Yup, I'm gonna need to get ahold of a bottle of this ASAP.
Did you ever get one?Yup, I'm gonna need to get ahold of a bottle of this ASAP.
Nope, and I've been lookingDid you ever get one?
Lmk if you need further assistance.Nope, and I've been looking
It took me forever to figure out why this rum tasted so different to me. It seems they forgot to put three bags of sugar into every bottle. It is actually a lot better tasting now that I haven't had any rum in a while. Too many rums depend on sugar these days.
If it makes a difference, I kinda did the same to myself Carlos. Anything under 107 proof is generally a "change of pace" pour for me now.The mini-bottle chaos continues. Man, do I ever love Diplomatico. My absolute favorite rum. But now, thanks to the influence of @icehog3 steering my recent obsession with high-proof bourbon, 80-proof rum tastes like a Hi-C juice box to my palate.
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Exactly!If it makes a difference, I kinda did the same to myself Carlos. Anything under 107 proof is generally a "change of pace" pour for me now.
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Edit: Drinking an 80 proof rum after months of drinking bourbon at 107-120 proof is a unique experience. It tastes like sugar water. My rum palate needs to be retrained.
Well that explains it! I thought it was just me...it was SO damn sweet.I'm pretty sure the 15 yr has something like 35 grams of sugar per liter so calling it sugar water isn't so far off.
I noticed the amount of sugar tested in the El Dorados went up with age 5 year tested at 5 g/l 8 yr tested at 15 g/l and the 15 year tested at 35 g/l. I'm curious if that is do to evaporation during ageing or did they add sugar at bottling to make the older rums richer and thicker?