Sunday, July 31, 2016
No Black Tot Day in My Navy
Today is officially "Black Tot Day", but not in Bahama Bob's Navy. The vessels of Bahama Bob's Navy are celebrating the arrival of Pusser's Gunpowder Proof Rum to Florida today. Morning Grog on Sanity Too to start the day, followed by this evening's the introduction party starting at 7 pm at the Rum Barrel on Front Street in Key West. Today all the sailors in my Navy are drinking Pusser's Gunpowder Proof Rum in the true style of the British Sailors.
The unique component of Pusser's Gunpowder Proof is rum distilled from vintage wooden pot stills, a process that provides a depth of flavor far beyond that of mass-produced rums distilled from “modern” semi-automatic metal column stills. The two existing wooden pot stills, first put in use in the early 1700s and located in Guyana’s Demerara River Valley, impregnate the rum with esters (naturally occurring organic flavoring compounds) far beyond those of any other rum. What results is a truly unique, award winning taste.
The name “Pusser’s” is nothing more than a corruption of the word “Purser,” the Royal Navy ship’s supply officer who retained the stocks of rum. Before hydrometers, the ship’s Purser would test rum strength by mixing a few grains of gunpowder with rum to see if it would ignite under the heat of a magnifying glass. If it did that was 'proof' the rum was “at strength,” if it was not, the Purser was threatened with bodily harm for “watering down” the rum.
Join us tonight at the Rum Barrel for an evening of great rum tasting a chance to try some unique Pusser's Gunpowder Proof cocktails and some fun giveaways. The party starts at 7 pm upstairs on the Quarterdeck of the Rum Barrel. Admission is FREE.
Saturday, July 30, 2016
"Mr. Boston Official Bartender's Guide" is Online
Great News, The original Mr. Boston Official Bartender's Guide is back. It is on line and it is very well done. I have always thought that the Mr. Boston Guide was the best one around, and had the most accurate recipes, especially when it comes to the classics.
Mr. Boston used to be the barkeep's best
friend. The unmistakable, narrow, cherry-red books were once found behind every
bar. The first edition of "Mr. Boston Official Bartender's Guide" was
published in 1935, just as America was again able to properly quench its thirst
after Prohibition. More than 65 editions would be published.
Around the time that American bartenders
became "mixologists" and cocktails got complicated, Mr. Boston fell
from favor. A few years back, the New
Orleans-based Sazerac Co. bought Mr. Boston, which also sells a line of
cordials and spirits. Thursday July 21
Sazerac relaunched the Mr. Boston guide as a free, web-only tool. Sazerac plans to make Mr. Boston bigger than
ever. The website: www.mrbostondrinks.com offers more than 10,000 cocktail recipes from the
post-Prohibition era.
It took the Sazerac Co. five years to get
out of the Mr. Boston publishing contract.
While they waited, they found
copies of all but 17 editions of the Mr. Boston guide and entered the 10,539
cocktail recipes into a database. "We've
been restoring it like you would a Van Gogh," said Mark Brown, president
and CEO of Sazerac. Now, you can search
every one of those recipes at mrbostondrinks.com. When there is more than one
recipe, the site lets you see each version to learn how the cocktail changed
over time.
Recipes can be searched by name or main
ingredient. A "discovery" page lets you browse by style, era,
occasion, city of origin and even color. Create an account, and you can review
the recipes and build a personal collection of your favorites. The site also has a guide to techniques and
glassware, a glossary of ingredients and historical information.
The Mr. Boston guide is a record of how
America drank for 80 years. And the Sazerac company plans to keep the guide
alive for at least another 80 years. Although
they likely won't print another guide, Sazerac has big plans for Mr. Boston.
First, they want to find the remaining 17 editions and enter those recipes.
They will create videos demonstrating cocktails and techniques. They plan to
commission articles on cocktails. And users will be able to add new drinks,
which will be considered for inclusion in the guide.
If you have a question, almost any question about mixology or bartending in general, this is the site you need to visit.
Friday, July 29, 2016
Grog: The World's Original Cocktail
Back in the late 1600's and the early 1700's rum was known as "Kill Devil", mostly because of the firey burn it had. In fact it was just plain rough. In the early days of rum rationed out to the sailors of the British Admiralty it wasn't much better. Most of the rum was more truly a distillate rather than a rum. It was unaged and most of it was more like moonshine in its strength.
Admiral Edward Vernon was credited for Grog being the mandatory drink of the British Navy in 1740 when Vernon was issued the infamous "Captain's Order Number 349. This stated that all rum should be mixed with water, a dash of brown sugar,and lime to make it more palatable. The sailors christened the weakened beverage after the admiral, from the grogram cloth cloak that he wore.
Grog has gone through a lot of modification over the nearly 300 years that it has been around, but the original recipe with just a cinnamon stick dropped in as a garnish and adding a dash of spice to the mix.
Gunpowder Proof Rum Grog
Pour all ingredients into a shaker with ice and shake until chilled and strain into a tumble filled with fresh ice. Drop in a cinnamon stick to garnish and enhance the flavor.
Admiral Edward Vernon was credited for Grog being the mandatory drink of the British Navy in 1740 when Vernon was issued the infamous "Captain's Order Number 349. This stated that all rum should be mixed with water, a dash of brown sugar,and lime to make it more palatable. The sailors christened the weakened beverage after the admiral, from the grogram cloth cloak that he wore.
Grog has gone through a lot of modification over the nearly 300 years that it has been around, but the original recipe with just a cinnamon stick dropped in as a garnish and adding a dash of spice to the mix.
Gunpowder Proof Rum Grog
- 2 oz. Pusser's Gunpowder Proof Rum
- 4 oz. Water
- 1/2 oz. Brown Sugar Simple Syrup
- Juice of 1/2 Lime
Pour all ingredients into a shaker with ice and shake until chilled and strain into a tumble filled with fresh ice. Drop in a cinnamon stick to garnish and enhance the flavor.
Bahama Bob’s Grog Syrup
- 4 cups Dark Brown Cane Sugar
- 4 Cups Water
- 1/8 Cup Ground Cinnamon
- Juice of ½ Lemon
Place all ingredients
into a sauce pan and slowly bring to a boil.
Reduce heat to a slow boil for 5 minutes. Put into squeeze bottles and
chill for a couple of hours before using.
Lasts about 2 weeks in the refrigerator.
Thursday, July 28, 2016
How Did the Rum War Over Havana Club Begin?
Havana Club is an iconic brand that as we
approach normalization of relations with Cuba has become a valuable property
that was thought to be worth nothing in 1973 here in the United States when the
trademark was about to expire. The story
of the rum war between Bacardi and Pernod Ricard is loaded with a history of
bad decisions and revenge.
The Arechabalas introduced Havana Club
with Americans in mind in 1934. The name
of the Cuban capital was spelled in English, rather than the Spanish
"Habana." Soon Havana Club was served in places such as
the Stork Club, a high-society night spot in Manhattan. The Arechabalas, according to Gjelten, sympathized with
dictator Fulgencio Batista, whom Fidel Castro overthrew. Soldiers showed up at the Havana Club office
on New Year's Day 1960. The late Ramón
Arechabala was a sales manager, while one of the top executives, his uncle José
María Arechabala, or "Pepe," was in Spain. "From now on, I am Pepe, and you people
will do as I say," declared a military commander, as Ramón Arechabala
recalled in court testimony in 1999.
"I say, 'Okay, no problem, whatever
you say,' " he testified, "because he was armed with a machine
gun." Ramón Arechabala, went on to sell cars in Miami. In 1973, he realized that the Havana Club
trademark was due for renewal. He asked
his uncle whether they should file the paperwork. His uncle said no. The family did not have
enough money to produce rum in the U.S. and mistakenly believed they couldn't
renew the trademark without making rum.
"He told me we could not do anything right now with it, because,
'Let's wait because we might be going back to Cuba any moment,' "
Arechabala testified.
In 1976, a state-owned Cuban enterprise
secured the American trademark for Havana Club. It was a cunning yet hopeful investment in
the day when Cuban rum might once again be poured on the other side of the
Florida Straits.
The
rum war was declared nearly 20 years later, when two things happened. In 1993, news broke that Pernod Ricard had
struck a deal to become equal partners in Havana Club. In 1994, Bacardi filed its own application
for the U.S. trademark for Havana Club. Bacardi paid the Arechabala family $1.25
million for any rights to Havana Club that the family still possessed, plus a
fraction of any sales of Havana Club. Ever
since, Bacardi and Pernod Ricard have battled on legal, regulatory, political
and commercial fronts.
This seems
like a battle that will never be settled, it looked like it was settled back in
the early 2000’s when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Bacardi, but with the
easing of relations with Cuba it has reared its ugly head again.
Read the entire story at https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/havana-club-v-havana-club-inside-the-rum-war-between-bacardi-and-cuba/2016/07/22/57c32a06-2cb4-11e6-9b37-42985f6a265c_story.html
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Black Tot Day, Sunday July 31, 2016, the 46th Anniversary of Rum Being Removed from British Navy Ships
For over three centuries, until 1970, all Royal Navy vessels would ring out their ship's bells just before noon every day. The famous call, 'Up Spirits' would go out, calling sailors to report to deck and receive their daily 70ml ‘tot’, or shot, of rum.
Sunday marks the 46th anniversary of Black Tot Day, and here in Key West we are celebrating this day by introducing the newest Pusser's Rum, Gunpowder Proof at the Rum Barrel. We are having a free event at 7pm Sunday evening to introduce this award winning new expression from Pusser's Rum. This is British Navy Rum presented at the original admiralty strength of 54.7% ABV.
The original ration was beer, but when it
was not available, or as often happened it would often spoil easily, it could
be substituted by a pint of wine or half a pint of spirits depending on what
was locally available. In later years,
the political influence of the West Indian planters led to rum being given the
preference over other spirits.
The half pint of spirits was originally
issued neat; it is said that sailors would "prove" its strength by
checking that gunpowder doused with rum would still burn, verifying that rum
was at least 54.7% ABV, thus the term “Proof” came about.
The practice of compulsorily diluting rum
in the proportion of half a pint of rum to one quart of water was first
introduced in the 1740’s by Admiral Edward
Vernon, known as Old Grog, because of his habitual grogram cloak. The
ration was also split into two servings, one between 10 am and noon and the
other between 4 and 6 pm. In 1756 Navy
regulations required adding small quantities of lemon or lime juice to the
ration, to prevent scurvy. The rum itself was often
procured from distillers in Jamaica, Trinidad
and Tobago and the British Virgin Islands. Rations were cut in half in 1823
and again in half, to the traditional amount, in 1850. The last rum ration was on 31 July 1970 and became known as Black Tot Day as sailors were unhappy about the loss of the rum ration. There were reports that the day involved sailors throwing tots into the sea and the staging of a mock funeral in a training camp.
This is the perfect day to introduce this wonderful new expression to Florida. Come join in the celebration at the Rum Barrel on Front Street, here in Key West. We start at 7 pm, join us to taste this expression and try new special cocktails made from Pusser's Gunpowder Proof Rum. The party celebrates the newest Navy Rum on the day that the rum was removed from the British Navy Warships.
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Quitting Smoking and Reduced Alcohol Consumption
Quitting smoking and you will likely as
not lower your alcohol consumption. This
is the observations of James Brown of University College London. “Adults who
attempted to quit smoking in the past week consumed less alcohol than those who
weren’t trying to give up cigarettes. And now, according to Medical News
Today government
warnings are now suggesting that those looking to stop smoking should lower
their alcohol intake or just abstain from it completely. It had previously been accepted that those
looking to quit smoking would up their alcohol intake as a way of coping for
the lack of nicotine.”
This is an interesting conclusion that I truly understand. From personal experience years ago, when I
quit smoking there were two places that I avoided for quite some time. First of all was the bars, smoking goes right
along with having cocktails and conversation, especially when there are a lot
of people smoking. Second was the
coffee shop for the same reason. I did
find, however that after about a year, I could start going to the bars again
and not have a terrible urge to smoke.
I think that
what they found is a short term effect rather than something that carries on
for the long term. I think that it
depends on the individual and their will power around other smokers. Jamie Brown and colleagues found that adults who have
attempted to quit smoking in the
past week consume less alcohol than smokers who have not tried to quit. While smoking remains the leading cause of
preventable death in the United States, with around 40 million American adults are currently
smoking cigarettes, 70 percent of smokers say they want to quit the habit. In order help with the quitting process,
health officials recommend reducing alcohol intake or abstaining from it
altogether.
I know for me I did not go to a bar for at
least a month after I decided to quit smoking, but as the desire for nicotine diminished,
I could comfortably go to bars again without craving a cigarette. I feel that they have arrived at a very
valid conclusion, but I feel that this is just a temporary thing that will,
after a period of time, will be reversed.
Monday, July 25, 2016
Shirley Temples Are Destroying America’s Youth
Shirley Temple |
"Shirley Temple".
The Shirley
Temple is the most enduring non-alcoholic drink that ever had the temerity to mimic
the sophistication of an actual cocktail.
Watching kids order and sip Shirley Temples at a restaurant is "adorable". "I have several objections to the drink,
but none are about kids pretending to be adults", playing adult is how they
learn. It’s what they’re being served,
and therefore what they’re learning, that’s wholly objectionable.
Shirley Temple "Mocktail" |
The recipe for the Shirley Temple varies
slightly depending on where it’s served. But generally it’s a concoction of
ginger ale (or sometimes 7Up) mixed with a little grenadine and served in a
highball glass. The essential coup
de grace? A cherry the color of a shiny new fire engine. That’s what made
it sophisticated for kids. What is a
Shirley Temple? It is sweet mixed with sweet, garnished with a crimson dollop
of sweet. It’s an underground bunker of a drink, able to withstand direct
assault.
"I’m not the only one who objects to the
Shirley Temple", Shirley Temple never really liked it either. “It is a saccharine sweet, icky
drink?” she replied to an NPR interviewer who asked her about the drink in
1986. “All over the world, I have been served my
namesake, because, people think it’s funny. I hate them.” When asked why?,
she replied, “Too sweet!”.
Read More at http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/07/20/the-shirley-temple-s-effect-on-four-generations-of-cocktail-drinkers.html
I really have to agree with Wayne that it is a really bad drink, but for slightly different reasons. One of the most important things that young children need to learn when they are out in public is how to behave and good manners. The last thing that needs to be done if you are truly trying to enjoy going out with your children is a "ton of sugar". Children are hyper enough, they don't need a stimulus that make them more hyper when you are trying to teach them to be quiet and act appropriately. There are many other possibilities that are not laded with sugar.
Sunday, July 24, 2016
It's Been Too Long, Need to go Back to Abaco
It is hard to beat the crystal clear waters and the powdery white sand of the Bahamas, and especially Great Guana Key. The combination of the rocks, surf, and the sea oats make it such a beautiful view from the dunes that lie just off of the beach. So many great memories of these cays that surround the "Crystal Sea".
Saturday, July 23, 2016
How Much Can You Drink to be less Calories than a Cheeseburger?
The basic 1/4 pound cheeseburger has 545 calories. That is 260 1/4 lb patty, 120 bun, 60 American cheese slice, 15 ketchup and 90 Mayo. This is a basic cheeseburger, not a double or one with god knows what dripping off of it. The average recommended intake for men is 2500 calories and women 2000 calories, this is an average of all the weight and activity levels. 500 calories of liquor or cheeseburger boils down to 20% of a mans daily allowance of calories and 25% for women.
It is actually simple, take a simple Rum and Coke, you get 100 calories from the rum and 90 for the cola, that is 190 calories, and on average most people will drink three of them at a sitting, that is 570 Calories or more than a cheeseburger. If you start adding heavily sugared mixers like creme of coconut etc, then you can get single drinks like a Pina Colada, that will have more than 400 calories each.
"A recent survey commissioned by Truly Spiked & Sparkling and conducted online by Harris Poll showed that a stunning 47% of drinkers in the United States believe that there aren’t enough low-calorie drinks options out there on the market, with 45% believing that following a fitness regime makes it more difficult to be social when events revolve around food and drink."
On the other hand a rum or any other basic spirit on the rocks or with a diet soda, is only 100 calories, about the same as a light beer. You will be pretty drunk is you have five of those in one sitting, but it is less than a cheeseburger. Check out the chart and see what you are taking in when you are out grilling and eating burgers and drinking your favorite beverage how many calories your are taking in. Usually about the equivalent of about 2 to 3 hours of running to burn them off.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3700150/How-fattening-favorite-drink-55-calories-780-use-chart-tipple-choice-ranks.html#ixzz4F3uVTWVM
It is actually simple, take a simple Rum and Coke, you get 100 calories from the rum and 90 for the cola, that is 190 calories, and on average most people will drink three of them at a sitting, that is 570 Calories or more than a cheeseburger. If you start adding heavily sugared mixers like creme of coconut etc, then you can get single drinks like a Pina Colada, that will have more than 400 calories each.
"A recent survey commissioned by Truly Spiked & Sparkling and conducted online by Harris Poll showed that a stunning 47% of drinkers in the United States believe that there aren’t enough low-calorie drinks options out there on the market, with 45% believing that following a fitness regime makes it more difficult to be social when events revolve around food and drink."
On the other hand a rum or any other basic spirit on the rocks or with a diet soda, is only 100 calories, about the same as a light beer. You will be pretty drunk is you have five of those in one sitting, but it is less than a cheeseburger. Check out the chart and see what you are taking in when you are out grilling and eating burgers and drinking your favorite beverage how many calories your are taking in. Usually about the equivalent of about 2 to 3 hours of running to burn them off.
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Friday, July 22, 2016
Couples That Drink Together Stay Together
This is an interesting study. My wife and I have been together for almost 42 years, we share many of the same interests and enjoy a lot of things together. Our drinking habits are very much the same, most of the time if either of us are drinking we are drinking together. I feel like this is a very good thing for us, both from a social stand point, but on so many other levels. Many couples fight over financial things, and if one drinks and the other doesn't, this can lead to a serious financial rift, especially if money is tight. I feel like this is a very valid study and a good read.
The
study, conducted by the University of Michigan, found that married couples aged
over 50 with the same drinking habits as their partner – whether they partake,
or abstain – tended to be more happier than those whose drinking habits were
misaligned. The amount that people
drank was less important than whether both partners had the same habit of
drinking or not drinking, the study found.
Women in particular became increasingly dissatisfied over time when only
they, and not their partner, drank. “Concordant
drinking couples reported decreased negative marital quality over time, and
these links were significantly greater among wives”. “Wives who reported drinking alcohol
reported decreased negative marital quality over time when husbands also
reported drinking and increased negative marital quality over time when
husbands reported not drinking.”
“The present findings stress the importance
of considering the drinking status rather than the amount of alcohol consumed
of both members of the couple when attempting to understand drinking and
marital quality among older couples”, researchers concluded. “These findings
are particularly salient given the increased drinking among baby boomers and
the importance of marital quality for health among older couples.”
Read More at https://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2016/07/couples-that-drink-together-stay-together/Thursday, July 21, 2016
W.C. Fields the Entertainer and the Drunk
There seems to be quit the direct connection between creativity and drinking. So many famous
creative people have been associated with drinking. Ernest Hemingway is as well known for his
ability to sip his daiquiri's at the El Floridita as he is for his writing. Like so many other celebrities,
W.C. Fields brought drinking out of the closet of the Prohibition Era and on to the screen as comedy. "It was a woman that drove me to drink and I never got a chance to thank her", has always been one
of my favorites. One of his first major movies on the subject of drink came out in 1933, just prior to
the end of Prohibition. It was called International House, where Fields played professor Henry R.
Quail, a professor that was flying his autogyro (a strange hybrid of plane and helicopter) to Kansas
City but he got drunk and confused and ended up in China. He did not become known as a great
actor as a result of the movie, but as an irascible drunk, “The persona itself was the work of genius.”
creative people have been associated with drinking. Ernest Hemingway is as well known for his
ability to sip his daiquiri's at the El Floridita as he is for his writing. Like so many other celebrities,
W.C. Fields brought drinking out of the closet of the Prohibition Era and on to the screen as comedy. "It was a woman that drove me to drink and I never got a chance to thank her", has always been one
of my favorites. One of his first major movies on the subject of drink came out in 1933, just prior to
the end of Prohibition. It was called International House, where Fields played professor Henry R.
Quail, a professor that was flying his autogyro (a strange hybrid of plane and helicopter) to Kansas
City but he got drunk and confused and ended up in China. He did not become known as a great
actor as a result of the movie, but as an irascible drunk, “The persona itself was the work of genius.”
He drank often and well, mostly Martinis,
“I work better with them inside me,” he said, but he was not unfamiliar
with Irish Whiskey, Bourbon. Scotch, Rye, red wine and sherry. He was
also quite fond of rum and Coca Cola. His
staff estimated that he drank about two quarts of liquor a day. He was always an amiable drunk, and he
wore his alcoholism well, like the askew top hat, which he became famous for. He drank at home and he drank on
the set. He would often bring a cocktail shaker filled with gin to work, which
he referred to as his “pineapple juice.” When a studio employee once refilled
it with actual juice, Fields took a sip and bellowed, “Somebody’s been putting
pineapple juice in my pineapple juice!”
His fondness for drink didn’t impair his acting, and may have improved it. “His
timing was better when he was drinking,” said legendary director Mack Sennett,
who certainly knew about comedy, since he was responsible for the Keystone
Kops. “He was terrified of speaking lines too fast, which he sometimes did if
he was sober.”
Toward the end of Field’s life, his
drinking became less funny, his nose larger and redder. Fields
suffered from roseacea, did little to treat it, and helped cement a link
between excess drink and scarlet snouts. Yet he always
maintained his ability to function appearing in his last film, Sensations
of 1945, 72 years ago next week. “He keeps on drinking and keeps on being
funny,” said one colleague of that era, “so whose business is it except his
own?”
W.C. Fields died 70 years ago. He had been a bridge between the dour temperance
era, and the boozy, goofy humor of Dean Martin, Joe E. Lewis, Foster
Brooks, Jackie Gleason, and Red Skelton. His Los Angeles tombstone
was famously engraved with the line, “On the whole, I’d rather be in
Philadelphia.”
Read More at http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/06/21/how-w-c-fields-helped-end-prohibition.html
Wednesday, July 20, 2016
International Spirits Challenge Rum Winners
The 2016 International Spirits Challenge results are in and some good friends are the big winners.
Trophy Winners R.L. Seale and Pusser's Rum are both outstanding example of the rum production industry. There are a whole lot of others that showed very well in the event, as you can see below with all of the gold medal winners being listed. The silver and bronze metal winners can be seen by clicking on the "Read More at" website. Congratulations to all of the winners, you are examples of how far that the rum category has come with their drive for excellence.
Brand Name
|
Brand Owner
Company Name |
Tasting
Medal |
Trophy Winners
Pusser's Rum Gunpowder Proof
|
Pusser's Rum Company
|
Trophy
|
|
Foursquare 2004
|
R L Seale & Company
|
Trophy
|
|
Gold Medal Winners
|
|||
Branca
|
J.Faria & Filhos
|
Gold
|
|
Facundo Exquisito
|
Bacardi
|
Gold
|
|
Foursquare Zinfandel Cask Blend
|
R L Seale & Company
|
Gold
|
|
Havana Club Añejo 15 Años
|
Havana Club
|
Gold
|
|
Mezan Panama 2006
|
Marussia Beverages
|
Gold
|
|
R H Jefferson
|
Whitehaven Harbour Commissioners
|
Gold
|
|
Red Heart Original
|
Pernod Ricard South Africa
|
Gold
|
|
Savanna Rhum Vieux Traditionnel
5 anos
|
Distillerie de Savanna
|
Gold
|
|
Woods Old Navy Rum
|
William Grant & Sons
|
Gold
|
|
Foursquare 2004
|
R L Seale & Company
|
Gold
|
|
Pusser’s Rum Gunpowder Proof
|
Pusser’s Rum Company
|
Gold
|
Tuesday, July 19, 2016
Pussers Gunpowder Proof “Black Tot Day” Launch in the United States
This year's celebration of "Black Tot Day" is going to be a very special one, marking the 46th anniversary of the removal of the daily ration of rum from the British Royal Navy ships, Pusser's Rum is introducing their new Pusser's Gunpowder Proof expression to the United States. This is the rum that was just awarded the trophy in the rum category at the International Spirits Challenge last month and a "Best in Class" at the 2016 RumXP event in Miami in April.
Pusser’s Gunpowder Proof Rum Leaps Across the Pond Aged Overproof Expression to Launch July 31 in Select U.S. Markets to Commemorate “Black Tot Day” Pusser’s Gunpowder Proof, the last rum issued by the modern Royal Navy to its enlistees in 1970, will launch in seven U.S. markets July 31 to commemorate the 46th anniversary of Black Tot Day. Gunpowder Proof is an aged overproof expression at 54.5 percent which was the formula last used by the Admiralty. Pusser’s Rum Pusser’s Rum is produced in strict accordance with Admiralty blending specifications last used by the Royal Navy for issue to its fleet, a tradition which began in 1655 when it first served rum as its spirit of choice, with extra “tots” being offered before and after some of the most infamous battles in history.
This is probably the best expression that Pusser's has produced to date. The two existing wooden pot stills, first put in use in the early 1700's and located in Guyana’s Demerara River Valley, impregnate the rum with esters (naturally occurring organic flavoring compounds) far beyond those of any other rum. What results is a truly unique, award winning taste. The name “Pusser’s” is nothing more than a corruption of the word “Purser,” the Royal Navy ship’s supply officer who retained the stocks of rum. Before hydrometers, the ship’s Purser would test rum strength by mixing a few grains of gunpowder with rum to see if it would ignite under the heat of a magnifying glass. If it did that was 'proof' the rum was “at strength,” if it was not, the Purser was threatened with bodily harm for “watering down” the rum. “Gunpowder Proof is riding the wave of hand-crafted artisan spirits that are authentic and all-natural,” said Pusser’s CEO Gary Rogalski. “Forbes Magazine called the blend ‘the single malt of rum’ because of the painstaking batch process required to blend, bottle and bring the rum to market.
Monday, July 18, 2016
Where are You Going to be Most Apt to Consume Alcohol This Summer?
Summer time is a curious time when it comes to the consumption of alcoholic beverages. Depending on where you are, it could be at the beach, the mountains, on the lake or many other places. The summer provides us with so many opportunities to quench our thirst with a refreshing beverage. It seems that Americans seem to be most apt to have an alcoholic beverage at a barbecue. Portability and the ability to keep the beverages cold are big decision factors as to what they are going to be consuming.
According to Nielsen almost two thirds of
regular alcohol consumers in the US say they will drink at barbecues this
summer, ranking it the top consumption occasion.
With more than 90% of regular drinkers above
legal drinking age planning to consume alcohol outdoors during the summer season, picnics and barbecues rank the most popular occasion, followed by pool-side, at
the beach, and then at patio bars. In terms of summer alcoholic drink qualities,
“refreshing” was ranked top by both men and women, at 61% and 64% respectively.
“Natural” and “handcrafted” were expressed strongly with men, while
“fruity”, “sweet”, “citrusy”, “frozen” and “bubbly” were more popular
among women.
Nielsen data also found that social media had
become a key influencer when choosing drinks for US consumers. One quarter of legal drinking age plus consumers said what other people are seen drinking on social media,
increasing to 45% of 21-34-years old. 42% of the demographic also said that
they like to post pictures of their drinks on social media, well above the
average of 25% for all drinkers.
Read More at http://www.thespiritsbusiness.com/2016/07/barbeques-top-summer-imbibing-occasion-for-us/