A guided tasting gives a small group of pours a purpose. Instead of opening several bottles at random, choose a simple comparison and let the differences show themselves. These tasting sessions are built for home use, a quiet evening with friends, or a more focused way to understand bottles already on your shelf.
Keep each flight to three pours when possible. Use similar glasses, pour modest amounts, and give each whiskey time to open. A notebook or tasting worksheet is useful, but the only real requirement is attention.
Session One: Bourbon and Rye
Compare one classic bourbon, one high-rye bourbon, and one rye whiskey at similar proof. Start with aroma, then notice sweetness, spice, texture, and finish. The point is not to choose a winner. It is to understand how grain changes the shape of a whiskey.
Session Two: Proof and Balance
Choose two expressions from the same producer or category at different proof points. Taste them neat, then add a few drops of water to the stronger pour. Notice whether the extra proof adds concentration, texture, heat, aroma, or all four.
Read the Proof vs Flavor guide
Session Three: Finished and Unfinished Whiskey
Compare a standard expression with a related bottle finished in a secondary cask, such as sherry, port, rum, wine, Cognac, or toasted oak. First identify the base spirit. Then consider what the finishing cask adds to aroma, texture, fruit, sweetness, tannin, or spice.
Read the Barrel Finishes guide
Session Four: One Distillery, Three Expressions
Choose three bottles from one producer, perhaps a standard release, bottled-in-bond release, single barrel, or barrel-proof bottling. This kind of vertical tasting is useful for recognizing house style. Look for recurring notes and the decisions that change the character of each expression.
Session Five: Build a Blind Flight
Ask another person to pour three related whiskeys without showing the labels. Keep the category fair: three bourbons, three ryes, or three single malts. Blind tasting can reveal how reputation, price, packaging, and scarcity shape expectation before the liquid ever reaches the glass.
Use a Simple Tasting Record
Record the bottle, proof, date, aroma, palate, finish, and one sentence about whether you would return to it. Writing down a few notes helps preserve the details that fade fastest and makes later comparisons more useful.
Open Tasting Worksheets or use the Flavor Wheel Reference before your next session.