BobM said:I've never had a malt whiskey in my life, I'm a beer drinker. But I'm game to try your choice with you.
Here's an easy test to see if you'll possibly appreciate a single-malt scotch whisky:
If you can get neat ("straight up", undiluted) bourbon ("corn likker", " Kentucky sippin' whiskey") past your nose, you probably won't like either blended or single-malt scotch whisky - and vice-versa. Those who can enjoy equally the spirits of fermented corn and fermented barley malt are rare.
I should add that it's been my observation that folks whose first whiskey choice is rye ("Canadian") whiskey, can, in a pinch, take the occasional detour to either bourbon or Scotch without severe distress.
To bring this around to significance apropos of the PB's ... One winter vacation from college in the late 50's I was camping off a sand track south of route 72 and southwest of Mt. Misery. An old fellow I first took to be a classic "Piney" walked in on my campfire after dark. He did so politely- having called "haloo" from the darkness; I'd not heard his approach. When he said "guid evenin'" I had trouble understanding him until I realized he spoke with a thick Scottish accent. We passed a pleasant hour or so in conversation. He was originally from the Isle of Skye where he had cut peat and had come to the States just after the war (the one "to end all wars" ) Said he'd found work with a blueberry grower and as a gatherer of sphagnum peat and stayed in area. He gladly accepted a small draught of blended Scotch (I couldn't afford single malts in those days) before he left to return to his abode - which I assumed was nearby but never saw and to which I hadn't been invited. He had a Scottish surname which I've forgotten except that it wasn't one of the "Mac..." names. Perhaps Campbell , or Cameron... or some lowland family name; can't tell you for sure. At any rate, Asa Pitmann did say he knew of him, but wasn't sure where he lived, and added that he'd been a successful moonshiner during prohibition who had never been busted by the feds. Joe Palmer, for whom I worked shortly thereafter, also knew of him. I've often wished I knew if he'd distilled corn mash, which most moonshiners did, or if, true to his Scottish heritage, somehow had gotten hold of barley to malt and ferment and distill. Probably the former. Lots less labor intensive for an equal amount of hooch in the days when quality was probably judged more by proof than by any other feature of the product.
There are some interesting folks to met in the pines.
Dave