The fortunate are off to Aruba or St. Maarten or Jamaica,
or about to be, when they are not off to Sun Valley or Gstaad. But rum is one of the few drinks versatile enough to suit most any clime. The demon
goes swimmingly with boiling water and a touch of cloves in a glass with a
silver spoon. Devotees drink it in the American West and in Switzerland,
where rhum grog is served aprés-ski. But it’s better sipped under an equatorial
sun with tonic or fruit juice, or just shaved ice, while the shaded eye takes
in blue sky and water. Rum was not invented in the Caribbean but perfected in
those latitudes, and today its mellow charm accounts for a large chunk of the U.S.
spirits market.
The history of rum
is tied up with that of sugar cane, which supposedly was first brought back
from India
by Alexander the Great three centuries before the birth of Christ. Not until
the middle of the seventh century did it arrive regularly in Europe,
by Arabian caravan, probably from the South Pacific. Speculation has it that
Columbus took sugar cane to the West Indies on his second voyage, and it was
from there that this alcoholic product of fermented and distilled sugar cane
juice first became available when Spanish settlers in the 16th
century began making and exporting it.
Although written records from Barbados in
1600 contain a recipe for rum punch, the origins of the name itself are obscure. Some say it derives from the Latin name for
sugar cane, others attribute the name to the British Navy, where an admiral
known as “Old Rummy” prescribed rum as an antidote to scurvy. Rum is perhaps
our most romantic beverage, as rich in history as in calories. We associate it
with the discovery of America,
West Indian adventurers, pirates, and the Spanish Main.
Rum was a favorite of the American colonists for the same reason it’s popular
today - it tastes good, and is relatively cheap.
Allegedly Paul Revere got pumped up
on rum before shouting about the approaching British, and George Washington was
elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses by distributing 75 gallons of rum to
his constituents. Before the Civil War rum was also made in New England and part of an infamous trading cycle: sugar cane imported from the Caribbean was made into rum; this
was sent to Africa to purchase slaves; these
were sent to the West Indies to
buy more sugar cane, profits raked off at every stop.
During Prohibition, rum found its
way through the swamps of Florida and Louisiana to many a
cocktail glass,and even today rum carries a raffish association. To make the
stuff, sugar cane is crushed immediately after harvest and then boiled to
concentrate the sugar. Most of the sugar’s removed by centrifuge, but the
molasses that’s left is still quite sweet. Distinct styles of rum are produced
by distilling either the cane juice or the molasses, varying the time and
amount of distillation, aging in wood, and adding caramelized sugar.
Rum’s available in distillations
that range from 80 to 151 proof. With a few exceptions, the lower the proof the
more complex the flavor.
Americans have always liked mixtures of rum and fruit juice
or coconut milk. Although the daiquiri and the pina colada make good vehicles
for high-proof rum, the best way to drink it is neat. Rums from the
islands of the Caribbean and some South American countries are often filtered to make them
light in color and body, and high in alcohol. Puerto Rican and Cuban rums are commonly 100 proof, and are big sellers,
but usually not as flavorful as other versions. Flavorful, heavier rums often come
from the English-speaking islands, notably Jamaica, and the process for making
them is more involved. The residue of previous fermentations, known as “dunder,” is added to a new batch of
molasses, and then a natural, leisurely fermentation is allowed to occur. The fermented
juice is distilled twice, which produces clear liquor, and then aged in oak
casks. Caramelized sugar is added for deep color in Jamaican and
other heavier rums (and also used to improve the appearance of cheap brandies
and other spirits).
Haiti
and Martinique make rum from sugar cane juice, rather than molasses. It is aged in oak and comes
close to French brandy in delicacy. Barbancourt, of Port-au-Prince, makes a number of grades and
uses stars on the labels to distinguish among them. The Barbancourt Five Star,
tasted blind in a snifter, could fool a connoisseur of cognac. From Martinique
comes La Manny, aged in Limousin
oak and also with the allure of a good brandy. I recommend plain ole Mount Gay, from Barbados, however, with medium body and good
flavor. It goes well with Schweppes, or simply with ice and a squeeze of lime
juice.
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