PFFFFFTTT ! ya call that Rum, figures need to be the other way around or %100 molasses in my opinion.Yummyrum wrote:Might be right up the ally of those that like 90% sugar Rum with a 10% Molasses addition
But then that's just my opinion.
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PFFFFFTTT ! ya call that Rum, figures need to be the other way around or %100 molasses in my opinion.Yummyrum wrote:Might be right up the ally of those that like 90% sugar Rum with a 10% Molasses addition
Well I ran it today ! 10 months later, but only had feints off a "Bacardi"(Ish) to addPikey wrote:Not sure SL but I've spread my ingredients so far across a number of posts - I'll consolidate here so it's visible to all and for my own future reference !Still Life wrote:Going by your link, how much would you up ShineOn's molasses by? And what size ferment?
[Edit - RECIPE ]
Pikey wrote: I have put the backset (From a very light "Bacardi-ish" rum) in the fermenter - around 10 litres I think. I did taste it and was quite surprised at how sour it was.
So we went in with 3 litres of molasses @ 40% sucrose and 2.168 kg of muscavado, Hot water and when it cools a little nutrient and yeast. - then we'll see how it goes. May add some more sugar yet, when I work out how much is in there ! (Thanks here to der wo for advising that molasses weighs 1.3-1.5 kg/litre)
Thanks der wo - at 40%, if I take it as 1.4 kg that gives me 3.82 kg total sugar (unless that muscavado is not all sugar)
A few grammes over 1 kg more muscovado just added, around 12 g of Tronozymol, 20 minutes airstone and 5 g Gervin G4 (26) yeast.
So total sugars around 5 kg and Water to make up to 25 Litres (about 6.25 US Gallons I believe)
I love tiki drinks and go through a lot of black rum. I hate spiced and doctored rums, but these are rummy, sometimes tannic like they've been force aged in small barrels, and some have that bitter caramel taste.Black rum was designed to impart the appearance of age to rums intended for mixing. The term "dark rum", while in common usage, can be vague and confusing, as it may apply to either black rum or premium aged rums.
However, it' is very important to distinguish between the two, as they have different uses. A black rum may be made using a wide range of distillation methods: pot, column, or blended, resulting in rum that may be light, medium, or heavy bodied. It tends to have little, if any age, but is defined by the addition of caramel, molasses, or both to the finished rum and is typically much darker in appearance than even fifty years in a barrel could achieve.
It remains, to my mind, the only style of rum you should refer to by color, because the addition of color itself is what defines the category. At Smuggler's Cove, we have found that using a black blended rum is often what we need to create the mouthfeel or flavor we're looking for in exotic cocktails, and it plays especially well with a broad range of other rums and spirits.