If you searched “best whiskey,” you probably mean one of these:
- Best first whiskey to try (easy to enjoy, not punishing)
- Best whiskey to try next (level up your palate)
- Best whiskey to try when you want something memorable (special bottle, special pour)
This guide is built for that. It uses the same “availability + value” logic whiskey drinkers actually use (the Reddit thread’s core filter) , plus the “accessible price + reasonable availability” lens Whisky Advocate emphasizes.
Pick your flavor lane (don’t overthink it)
Choose the description that sounds most like you:
- Sweet + dessert → vanilla, caramel, baked spices
- Spice + structure → pepper, clove, rye bite, “warming” finish
- Fruity + elegant → orchard fruit, honey, citrus
- Bold + dark → chocolate, oak, licorice, deep fruit
- Smoky → campfire, sea spray, peat
Now pick from the shortlist below.
The shortlist: best whiskeys to try by experience level
A) If you want the “no-regrets” modern rye
Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Rye (Batch A925)
Why it’s worth trying:
- Whisky Advocate’s 2025 Whisky of the Year pick, praised as “beautifully mature,” robust, and not a one-note spice bomb.
- Described flavor profile: dark fruit, licorice, chocolate, stewed fruits, plus cinnamon, clove, ginger, and balanced oak.
- It’s also framed as reasonably priced for what it is (stated at $75 on the ranking page).
How to try it: first sip neat, then add a few drops of water to open it up (barrel-proof styles often reward this).
B) If you want a rye that’s easier and more “crowd-friendly”
Elijah Craig Toasted Rye
Why it’s worth trying:
- Named top American rye at the 2026 World Whiskies Awards America, with a notably accessible price point cited at $55.
- Mashbill and approach: “Kentucky style” rye (51% rye, 35% corn, 14% malted barley) and finished in a second custom toasted barrel, which often reads as rounder and sweeter.
How to try it: over one large ice cube if you want mellow sweetness and spice.
C) If you want a “wow” bourbon experience (dessert-spice lane)
Maker’s Mark Cellar Aged (2025 Release)
Why it’s worth trying:
- Whisky Advocate highlights this release as a blend of older bourbons (11, 13, 14 years) and describes flavors like baking spice, baked apple, cinnamon roll, orange zest, cocoa, and tobacco notes.
How to try it: neat in a Glencairn or wine glass to concentrate aromatics.
D) If you want Irish whiskey that feels luxurious but still approachable
Drumshanbo Marsala Cask (Irish Single Pot Still)
Why it’s worth trying:
- Whisky Advocate’s Top 20 includes it with an $80 price callout and 94 score.
- Fully matured in marsala casks (not just a quick finish), with honey, apricot, florals, clove-orange aromatics and tropical fruit + pot still spice on the palate.
How to try it: neat first, then a tiny splash of water to lift the fruit.
E) If you want a “global benchmark” pour (big sherry influence)
Kavalan Solist Fino Sherry Single Cask Strength (Taiwan)
Why it’s worth trying:
- Won Whisky of the Year at the 2025 International Whisky Competition with a score of 97.04 in a double-blind process.
- Notes include sherry-driven toffee/fudge, chocolate hints, mango, ripe citrus, green apple; cask strength typically 50–59.9% ABV.
- Realistically, it’s a splurge bottle (Food & Wine cites a broad U.S. price range).
How to try it: ask for a bar pour first. Add water gradually, it’s cask strength.
F) If you want to taste an award-winning American whiskey that’s “hard mode”
Smith Bowman Cask Strength (Batch #4)
Why it’s worth trying:
- Named Best Bourbon and Best American Whiskey at IWC 2025 with a 97.01 score, just behind Kavalan overall.
- Reality check: it was released via lottery and described as extremely limited.
How to try it: bar pour, or split a bottle with friends if you can find it.
A smarter way to “beat the listicles”: the 3-bottle progression
If you want a clean, confident path without guessing:
- Start (approachable, good value): Elijah Craig Toasted Rye
- Level up (benchmark complexity): Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Rye
- Go big (special occasion global pour): Kavalan Solist Fino Sherry Single Cask
That progression covers: easy sipping → depth/structure → world-class sherry-cask intensity.
How to order whiskey at a bar so you don’t waste money
- Try it neat first (one sip), then decide if you want ice or water.
- Ask for “one large cube” instead of crushed ice to avoid over-dilution.
- For cask strength: request a side of water. Add a few drops at a time.
