Rum & Rhum Flashcards
Distilled From
- fermented sugar cane juice
- sugar cane syrup
- sugar cane molasses
- any other sugar cane by-products
ABV
- distilled at less than 95%ABV
- bottled at or above 40%ABV
Requirement of formula if
-harmless coloring, flavoring, or blending materials (HCFBM) are added and cannot exceed 2.5% of final product
Origin of name
- in Barbados
- Latin for Sugar Cane
- 1670’s “Rumbullion”
- Rhum if produced in French Caribbean Islands
- Ron for Spanish speakers
- “Kill Devil” as it was believed to cure ailments
Geographical Origin
Caribbean basin ideal for growing sugarcane by the 1600’s
Tot
Daily ration of rum for sailors of the Royal Navy for over 300 years given to them by the “Purser” or “Pusser”
Top Three Sugarcane Countries
- Brazil
- India
- China
Raw Material
- Fresh Cane Juice
- Evaporated Cane Juice “miel virgen”
- Molasses (A-B-C-D and black strap)
- Crystallized Sugar (white, brown, panela, etc)
Harvest
sugar cane is about 15 feet high and weighs 5 to 7 lbs
Molasses-Based
byproduct of boiling and crystallizing sugarcane juice
Fermentation
From 1 day to 2 weeks
- Natural Fermentation - open containers, naturally occurring yeast in the air
- Controlled Fermentation - a particular strain of yeast is used, usually a distillery’s most valuable asset
Distillation
Originally pot-still then Coffey (column) still. Now either discontinuous (pot still) or continuous (column) distillation.
Aging
- Barrels: American white oak, bourbon aged(charred), cognac(French oak), Sherry(European Oak)
- Caramel is sometimes added for color and consistency
- Angel’s Share is known as “the duppies’ share”(evil spirits)
- Age statement reflects the youngest rum in the blend
Single Barrel Rum
from one Barrel source
Solera Aging
- Originaly Spanish
- blending from different vintages consistently in 4 or even 5 or more levels high of stacked barrels
Rum Styles
- American (Colonial) - pot distilled, brandy influenced
- Cuban and Puerto Rican - Lightest, cleanest, most rectified alcohol possible then adding flavor through careful aging and blending
- French - pot still, sugarcane juice, Rhum, lots on congeners and aromas
- Naval (British Royal Navy)- combined rums from different distilleries in Barbados, Jamaica, and Guyana
- Spanish - Highly fruity, brandy-like, most use pot stills
- Jamaican/Guyanese - Dark, Heavy, and Potent, Jamaica defining it by its esters
Jamaican Rum Types
- Common Cleans: 80-150 esters
- Plummers: 150-200 esters
- Wedderburns: 200-500 esters
- Continental Flavored: 500-1700 esters
Families of Rhum/Rum
- Rum Industrial: obtained from distillation of molasses and not fresh fermented sugarcane juice
- Rhum Argicole: distilled from freshly squeezed sugarcane juice, column still, cannot be bottles less than 40%ABV “AOC Martinique Rhum Argicole”
Rhum Argicole Martinique Designations
- Rhum “blanc” Martinique: colorless, laid still for atleast 3 months, and not more than 3 months if stocked in oak barrels
- Rhum Martinique “eleve sous bois”(cask aged): aged in oak barrels for at least 12 months
- Rhum Martinique “vieux”(extra aged): Aged for atleast 3 years in barrels under 650 liters
Color Defenitions
White: also known as Clear, Crystal, Blanco, Plata. Cheapest to produce, most popular. typically un-aged
Gold: Also known as Oro, color derived from barrels or usually caramel and molasses
Dark: dark/black color can be obtained naturally or often additives are incorporated to obtain a dramatic effect