False. Distillers who release cask-strength whisky fully expect you to add water. In fact, they design the whisky to be diluted by the drinker to their personal preference. Not adding water to a 65% ABV whisky is like eating raw pasta—you’re missing the intended preparation.
False for high ABV; true for low ABV. Adding water to a 40% whisky will likely make it taste watery and flat. Adding water to a 55% whisky is often essential to open the aroma and reduce burn. The key is moderation: a few drops, not a flood. percentage of alcohol in whisky
At first glance, the number on a whisky bottle seems simple. It’s usually a figure between 40% and 60%—43%, 46%, 57.2%—followed by the word “ABV” (Alcohol by Volume) or, in the United States, the term “Proof.” But for the distiller, the blender, the collector, and the casual drinker, that tiny number is a universe of information. It tells a story of legality, economics, chemistry, flavor, and tradition. Not adding water to a 65% ABV whisky