Why do you need to drink whiskey from Scotland ? If you have not may need to buy a lot of whiskey for a little when suffer from alcoholism money ?
People who now make the best whiskey is obvious . Scotland looks like automotive Detroit . Similarly , in Solingen for the knife .
More advanced society is purified material from less advanced society
>>7037035
I drink scotch because I'm an adult with an adult palate. If you can't handle the peat smoke, there's always vodka
Shut up you stupid weeb.
Also it's spelled whisky, dumb fuck.
>>7039760
Unless it's from Ireland, then its a whiskey.
>>7039763
Wrong way around mate.
>>7037035
What are all these words
>>7037069
You're also a moron for equating Scotch with peat. Are you one of those Americans who drinks Ardbeg/Laphroaig/Lagavulin and then acts superior for having drunk those mass produced, chill-filtered, watered-down and artificially coloured whiskies becuase they make you feel more adult?
If one doesn't like peat then they're in luck with Scotland as the majority of whiskies (including many of the very best) produced there aren't peated.
>>7039767
Much is made of the word's two spellings: whisky and whiskey.[3][4] There are two schools of thought on the issue. One is that the spelling difference is simply a matter of regional language convention for the spelling of a word, indicating that the spelling varies depending on the intended audience or the background or personal preferences of the writer (like the difference between color and colour; tire and tyre; or recognize and recognise),[3][4] and the other is that the spelling should depend on the style or origin of the spirit being described. There is general agreement that when quoting the proper name printed on a label, the spelling on the label should not be altered.[3][4] Some writers refer to "whisk(e)y" or "whisky/whiskey" to acknowledge the variation.
The spelling whiskey is common in Ireland and the United States while whisky is used in every other whisky producing country in the world.[5] In the US, the usage has not always been consistent. From the late eighteenth century to the mid twentieth century, American writers used both spellings interchangeably until the introduction of newspaper style guides.[6] Since the 1960s, American writers have increasingly used whiskey as the accepted spelling for aged grain spirits made in the US and whisky for aged grain spirits made outside the US.[7] However, some prominent American brands, such as George Dickel, Maker's Mark, and Old Forester (all made by different companies), use the 'whisky' spelling on their labels, and the Standards of Identity for Distilled Spirits, the legal regulations for spirit in the US, also use the 'whisky' spelling throughout.[8]
"Scotch" is the internationally recognized term for "Scotch whisky".
>>7037035
>Why do you need to drink whiskey from Scotland ?
I don't tho
so I drink whisk(e)y from everywhere
>>7037069
>I drink scotch because I'm an adult
>also I have a mature wardrobe and respectfully salute ladies like the gent in pic related
>>7037035
I like to relax with a Scottish on the rocks.
Nice way to end the day.
>>7041734
poorly translated moonspeak
>>7037035
>not knowing how to speak properly
>not having a glass of double black label every day after work
>probably thinks bourbon is whiskey
>drinking anything but Canadian Rye
>>7042610
>not drinking Canadian Scotch