Welcome to Yo Ho Ho, NABOR!

My Scale for Rating Rum Keep in mind as you read my reviews and ratings that I'm giving you my opinions from a unique perspective. So here's that view of rum that impacts my ratings.

1. I really, really don't like spiced or flavored rum.

2. I've discovered a preference for aging that transcends price.

3. Too much alcohol or too much of a burn straight up hides the quality of rum.

4. I'm surprisingly unswayed by others' opinions of rums, but I am driven to try rums about which others rave.

5. I gave up trying and rating cheaper rums with the exception of some novelty rums.

6. A typical tasting is both straight up and with Diet Coke.

7. I'm not much of a drinker. I don't have more than two drinks in an evening. So I really savor my rum and Diet Cokes.

My Rating Scale 1 to 10, Worst to Best No quibbling over decimal points; although, I have gone back and changed ratings--and reserve the authority to do so again.

The lowest three ratings are just rather poor rums that I don't like.
1 = Pour it out. 2 = Rub it on. 3 = Give it away.

The next three ratings mix with my Diet Coke, and I can be polite about them in company.
4 = Mix it very well. 5 = Mix it. 6 = Accept the gift, but don't regift.

The 7's are a conundrum. They knocked on the door, but the knock on them is typically too much alcohol bite.
7 = Don't turn it down.

These are the rums I hope to get when dining out or in a bar.
8 = Put it on the Top Shelf. 9 = Write it at the Top of the List.


These rums are so far above the others that everyone who tastes them instantly realizes they are special.
10 = Mark it as the Ultimate Rum.

Value Ratings The value ratings are calculated by squaring a rum's rating and dividing by the price for a 750 ml bottle. The very expensive ones don't compete on value. The really bad ones can't overcome their 1 or 2 ratings. This helps find the 8's and 9s that deliver the best taste for the money.

Sunday, April 22, 2012


An Interview with Uncle Richard

Glynn: I understand you recently returned to Barbados to see how rum has matured since 1647.
Uncle Richard: Yes, the kill-divell has really evolved in three centuries.
Glynn: You were the first to write about rum in your book A True and Exact History of the Island of Barbados.  In fact, the rum you encountered in Barbados in 1647 was the first ever distilled.
Uncle Richard: That’s what I hear.  The natives called it kill-divell and boiled it in copper pots using their locally grown sugar cane.  I see the process is a bit more refined, so to speak, these days.
Glynn: Could you English gents stand to drink the local kill-divell?
Uncle Richard: On weekends, and when we did, it didn’t take much of the Devil’s killer brew to finish us off.  Remember, the natives didn’t put their rum away in barrels for 20 years to age it, so there was quite a bite to it.
Glynn: Now I want you to try some Mount Gay Extra Old from Barbados, mixed in what we call today Caffeine-Free Diet Coke on the rocks.  That means it has ice in it.  This is my preferred concoction. There wasn’t any ice to put in drinks in Barbados in 1647 was there?
Uncle Richard: Wow, that’s really chilly.  Where’s the kill-divell taste?  That stuff’s quite tame.  If I could have taken that mixture back to England, the Queen would have knighted me. 
Glynn: What did you think of the local kill-divell?
Uncle Richard: I would have included much more about it in my book if I had any notion future generations would find this at all interesting.  I had quite a fascination for the kill-divell. Around the island, there were several native families that made the brew.  My buddies depended upon me to give them my inside rating each month of the best batch out on the street.  I posted a flier at the local dry goods each month. 
Glynn: No kidding?  That post was the first rum blog. 
Uncle Richard: What’s a blog?

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