- Joined
- Feb 2, 2015
- Messages
- 1,387
I finally made the leap from my year old and somewhat still new passion of Bourbon, to Scotch. I researched like crazy (which is what I did with Bourbon before trying my 1st) and went with the most Bourbon expressioned Scotch I could find. I figured since I love bourbon so much it would be a smoother transition into Scotch.
I paid $60 for a Glennfiddich Single Malt 14 Year Bourbon Barrel Reserve Scotch (USA exclusive). Boy was I wrong; it had zero of the bourbon traits that I have been so delighted to experience. In fact it tasted like a band aid infused cocktail with a hint of retch (gross image I know).
I usually drink my whiskey neat but this one I've experimented with in all angles (dab of water, ice cube, lots of ice, stones, and lidding my Glencairn). I can't seem to enjoy without a grimace on my face. I'm gonna try cigars with it next.
At the moment I can only afford one bottle every two months so I'm kinda sad. I plan on buying Bookers Unfiltered Bourbon next. For the first time I can't wait to finish this bottle (Don't like to waste, especially after 14 years of maturation).
Any tips or advice. I don't want to turn my back on the massive Scotch world, but I'm scratching my head why I didn't spot this when researching. Thanks brothers.
I paid $60 for a Glennfiddich Single Malt 14 Year Bourbon Barrel Reserve Scotch (USA exclusive). Boy was I wrong; it had zero of the bourbon traits that I have been so delighted to experience. In fact it tasted like a band aid infused cocktail with a hint of retch (gross image I know).
I usually drink my whiskey neat but this one I've experimented with in all angles (dab of water, ice cube, lots of ice, stones, and lidding my Glencairn). I can't seem to enjoy without a grimace on my face. I'm gonna try cigars with it next.
At the moment I can only afford one bottle every two months so I'm kinda sad. I plan on buying Bookers Unfiltered Bourbon next. For the first time I can't wait to finish this bottle (Don't like to waste, especially after 14 years of maturation).
Any tips or advice. I don't want to turn my back on the massive Scotch world, but I'm scratching my head why I didn't spot this when researching. Thanks brothers.