The Vantage Point

Sensory science, whisky without the gatekeeping, and honest thoughts on what makes an experience actually land. I write here when I have something worth saying.

What Fraser Campbell Taught Me About Going Independent, Building Community, and Why Whisky Needs More Honest Weird Tasting Notes
Whisky Education, Industry Interviews, Community Building Samantha Staniforth Whisky Education, Industry Interviews, Community Building Samantha Staniforth

What Fraser Campbell Taught Me About Going Independent, Building Community, and Why Whisky Needs More Honest Weird Tasting Notes

Fraser Campbell is the kind of person who will put in the work to help the drinks industry even when he'd rather go home to his dog or play guitar. When COVID hit and the UK government scapegoated hospitality with 10pm curfews, Fraser turned around Work From Bars in 24 hours. When Melbourne bartenders couldn't find staff in 2011, he created the Melbourne Bartender Exchange. It grew into the Global Bartender Exchange in 2012, reaching 150,000 members globally.

But what stuck with me most from our conversation wasn't the wins - it was his teaching philosophy: "I just make sure people have a laugh and a good time. No one wants to feel like they're sitting in a classroom being forced to learn." And this: "I love an honest weird tasting note or alternative perspective about whisky flavour. More of that please."

Fraser's approach to whisky education - making space for different experiences, encouraging conversation, celebrating the unexpected - is exactly what the industry needs. Here's what he taught me about building communities, going independent, and why whisky needs less gatekeeping and more honesty.

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Beyond the Prescribed Palate: Why I Stopped Trusting Tasting Notes (And You Should Too)
Samantha Staniforth Samantha Staniforth

Beyond the Prescribed Palate: Why I Stopped Trusting Tasting Notes (And You Should Too)

I used to second-guess my palate because I couldn't taste "grandmother's attic" in my whisky. Turns out, the problem wasn't my palate - it was the prescriptive tasting notes. When I nose Glen Scotia Double Cask, I see a 90s ice cream commercial playing in my head. That's my synaesthesia talking. And it's just as valid as someone else tasting "leather and oak."

If you've ever felt stupid for not getting the notes experts told you to taste, this is for you. Learning how to taste whisky shouldn't make you feel inadequate - it should be liberating. In this post, I'm breaking down why prescriptive tasting notes are gatekeeping, how to develop YOUR own sensory vocabulary, and why your palate isn't broken (the system is). Your sensory experience is yours. No one else's vocabulary should override what you're actually tasting.

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