The UK Rum Club x SBS Release

As a few readers may be aware, I am one of the Founders and Admins of The UK Rum Club which is a Facebook Group with around 2600 members. We focus on pure rums over spiced, flavoured or doctored products

Along with our first release due out in the next month or so which is a Chairman’s Reserve bottling in conjunction with Royal Mile Whiskies, we have recently announced a collaboration with S.B.S Single Barrel Selection

An important announcement was made on the Facebook Group and a small extract is contained below:

We are extremely happy announce that in collaboration with S.B.S and Skylark Spirits, The UK Rum Club will have a pre-Christmas charity release!

With that in mind, to allow members of The UK Rum Club to experience the wilder and geekier side of Jamaican Rum and to expand their horizons, the collaboration with S.B.S has come to fruition

We are releasing the SBS x The UK Rum Club High Ester Jamaican Rum collection of 4 200ml bottles and whats more, your purchase will benefit charity

The pack will contain 4 individual 200ml bottles, each containing high ester Rum from a different Jamaican distillery.

They will be unaged and will all be bottled at 57% abv.

You will have the chance to experience:

Worthy Park – WPE – ester level of 600-800 g/hlaa

Hampden – DOK – ester level of 1500-1600 g/hlaa

Long Pond – STC^E – ester level of 550-700 g/hlaa

New Yarmouth – NYE-WK – ester level of 1500-1600 g/hlaa

Each pack of 4 bottles will be in its own presentation box and will be a limited run of 125 units priced at £99.99 plus postage

What is perhaps most important though is that 10% of each box, thats £10 of your purchase, will be split between two charities that are in need of funding, and that have a direct connection to Steven (Rum Diaries Blog) and Wes (The Fat Rum Pirate)

The charity that we here at Rum Diaries Blog has chosen is MyAware – Fighting Myasthenia Together

The charity that Wes over at The Fat Rum Pirate has chosen is CHUF – Childrens Heart Unit Foundation

Click the link to join the UK Rum Club, to read why we have chosen these charities and if you would like to, sign up to purchase a pack and help charity in the process The UK Rum Club Facebook group link

Your support really would be appreciated

Please note there are less than 20 of these sets still available

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  • Skotlander Handcrafted Rum V 1,400 SØMIL

    Skotlander Handcrafted Rum V 1,400 SØMILSkotlander Handcrafted Rum V 1,400 SØMIL is perhaps the most bizarrely named rum I have reviewed so far.  The strange name owes mostly to the way it has been aged.  When translated into English and the story is told it does make a lot more sense.  Even if the way the rum has been aged is a little baffling…….

    Skotlander Spirits hail from Denmark.  Not Scotland as some have commented on Social Media.  Believe it or not but some people have suggested the name is confusing. A simple Google search would easily dismiss any misconceptions.  This seems beyond some.

    Skotlander’s website asks you immediately on visiting if you wish to translate it into English.  It is currently available in English and Danish.  It’s really well done and has a great deal of information on the rums.  You can also buy their range online via the site.

    The rum up for review is their most recent release.  Translated into English the 1,400 refers to Nautical Miles.  As I mentioned the rum has been aged in a rather unique way.  The rear label of the bottle gives us the backstory.

    As you can see the rum has been aged in PX Sherry Casks and aged onboard Anders Skotlander’s Schooner Mira.  The rum was bottled at Cask Strength after being aged for 1400 Nautical miles around the Danish coast.

    Skotlander Handcrafted Rum V is packaged in a modern stubby style bottle with a wooden topped synthetic cork stopper.  The presentation is very sleek and clean.  It’ a very modern looking package.  Included with my two rums came a booklet on Skotlander’s rums and a Cocktail booklet with a number of cocktail and syrup recipes.  The rum also came with a white cloth bag with the Skotlander hog/pig logo.  All in all a very classy package.Skotlander Handcrafted Rum V 1,400 SØMIL

    The 50cl bottle has been released at Cask Strength of 61.6% ABV.  It is a limited edition of 704 bottles.  My bottle is number 415.  The rum retails at around the 200 Euro mark. The rum is small batch, pot distilled it has no additives, no chill filtration and is a natural colour.  It is not cheap but Skotlander ensure their customers that the rum is made using the finest grade sugarcane molasses in the world.

    In the glass the rum is very vibrant reddish brown.  I don’t know how long aged 1400 Nautical Miles is but it seems there has been quite a lot of interaction with the PX Sherry Cask to get this colour.

    The nose is sweet – there are some quite strong scents of sweet “booze”.  Beneath these quite strong fumes you also get a nice toffee aroma.  There are notes of what I would recognise as port or sherry – rich deep wine like scents.

    Further nosing reveals a slightly vegetal note – reminiscent of young Jamaican Overproofs.  It also reminds me of a small batch Pot Still rum from England called Old Salt Rum.  However these notes are only slightly detectable.  There is on occasion a little flash of varnish.

    All in all at full ABV it is a very complex smelling rum.  It is quite menacing and certainly a rum which you should approach with respect.

    Sipped at full strength it is initially sweet as the nose promises.  Skotlander Handcrafted Rum V 1,400 SØMILYou get a really nice fruity burst – redcurrants and blackberries.  Then the toffee notes arrive, they quickly fade into quite a sharp bittersweet melding of spices and smokiness.  Despite its sweetness it is quite a heavy and very rich rum.  Kind of like a mix of
    Pussers and Caroni in many ways.  The nearest I have tasted in terms of intensity of flavour has been the Foursquare 2013 Habitation Velier release.  They are very similar in a lot of ways.

    Taken down a notch or two with a drop of water the rum is a little lighter to sip.  You don’t lose any of the intense flavours but I can certainly taste a lot more oak which for me gives it a little bit more balance.  Initially I felt this was a better option but over time I have developed quite a taste for the rum at the higher ABV.  Albeit in much smaller sips.

    It’s expensive.  Both to the consumer and for the producer.  It is not something being done on the cheap, by a company looking to make a quick buck.  They want this rum to be the best it can be and they have also produced something, which is very distinctive.

     

  • Plantation Stiggins’ Fancy 1824 Recipe

    Stiggins Fancy Plantation rum review by the fat rum pirateStiggins’ Fancy 1824 Recipe Pineapple Rum has finally hit UK shores.  Plantation the makers of this rum have certainly created a real buzz around this and the sole current stockist of this rum have been overwhelmed with demand for this product.

    Rum brand Plantation is owned by Maison/Cognac Ferrand and whilst they may not be quite in the same league as industry giants Bacardi International and Diageo they certainly know how to market their Plantation line of rums.

    Regular Gold award winners at perhaps the worlds biggest Rum Festival – the Miami Rum Renaissance they have a very visible presence in the rum world.  Regulars at many other events such as Tales of the Cocktail (where this rum was first exhibited back in 2014) they are also responsible in conjunction with Monin for the strangely named Underground Punch Pong League (UPPL)!

    Over the past few years Plantation have been working with UK supermarket/clothing chain Marks and Spencer – M&S for short.  M&S’ own label Bajan and Guatemalan rums are supplied by Plantation and in turn M&S also stock Plantation’s own 3 stars White Rum.  As a result of this collaboration M&S have exclusivity on the initial release of Stiggins’ Fancy in the UK.

    Stiggins’ Fancy which is bottled at 40% ABV – good to see in a “flavoured” rum is available at £34 for a 70cl bottle.  On initial glance at a bottle of Stiggins’ Fancy you could be forgiven for thinking it is a “bootlegged” bottle of Plantation’s Original Dark as it appears a big sticker has been placed over the original label.  However on closer inspection and on looking at the rear of the bottle you will release that this isn’t the creation of some rebel bartender!

    The presentation is the now familiar Plantation full length bottle with the Plantation logo Stiggins Fancy rum review by the fat rum pirate Plantationon the neck and Plantation emblazoned across the bottom. A decent quality synthetic stopper tops of the presentation.  The rear label gives a LOT of information on Pineapple rum and Stiggins’ (actually Reverend Stiggins’ who features in Dickens Pickwick Papers).  According to the label Pineapple rum was very much a sipping delicacy back in 19th century England.  So what sets this flavoured rum from the other’s such as Captain Morgan’s own Pineapple concoction?

    Well its pretty much how it is made.  In France Rhum Agricole particularly white agricole is often infused with fruits.  Indeed the Facebook group La Confrerie du Rhum produced a limited release Pineapple Infused Rum around a year ago.  As with the “dosage” (adding sugar as they do with Cognac) Plantation have decided to use another French technique – Rhum Arrange.

    Like the Confrerie release Stiggins’ Fancy is made with Queen Victoria Pineapples from the Reunion isles – widely noted as the best quality pineapples.

    Plantation teamed up with renowned cocktail historian David Wondrich to create a serious pineapple rum that focused completely on flavour, rather than sweetness. Made by infusing the flesh of pineapples in the standard Plantation Dark Rum. Then, seeking more aromatics, Ferrand distilled the pineapple rind with their white rum Plantation 3 stars, then blended the two and matured them for an extra period in barrel.

    I must confess I am always a little sceptical of flavoured rums but if this has been made in the manner that is reported with no artificial flavourings, then its certainly worth trying!

    As a result of how this rum is made it has been released in limited batches.  The batch we now have in the UK is the fourth, made with 3.5 tonnes of pineapple, and there are plans to produce the fifth batch before the summer.  Such is the demand for this produce which Alexandre Gabriel never actually planned on releasing!

    Stiggins Fancy Rum review by the fat rum pirate PlantationSo as you can see there is a lot of “hype” surrounding this rum.  It has quite a lot to live up to and here it is being reviewed by someone who really does not like Plantation Original Dark………….

    Fortunately for Plantation it is also being reviewed by someone who hasn’t actually tried the newer Original Dark which is now a mix of Jamaican and Trini rum rather than just Trini stocks.

    Which is apparent right from the start with this rum.  The colour unsurprisingly is a very nice reddish/copper colour but its the nose where you immediately note the Jamaican component in this.  Like the Original Dark I wasn’t a huge fan of the Plantation Jamaica, I tried a while back but I have to say it works nicely in this spirit.

    The nose is sweet but not overly so and nowhere near as bad as I had expected.  It smells very much of fresh pineapple as opposed to sweetened tinned pineapple, the rum however is not overpowered by the flavour.  This is not like a flavoured vodka whereby the spirit tastes entirely of the flavour – the rum is still very much there. Big treacly notes of Jamaican rum and you also get some of the lighter sweet notes from the 3 stars white.  The nose is quite fiery and does indicate this is perhaps more of a mixer.

    It actually sips a lot better than the nose suggests.  It’s slightly bitter this way especially on the finish.  A cube of ice tempers the youth of the rum and makes it a pretty nice dessert style drink.  Like the nose you still get a lot of nice rich treacly rum alongside the pineapple flavour.  It’s a lot less sweeter than the nose suggests as well – less sweet than some regular Plantation rums as well!

    As a mixer is perhaps where Stiggins’ Fancy is probably how most people will use Stiggins’ (It was premiered at Tales of the Cocktail after all).  I mixed this with the usual cola and whilst it was okay I didn’t really feel the need for a Pineapple-y flavoured Rum and Cola.  It wasn’t bad but the two really didn’t work that well together.

    Where I initially found joy with the Stiggins’ is with a splash of Lemonade and an ice cube.  It’s dangerously drinkable – a very nice authentic Pineapple flavour with a very nice hearty hit of rum. The lemonade carries it very nicely.

    However, I was urged to try a Daiquiri and the result (please note the picture is courtesy of Steve James at Rum Diaries Blog) mine didn’t look quite so good.Plantation Stiggins Daiquiri rum review by the fat rum pirate

    The recipe I used is as follows:

    50ml Plantation Pineapple, 20ml fresh lime juice, 15ml simple syrup (1 to 1 water to sugar), shake and strain over fresh ice in a rocks glass.

    Easy peasy even a fool like me managed it and very tasty it was too.

    Plantation will be getting more stock of this available in the UK in August so if you haven’t tried this already I would urge you to try and pick up a bottle.  Obviously this is dependent on you liking Pineapple (and rum) if you do like Pineapple and rum then you should find this very tasty.

    For once the hype is fully justified – this is a flavoured rum which encompasses both the flavours of the Pineapples and the rum base.  The rum base a mix of the 3 stars and the “new” Original Dark works very well giving a nice satisfying rummy hit and at 40% you won’t find many “flavoured” spirits hitting this ABV.

    A real winner from Plantation and definitely one which deserves all the fuss.  The score may change in time the simple answer to not scoring this higher is that I haven’t tried enough rums like this so I don’t want to overscore.  Its very good stuff though! No doubt.

    4 stars

     

     

     

     

     

  • Lord Nelson’s Spiced Rum Liqueur

    Lord Nelson's Spiced Rum Liqueur review by the fat rum pirateLord Nelson’s Spiced Rum Liqueur represents the first liqueur which I have reviewed on the site.  Well the first drink which is actually labelled as a liqueur anyway…….

    Produced as a Naval Tribute to Lord Nelson (myth states that his body was preserved in rum for his final journey home) this is another product from the Hebridean Liqueur Company for me to review.

    Despite not featuring any rum liqueurs to date I have reviewed a Hebridean Liqueur product before.  Confused?  Don’t be I shall of course explain.

    The Hebridean Liqueur Company have produced another tribute with a naval theme.  Back in 2011 they set about finding a rum to celebrate (and I find this slightly odd for a Scottish based company) the Queens Golden Jubilee.  The result was The Anicent Mariner 16 Year Old Caroni rum, which as plenty is still readily available slipped under the radar (they initially did not label it as Caroni rum and have only recently added a sticker to indicate this).  I reviewed it here.

    Unsurprisingly to anyone who has tried Caroni rums, this Spiced Liqueur does not have Caroni rum as its base.  Instead it has a blend of Demerara rums.  Caramel and spices are added.

    It is available in 5cl and 50cl bottles.  Both bottles are tall with a long neck and square body.  As you can see Nelson adorns the front of the bottle.  The 50cl bottles come with a box with the same presentation of the bottle.  The liqueur is aimed squarely at the birthday and Christmas market.  The liqueur comes in at a very respectable 20% ABV and a bottle will set you back around £25.  It is frequently reduced on Amazon and bulk purchases can reduce the price should you get addicted to this!

    I often associate liqueurs with people who don’t really drink and the elderly.  However, I will be honest this has interested me for some time now.

    I’m quite surprised by the liqueur in the glass as it is nowhere as viscous as I was expecting.  In fact it just looks like regular rum a nice golden brown.

    The nose is as expected very sweet rich caramel, toffee and wafts of that distinctive El Dorado type Demerara rum.  It has hints of cloves and some nice spiced notes such as cardamom.

    LORDNELSONTasting the Lord Nelson’s reveals it as a very sweet (one glass only kind of drink) almost cloying drink.  Very much an after dinner digestif or nightcap.  Despite the overwhelming sweetness you still get plenty of nice spiced notes which add complexity to the drink – clove, a little spice a Cinnamon like note.  There is very slight heat to this drink and due to the caramel and added sugar it is silky smooth.

    It is too sweet for my tastes – I would have preferred less sugar and more of the complex spiced notes – ginger, cardamom a bit of clove are all there but struggle to overcome the sugar rush which overwhelms this drink.

    I haven’t tried a lot of liqueurs especially rum liqueurs but whilst this goes does pleasantly enough I doubt I would ever seek out a full size bottle of this.  I’ll give it a very preliminary score based on my lack of experience in this department but don’t be surprised if this score changes.

    I’ve reviewed it based on it being a Rum Liqueur with no prejudices or pretences in it being anything else.  I suspect it is slightly better than average but I can’t help feeling that with less sickly sugariness it could have been better.

    2.5 stars

  • Rhum Neisson Extra Vieux

    Neisson Extra Vieux Rum Review by the Fat Rum PirateRhum Neisson are a producer of Rhum Agricole from Martinique.  The Extra Vieux is one of Neisson’s aged products.  The company also produces a number of white rhums.

    Rhum many rum producers they actually grow their own sugar cane on site. This is fairly common amongst Agricole producers due to the production methods required.

    On the Neisson website they have a video which takes you right through the Rhum making process.  Right from cutting of the Cane through to the bottling.

    Neisson rhum is part of the AOC system.  Which is as follows

    Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée (AOC).  The French equivalent to EU’s Protected Designation of Origin (PDO).

    Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) is one of the geographical indications defined in European Union law to protect the names of regional foods. The law ensures that only products genuinely originating in that region are allowed in commerce as such. The purpose of the law is to protect the reputation of the regional foods and eliminate the unfair competition and misleading of consumers by non-genuine products, which may be of inferior quality or of different flavour.

    Neisson’s VO (or XO) rhum is bottled at 45% ABV.  It is aged for 12-24 months initially in new French oak casks.  It is then moved into used Bourbon barrels for maturation between 6 to 8 years.  Neisson isn’t all that readily available in the UK and a bottle of this rhum will set you back around £60 for a 70cl bottle.

    In the glass the rhum is a nice amber colour.  The nose is quite light and nowhere near as grassy or vegetal as I have experienced in the past.  The nose is quite fruity and pretty sweet.  It’s not a big or an intense nose its quite gentle.  It has an almost Bourbon like note to it in that it is slightly sweet/sour.  It’s perhaps reminiscent a little of Barbancourt 5 star.Neisson Extra Vieux Rum Review by the Fat Rum Pirate

    In the mouth the rhum is unmistakably a cane juice rhum but like Barbancourt it has a smoothness which is reminiscent of Cognac.

    It is sweet and warming and has a brown sugar like sweetness to it.  The sweet notes are also quite grape/wine like.  There is a really nice oaked feel to this rhum.  It is beautifully balanced along with the sweetness.  The only bad point to make is that the taste of this rhum is quite short.  You get a nice burst of sweet flavour along with the nice Bourbon oak notes.  However, they quickly fade.  The finish despite being initially more robust and spicy than I expected, doesn’t last too long.  The finish is where you will notice the more familiar grassy/vegetal agricole notes.

    Which I think are re-assuring – you’ve bought an Agricole rhum so I suppose you have a right to expect some of the “cane juice” to be evident in the mix.

    It is easy to be put off Agricole Rhum.  Like most things, say beer for example it can take a while for your palate to adjust to it and appreciate it.  It is also worth noting that a well aged Agricole is very different to the younger white Agricoles which are so popular for mixing in Ti Punch etc.

    This Neisson offers a much more refined and more complex experience.  If you are only really familiar with molasses based rums then this may still seem a little odd but it is worth persisting with.  There is a definite progression between this and some of the other younger Agricole rhums I have tried in the past.

  • Diplomatico Ambassador

    Diplomatico Ambassador rum review by the fat rum pirateDiplomatico Ambassador was launched in London, England in 2011.  It is currently the most expensive of the various rums available under the Diplomatico brand.

    Diplomatico Reserva Exclusiva is regularly cited as being one of the best rums in the world.  In all fairness it isn’t really but what it does offer is a soft, easy and very sugary entry into “sipping rums”. Having said that many will stay loyal to rums such as Diplomatico.

    Which as it happens is not a bad thing for reviewers like me.  As one of my rum comrades very kindly secured me a sample of this (and a few more of his pricier rums), as he is fond of the sweeter end of the spectrum.

    At just under £200 for a 70cl bottle/decanter it was unlikely I was ever going to buy a bottle.  It seems the presentation has changed slightly since 2011.  From what I gather the picture at the top of this review shows the most recent presentation.  Needless to say at £200 you get quite a lot of presentation for your money – expensive thick glass bottle, huge stopper, wooden lined box and some hand engraving.  It all looks very impressive. But you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover.

    The actual rum comes in at a very respectable 47% ABV.  It is a blend of Copper Pot distilled rums which are then casked in American White Oak (Bourbon) casks for 12 years before being treated to another 2 years in PX Sherry Casks.  Age wise this isn’t much of a step up from the £40 Reserva Exclusiva (12 year old).

    It has been stated that this rum has no sweeteners, caramel or other addtives by the marketing people at Diplomatico.  I think myself and Johnny Drejer would beg to differ. (Check my Hydrometer Test page for a reading)

    In the glass the Ambassador presents itself as dark reddish brown.  It shimmers in the light and is very vibrant.Diplomatico Ambassador Rum Review by the fat rum pirate  Moving onto the nose it is as I was expecting.  Very rich, reminiscent in some ways of Ron Zacapa, rather then DRE.  It has that same sugary syrup note with a hint of something vegetal beneath it.  It is very rich and the Sherry finish is very evident.

    A hint of aniseed and licorice.  There is little by way of aged oak notes or any real rum like character.  There is no trace of any alcohol on the nose – something which -when you consider this is 47% ABV is frankly a little ridiculous.

    It’s clear producers are creating rums which are seen by many to be “rich and smooth” and we know how that is being achieved, despite claims to the contrary.

    From nosing this rum I can understand the appeal of drinks such as these – it does smell very nice.  Just not really very much like rum!  Anyway, lets not labour the point and move onto the tasting.  In fairness the Ambassador is not quite as sweet on the nose as I was expecting.  It’s not as sweet as DRE.

    The tasting notes I’ll use still describe a pretty sweet rum – wine soaked raisins, even chocolate covered raisins, brown sugar, some slightly sharp red wine notes, a little bit of orange peel.

    There is a little tiny hint of spice and warmth in the finish – maybe a little allspice and Cinnamon.  The finish is long though in reality your mouth is covered with this rum rather then the flavours remaining the rum does! Sticking to your mouth.

    DIPLOAMBYou don’t feel like you are drinking something which is almost 50% ABV.  In many ways I don’t really feel I’m drinking rum.  Which is where the Ambassador really runs into trouble with me.  It’s too much like liqueur – a nice warming after dinner treat but NOT rum.

    It’s easy to consider a rum like this to be rich and complex.  It does have a few tricks up its sleeve and it does have more than one note.  For me the notes it does have all add up to sweetness and there really isn’t enough oak and evidence of good ageing and barrel management.  It’s another rum I would love to try without the additives.  I suspect it would be extremely poor.

    This is a very smooth and enjoyable drink.  However, at £200 you could have yourself some cask strength Velier Demerara or any number of other rums.  I’d be just as happy drinking DRE as I would this.

    You could buy just about the entire Foursquare range for the price of this and that is proper rum. This is just an overpriced imposter.

    2.5 stars

     

  • Compagnie des Indes Jamaica New Yarmouth 12 Year Old (Danish Bottling)

    Compagnie des Indes New Yarmouth Denmark Rum Review by the fat rum pirateCompagnie des Indes (East India Company) Jamaica New Yarmouth 12 Year old rum. Compagnie des Indes are an independent bottler from France.

    So far they have not achieved fame for any particular bottling or style, the way the likes of Velier, Rum Nation and Bristol Classic have. Though they have established a reputation for bottling an eclectic series of single casks and their own signature blends.

    This Jamaica New Yarmouth is a different cask and bottling to the one I tried recently at the London Rumfest. This effort has been bottled exclusively for the Danish market. Compagnie des Indes have made a few Cask Strength expressions available only in Denmark.

    The New Yarmouth distillery came as a surprise to me as I had previously not heard of it. New Yarmouth is a part of the Appleton Estate. It is based in Clarendon Parish and produces the white unaged rum in Wray and Nephew Overproof. Operating both pot and column stills. It is not a small distillery, its just a bit like Hampden in that its rums appear more in blends and “branded” rums rather than their own line up of New Yarmouth rums.

    Jamaica New Yarmouth comes in your standard stubby Compagnie des Indes bottled. It is noted that this rum was distilled in 2005 and bottled in 2017. Noted as being 12 Years old. It is a single cask (so it is different to the standard 55% offering) the cask is noted as JNYD9 it is bottled at a very hefty 65.2% ABV. In Denmark it would set you back around 900-1000 Kroner or which Google tells me is around £107-120. As far as I am aware, this is a 100% Pot Still rum.New Yarmouth Sugar Estate

    Poured in the glass the rum is very light in colour -white wine to straw coloured. It clearly has not been coloured with caramel. Or if it has it hasn’t worked!

    The nose as one might expect of a 65.2% rum is enormous. It is high ester Pot Still Jamaican funk. When poured it absolutely reeks! You can smell it in the house next door! I’d imagine even after only a small sample of this you’ll smell like a brewery for the rest of the day!

    It is sweet like a Long Pond. Huge fruity notes of banana, coconut,  strawberries, apples and blackcurrants. It has those big varnish like notes but there is not as much burn as I was expecting. The age in the cask has certainly tamed it a little. It’s a huge nose but there is also a nice balance to it. There is a little spicy oak there and some calming vanilla. Touch of menthol – its very fresh and vibrant.

    Sipped it is jam packed with flavour. Everything on the nose transfers into the mouth. Even tiny sips of this are incredible. It is initially sweet with a lot of banana and funky sweet alcohol driven notes. The mid palate introduces a nice amount of oak and some spiciness from the cask. It is one of the most intense rums I have ever tasted.

    Even at full strength and taking into account the amount of flavour in the distillate it stills keeps itself in order. Once you get used to it its very easy to sip even at the full ABV. Each sip adds something else – mint, coconut, raisins, a touch of nail polish which gives these rums such a fresh taste.

    The more I delve into Jamaican rum the more I am taken by the Pot Still rums that come out of Hampden, Long Pond and now New Yarmouth. All are similar. I would have thought that this was from Long Pond but I have tried Hampden rums where I have thought the same. I do not think the differences in the rums from these distilleries are as big aCompagnie des Indes 12 years Jamica New Yarmouth 62,2s say Worthy Park. Worthy Park is a very modern operation and they produce a Jamaican rum which is quite a bit different to the rest, with no drop in quality it must be said.

    This rum caused quite a fuss at London Rumfest. I immediately pointed out to anyone listening to try it. Florent Beuchet who runs Compagnie des Indes gave a very telling smile when I commented no how good it was.

    Spending time with this rum at home I find this cask no less impressive than the one I had at London. This is rum for the more serious enthusiast. It’s not for everyone, miles away from Appleton 21 or Joy. Hugely funky, medicinal yet fresh and fruity. I really hope Florent has a lot more casks of this rum as it could becomes CDI’s signature…….

    Stunning.