Barbados Surgarcane |
Barbados seem to be heading back to their roots if you will and making use of several local resources that were available to their forefathers to improve their rums. Barbados has the distinct honor of being one of the earliest producers of rum and today is still in the forefront of innovation in the industry.
WHY USE SUGAR CANE
If we look back
far enough, we will find less diversity in rum than we have today. It was not
wild yeast versus cultured yeast, it was not molasses versus juice, it was not dunder
versus non dunder. There was no
"imported molasses" either.
Still Rums had a clear identity, by country. They were built
on different formulas of the same prime elements - molasses, cane juice, dunder
and water. Rums were made on sugar cane estates and these
elements were what was available.
Economics drove
change. Agricole - rum from pure juice - blossomed in
the 19th century from a myriad of economic factors. City based commercial distilleries arrived molasses
only obviously. Cultured yeast
fermentations of 48 hours arrived instead of 2 weeks and of course the column
still which changed rum irreversibly forever.
In the small
islands of the anglophone Caribbean, free trade has seen the demise of the
sugar industry in recent decades and today, the historic great producers are
obliged to import molasses.
St. Nicolas Abbey Cane Crusher |
We are not doing
this to mimic agricole rum. Even if we release pure cane juice rum in the
future, we won’t call it agricole. We believe agricole is the sole provenance
of our French friends. We may use
dunder as well as we push the envelope in getting flavor from the cane but we
are not trying to mimic Jamaican rum. Definitely
no muck pits or dunder pits though ! We
are not trying to recreate some specific rum formula from the past. Again,
too much respect for our forefathers to use them as marketing gimmicks. We are trying to maintain our near 400 year
heritage as a sugar cane growing country. We are trying to reestablish the historic
link between Foursquare distillery and the sugar cane estate where it is
nestled. It is not about 'terroir', it
is not about juice v molasses, it is about controlling your destiny.
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