Thursday, November 12, 2020

Rum diary

Oh dear, it's been a long time since my previous entry. Hope everyone is doing ok. It's been an unsettling time at AduV Towers. 

I had formulated careful plans for my lovely American fiancee to visit me in the UK this week which wouldn't have been easy, with the complicated and inhumane quarantine rules, but I'd found a way of doing it which I considered reasonable and legitimate. Then the second lockdown was announced in the most incompetent way imaginable and all my careful plans had to be cancelled. I'm now hoping she can come over in December but the way this government behaves makes it very difficult to predict what might happen. At least there are now vaccines on the horizon and the prospect of a return to some kind of normality next year. 

In the first lockdown, instead of learning how to bake sourdough bread and/or reading War and Peace, I taught myself how to play poker. I've wanted to learn this for a long time and consider it a useful addition to my skill set. In the second lockdown, some more adult education: I'm learning about rum. 

I'd been feeling irritated for a while that decent bourbon in the UK is so expensive. My house bourbon was alternating between Bulleit and Eagle Rare depending on which one was on special offer, and I enjoy them both, but then I went and spoiled myself with things like Koval and the Big B and it's hard to go back. 


I was reminded of rum by this wine label which G gave me a long time ago and it brought to mind the question why did I not have something suitable for it to be decorating? Clearly this sad state of affairs needed to be rectified immediately. G told me that he'd recently had some BBR Jamaican 14 year old rum and had been impressed. Apparently BBR had (maybe still have? not sure) some guy who went round the distilleries and picked the good stuff. Admittedly I haven't explored the world of the major rum producers (yet...) but I get the impression that the BBR bottlings are quite a steal. 

I whizzed onto the Whisky Exchange website as I needed to buy some Stoli Vanil for a certain beloved person who at the time I thought would be visiting me soon. I know everyone thinks it's hilarious that I'm about to get married to a woman whose drink of choice is vanilla vodka and Diet Coke but I only see positives in this! She does also drink margaritas, mojitos and Amaretto and ginger beer, so we'll establish a comprehensive cocktail cabinet when I move over there.

It turned out that if I bought the Nicaraguan 13 year old, as opposed to the Jamaican 14 year old, for a whole extra pound more, I would meet the much sought after threshold of free delivery. Incidentally, the offerings on BBR's own site and those at the Whisky Exchange overlap but have some differences. 


The Nicaraguan 13 year old costs £76.95 and I consider it well worth it. Caramel and toffee on the nose, creamy with a very spicy, hot finish - hot in the culinary sense. Ginger. A hint of dried tropical fruit. I wonder if I might think it was a bourbon if I didn't know it was a rum, and so we're back to G's theory that certain spirits trend towards the same flavour profiles after a period of time. This is especially delicious with some Lindt Excellence of the dark sea salt variety. 

Having whetted my appetite, I subsequently indulged in further items from the range. 


Barbados 13 year old. £86.95 from the Whisky Exchange (as opposed to £95 from BBR). A little more restrained on the nose, perhaps even floral. Definitely drier on the palate, more subtle. Complex and sophisticated. Again, creamy flavours and glace cherry. Harmonious. From Foursquare, which a little bird tells me is a rather good distillery. Not sure its worth £19 more than the Nicaraguan though, to be honest. 


Guyana 14 year old - £90 from BBR. According to their website this is from 2003 so is now actually 17 years old. Interesting to see how pale it is compared to the others. My initial reaction was that it wasn't my cup of tea at all - I found it offputtingly medicinal on the nose. Second time around, I worked out that it's more like a Scotch, and if I approach it that way I can appreciate it more. It has a certain iodiny, herbaceous quality which leads me to suspect that G may like it more than me. On revisiting the BBR website I see that it has received one 2 star review, so clearly I'm not the only one, and it could explain why they still have it. But if you like Highland Scotch, it might be worth a look. 

These rums all come in at 46% but they're a little pricey to be everyday drinkers, so I investigated further and discovered that BBR also do a more basic range. I acquired a bottle of the Nicaraguan from that range at a mere £30. It was perfectly acceptable but frankly not very interesting. I think it would be fine in cocktails, but it wasn't really a "sipping rum".

The Whisky Exchange then tempted me with something called Black Tot at £35 on special offer, generally around the £40 mark elsewhere. Again, it's 46% and I'm getting all the flavours I enjoy - molasses, toasted pineapple, ginger... it's very fruity and aromatic and unmistakably a rum. Compared to the others, it's perhaps a little obvious, but hey it's half the price. It packs a punch, it's enjoyable and doesn't break the bank. I've stocked up!