BARBADOS - RUM COCKTAIL COMPETITION |
Editor’s Note: In these times of sequestering at home, many aficionados may enjoy some new and interesting pastimes such as reading about the lore of rum and tasting its many iterations. Considering all the vegetables that can go into a rum drink, and since I'm of course staying at home these days, I started a vegetable garden. Yvette's Coronavirus Garden sidebar.
They told us it would be a rum cocktail competition. And indeed, it was ... if you can picture Master Chef team challenge chaos. Flying fingers. Slashing knives. Frantic muddling. Lots of running to grab prized ingredients. More than a little slurping. It was a blast. But our trip to Mount Gay Rum Distillery in Bridgetown, Barbados, was also a history lesson about rum and the West Indies. So before we boozed, we learned.
Mount Gay Distillery stands pretty much where it has since 1703. Our afternoon included this history lesson and also a tasting. And all of this was capped by The Competition. But, more on that a bit later.
As for Mount Gay’s rum, it is made with “coral filtered” water and, of course, molasses. It’s aged in toasted oak former whiskey barrels. And the company sells five versions, ranging from the least expensive, a clear liquid called “Silver” up to “1703,” the top line, small batch (only 12,000 bottles in 2017) stuff that goes for $195 each bottle. So we tasted all of them. Ok, not the rarefied 1703. But the other four.
As for 1703, Mount Gay’s top rum, it’s a really pretty bottle and the distillery says each is selected, bottled and labeled by hand. I really didn’t expect to get a taste. One more stop on our tour. We watched one of their bartenders demonstrate how to not slice off our fingers with the knives, how to muddle greens for, say, a mojito, proper shaking technique and of course, the art of the gentle pour.
And, now, finally, it was time for the grand rum cocktail competition. On a back shelf, there was an array of rums, liquors, fruits, vegetables, spices and more. The group was divided into teams of four and at “go” we all ran for the goodies. Everyone was muddling, slicing, shaking, pouring. Swigging. One of our team, with a “real” camera muttered TGAF ... Thank God for Auto Focus. That’s what we wound up naming both our team and the drink. We concocted a ginger/lime based drink. It had freshly shaved ginger, lime, crushed pepper seeds for a kick, and a splash of bitters along with the Black Barrel run. “Um, it needs something else,” someone said. More lime maybe? No, more alcohol. Lots more alcohol. And then, it was a truly nice drink; one where, to us, the rum and the rest were equal partners so no one thing was overwhelmed. Honestly, I would drink this at a bar with friends.
If this all sounds a bit pro for a bunch of amateurs who probably couldn’t shake a drink without disaster, well, that was only three of our four. We DID have a ringer in the form of our friend Peter, who in a former life was food and beverage manager for Holiday Inn.
INFO Mount Gay Rum (https://www.mountgayrum.com/) has a number of tours and experiences including various rum tastings with and without lunch and the Cocktail Workshop, which includes the cocktail competition. That one is $70 US and includes transportation from your hotel. |