If you鈥檙e over the age of 24 and still drinking green beer for St. Patrick鈥檚 Day, we need to talk.
Seriously, green beer is the pukey-green swath that the rainbow of bad decision-making is built on鈥攁nd there is no pot of gold at the end of any night starting with green beer. I mean, there鈥檚 a pot, but it鈥檚 porcelain, not gold.
What you should be drinking is Irish whiskey. Everyone else is. According to a , Irish whiskey is actually the fastest growing spirit category in the U.S. And there鈥檚 so much more to the category than just Jameson, Irish coffees, and Irish car bombs. Here鈥檚 how to look like a complete Irish whiskey aficionado this St. Patrick鈥檚 day.
Step One: Know The History
There鈥檚 a reason we all grew up watching our fathers and grandfathers drink Scotch and not Irish whiskey. Essentially the luck of the Irish hasn鈥檛 been so great from a whiskey perspective. The industry has had one setback after another鈥攂eginning with the Irish Temperance Movement of the 1830s. 鈥淥n April 10th, 1838 a capuchin friar, Fr. Theobald Matthew, turned people against what he perceived as the 鈥榙emon drink,鈥欌 says Danny Fagan, Brand Director for Castle Brands鈥 Irish Portfolio, which produces and . 鈥淚n just five years, over 5 million people of a population of 8 million Irish citizens had taken what was called 鈥榯he pledge.鈥欌 The direct result of 鈥渢he pledge鈥 was 20 of Ireland鈥檚 best distilleries closing their doors.
About the time things were starting to get going again, the Irish War of Independence happened, once again stopping production. Then, just a decade later, the Economic Trade War with the British further hobbled the just-recovering industry. So when thousands of Americans arrived in Europe to fight Hitler, 鈥渢he only kind of whiskey you could get was Scotch whiskey,鈥 says Stuart McNamara, the Dublin-based whiskey writer behind . 鈥淭he soldiers learned to drink Scotch whiskey and brought it back to the states with them.鈥

Step Two: Know The Scene
Like America, Ireland is having a bit of a craft resurgence with several new distilleries opening up. There are still only about ten distilleries, but there are lots more brands being produced at those distilleries. (The American idea of producing more than one brand at a distillery is not at all unusual in Ireland.)
鈥淭he number of varieties of Irish whiskey which are starting to hit the U.S. market are phenomenal,鈥 says Fagan. 鈥淔rom Single Malts with different barrel finishes to single pot still Irish whiskey, there is a growing demand for unique whiskeys.鈥
A fair amount of Irish whiskey is actually owned by international companies, but both Fagan and McNamara say it doesn鈥檛 seem to be harming quality. 鈥淲hen I visit these distilleries there no sense of a multinational company being involved. Of all the 10 people working there鈥攆rom the distiller to the person doing marketing and distribution鈥攖hey鈥檙e all Irish. It鈥檚 all being done the traditional way,鈥 says McNamara.
Step Three: Know What You鈥檙e Tasting
Irish whiskey doesn鈥檛 have the same smoky flavor that some Scotches have. Drying barley over peat fires causes the smoke flavor in many Scotch whiskies, and that鈥檚 not traditionally done in Ireland. Instead, Irish whiskey tends to have a lighter flavor. 鈥淚t really is a spirit that鈥檚 good when it鈥檚 drunk on its own,鈥 says Tony Abou Ganim, a globally renowned spirits expert and mixologist.
Like Scotch, single malt is a common term in Irish whiskey, but another type worth trying is single pot still whiskey. This variety uses a mix of both malted and un-malted barley. (Single malt uses just malted barley hence the term single malt.) Describing the beauty of a single pot still whiskey, McNamara says, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about the nose, it鈥檚 about the flavor the taste; it鈥檚 not to be mixed with lemonade or Coca Cola.鈥 (Or coffee or Irish car bomb ingredients, or, well, you get the idea.)
Step Four: Try Something Beyond Jameson
鈥淛ameson has practically become the generic term for Irish whiskey,鈥 says Abou Ganim. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like Patron. I once had a guy walk in and order Patron. I said we were out of the one he wanted, but offered him another similar tequila. He said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want tequila, I want Patron.鈥 I think Jameson has done that to the Irish whiskey category.鈥
Now, to be clear, Abou Ganim likes Jameson. However, there鈥檚 more out there. He suggests Green Spot and Red Breast as two of the best single pot still choices. He also recommends trying some of Jameson鈥檚 extension products鈥攑articularly the brand鈥檚 , which is aged in sherry casks and American oak barrels.
鈥淚鈥檝e never seen the selection of Irish whiskies that we have available today,鈥 he says. And that (along with not spewing the remnants of green beer into a gutter) is something worth drinking to this St. Patrick鈥檚 Day.