Sometimes it tastes almost like I burnt or scorched the juice.
I was just wondering if there were juices that were made for low sub ohm builds.
i'm sure there are. however, i completely agree with ryedan. there is simply no way to engineer a juice to specifically avoid burnt or dry hits. that's the vapers responsibility. the vaper must keep the coil and wick wet and make sure they work well with the amount of air flow and power delivered to them. even how hard you pull on the device is going to effect your success to an extent.
now, what a juice maker CAN do to make a juice better for sub-ohm vaping is to make a "smoother" juice. sub-ohm can produce massive flavor and throat hit. it can also be particularly drying to the sinuses. adding a little bit of water or saline solution to the juice can help to tame the hygroscopic nature of pg and vg to lessen the drying, irritating effect on the throat and sinuses. not including additives specifically for increasing throat hit and minimizing the flavoring would also be beneficial for sub-ohm vaping. they're not needed and can only increase irritation and/or completely overwhelm the senses inducing coughing fits, etc..
for example; i would never try to sub ohm pluid in full flavor. the flavor and throat hit would knock my socks off even at 0 nic. and again, i sub-ohm (and sometimes chain vape) 40+ mg/ml. today i'm vaping 42+ mg/ml @ 3%- flavoring on that same 0.38Ω setup to give you an idea. but this is with a macro coil, 24 Ga kanthal and a drilled out 7/64" air hole on an RDA.
so if you're scorching juice, maybe increase the diameter of your coil to allow a larger wick, increase your air hole, find an atty that can keep up with your wicking, etc., etc.
that's why i suggested you give some information on your setup.