Rum & Rhum Flashcards

1
Q

Distilled From

A
  • fermented sugar cane juice
  • sugar cane syrup
  • sugar cane molasses
  • any other sugar cane by-products
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2
Q

ABV

A
  • distilled at less than 95%ABV

- bottled at or above 40%ABV

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3
Q

Requirement of formula if

A

-harmless coloring, flavoring, or blending materials (HCFBM) are added and cannot exceed 2.5% of final product

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4
Q

Origin of name

A
  • 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
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5
Q

Geographical Origin

A

Caribbean basin ideal for growing sugarcane by the 1600’s

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6
Q

Tot

A

Daily ration of rum for sailors of the Royal Navy for over 300 years given to them by the “Purser” or “Pusser”

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7
Q

Top Three Sugarcane Countries

A
  • Brazil
  • India
  • China
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8
Q

Raw Material

A
  1. Fresh Cane Juice
  2. Evaporated Cane Juice “miel virgen”
  3. Molasses (A-B-C-D and black strap)
  4. Crystallized Sugar (white, brown, panela, etc)
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9
Q

Harvest

A

sugar cane is about 15 feet high and weighs 5 to 7 lbs

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10
Q

Molasses-Based

A

byproduct of boiling and crystallizing sugarcane juice

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11
Q

Fermentation

A

From 1 day to 2 weeks

  1. Natural Fermentation - open containers, naturally occurring yeast in the air
  2. Controlled Fermentation - a particular strain of yeast is used, usually a distillery’s most valuable asset
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12
Q

Distillation

A

Originally pot-still then Coffey (column) still. Now either discontinuous (pot still) or continuous (column) distillation.

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13
Q

Aging

A
  • 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
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14
Q

Single Barrel Rum

A

from one Barrel source

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15
Q

Solera Aging

A
  • Originaly Spanish

- blending from different vintages consistently in 4 or even 5 or more levels high of stacked barrels

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16
Q

Rum Styles

A
  1. American (Colonial) - pot distilled, brandy influenced
  2. Cuban and Puerto Rican - Lightest, cleanest, most rectified alcohol possible then adding flavor through careful aging and blending
  3. French - pot still, sugarcane juice, Rhum, lots on congeners and aromas
  4. Naval (British Royal Navy)- combined rums from different distilleries in Barbados, Jamaica, and Guyana
  5. Spanish - Highly fruity, brandy-like, most use pot stills
  6. Jamaican/Guyanese - Dark, Heavy, and Potent, Jamaica defining it by its esters
17
Q

Jamaican Rum Types

A
  • Common Cleans: 80-150 esters
  • Plummers: 150-200 esters
  • Wedderburns: 200-500 esters
  • Continental Flavored: 500-1700 esters
18
Q

Families of Rhum/Rum

A
  1. Rum Industrial: obtained from distillation of molasses and not fresh fermented sugarcane juice
  2. Rhum Argicole: distilled from freshly squeezed sugarcane juice, column still, cannot be bottles less than 40%ABV “AOC Martinique Rhum Argicole”
19
Q

Rhum Argicole Martinique Designations

A
  • 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
20
Q

Color Defenitions

A

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