Pikey wrote:
.........My own experiments with "Bacardi(ish)" give me tastes in both "Heads" and "Tails", which I recognise strongly from the commercial brews. It may be that I concentrate on these elements and use most ot the "Hearts" for something else........
NZChris wrote:I've tried my caramel and made up a rum that has the same cloying sweetness that I don't like in Captain Morgan Spiced Rum, the only Captain Morgan I have to compare it to. The rums I blended my sample out of are experimental ones made out of heads and feints and fast aging trickery and it tastes surprisingly close to the CMSR.
If my pub has bottle of CM dark, I'll bring home a nip to compare, but I'm not buying a whole bottle when I make better.
Side by side with Black Heart, the caramel is about the same, but my feints experiments have much more flavor, some of it coming from a very ripe dunder pit. Both are not great for sipping and need to be drowned in Coke.
Great to hear your experiments are proving to be going in the "right" direction chris.
I've manged to secure some "Light" and also "Dark" Muscovado sugar at sensible prices, so my ferment is on hold for a few days until it arrives. I'm assuming that is the closest I can get to "real" cane juice, perhaps even with some of the "Skummings" still in there?
maybe we can now speculate a little as to what really happened here ? Perhaps the "blending" from all these different sources was in reality just a gathering together of all the "junk rums" from various sources, which were tipped into vats and then these were distilled again, to get the "good rum" (hearts) which was light and clear and went to make the "pina-coladas" etc for the hierarchy.
The waste (Feints) - heads and tails, - went into wooden barrels just because that was what they had and after a while, was drawn off complete with various "gum" and "Oils" which could be seen. It was decided that it was cheaper to serve this to the already alcoholic sailors than the Brandy they had been serving and it was a simple matter to add that "non-sweet" caramel crow refers to and which was already produced in England, so it could be brought over easily, as a cover for the lack of clarity in the "rum".
I guess in the meanwhile, I'll be putting some oak into something and keeping it warm for a few days
[Edit - I'm ambivalent as to whether they would heve "cut the fores" although experience with current commercial brews leads me to think not ! I shall be taking them out though ]