig is the only scotch I've tried that I truly disliked. I'm still on the beginner-ish edge and the heavy peaty-ness was way over the top for me.

Balvenie is nice stuff, easy to get to like. McCallan and Glenfiddich are both accessible drinkers as well.

Agree on the Islays; not usually a good choice for beginners unless you really like bold flavors. +1 on Macallan; if you've got the money, get the 18 year - yummm!!
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,403
8,199
126
Don't know what you mean by "Good" Scotch.

Scotch, Whiskey, Bourbon, etc. all all vile, nasty, disgusting tasting liquids.
What you seem to be asking is what is the least nasty tasting Scotch?

I see you live in Kentucky. Can't you get deported for being a traitor of the state for badmouthing bourbon?
 
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