patricksparis wrote:also, believe it or not although i have a relatively new whiskey obsession and i am interested in promoting irish whiskey i dont dri nk any more so i may need help with tasting notes
Make it a thing with your customers. Anyone who orders a good irish whiskey give them a pre-printed tasting notes sheet and a pencil. Most won't fill it out but those that do will see it as a good schtick and you can compile the overall tasting notes from their responses.
If you really want to go all out, you could create a taste compass or board, with two axes - light&fragrant / heavy & spicy on one axis, then sweet & floral / savory and rich on the other. Then you can put stickers or chalk marks for each whiskey and customers who buy the whiskey can ask that it be moved across. Each whiskey will thus have a customer chosen place in one of four quadrants. Powers John Lane would be (IMO) top right corner in the heavy&spicy / savory and rich quadrant, while greenore 8 would be in the bottom left light&fragrant / sweet & floral.
Here is the Diageo tasting map for scottish whiskey:
https://www.google.ie/search?q=whiskey+ ... B608%3B609Something like that could be a good way to get people to try different Irish whiskies.
A tricky part of tasting notes is that not only can each bottle taste different, so something that you can constantly update would be a good idea.