A very slight advantage for the Bielle Canne Grise

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We don’t know more.

The complete enigma

It’s unclear whether this is a rum from Guadeloupe or Martinique. Its age is also unknown. It appears to have aged at least a little, given its color, but this may simply be due to barrel aging during the crossing.

We don’t know.

It is therefore a blind tasting without preconceptions, b ssible for me to link it to a particular house as production methods have changed so much over the past century.

It’s also unclear whether this is a molasses rum or a pure juice rum. This is important to note because there was  market and competitor analysis: study the playing field still a lot of molasses rum being produced in the French West Indies a century ago, even though production was already declining sharply.

The duel

These are pure cane juice white rums

I find tasting two rums at the same time to be an extraordinary experience. It allows you to accentuate the finer belgium numbers  elements of a rum to accentuate the differences betwe es are more perceptible, and the tasting is richer as a result.

A very slight advantage for the Bielle Canne Grise, but very slight. A little extra that makes me choose this rum over the Bologna, even if I wouldn’t turn my nose up at it.

Ideal tasting mode
These are two rums that are very good to at. They are also very enjoyable in ti-punch and cocktails, but my preference remains to drink them neat.

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