Ardmore Scotch is inviting you to figure out how to be a better scotch drinker. So, if you don't have the sophisticated palate to differentiate a single malt from a blend, its experts may be able to teach you a thing or two.

One thing we all know is that scotch is best imbibed late at night, while you're alone -- you don't want to share it with those hangers-on who always drink your best stuff. So, one night, when you've quarantined yourself, consider taking Ardmore's Taste Journey. To embark on the wasted vacation, you register for an account at ArdmoreWhisky.com, start drinking, and, after your third drink, you'll completely forget where your computer is. (Not really, but totally plausible.) In actuality, you can use Ardmore's online tools to graph your impressions of its unique blend. You can make flavor notes (too peaty, too floral, too likely to burn down your house if held near open flame) and compare them with leading spirits bloggers.

Among the different things you'll learn from the Taste Journey is whether you should really just give up on scotch altogether and stick to wine coolers.