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AceExplorer
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Thu, Jul 21, 2016 4:02 PM
Interesting, Mike. To have the original recipe is one thing, but I think in the case of Havana Club you must also have the original yeast strains, right? The Puerto Rican product has appeared at my local Total Wine, and I snapped the photos below to share here. No word on when I'll "buy and try," but maybe someday. Maybe. Definitely if the reviews are really positive. You're right, we may never again get to taste the "real" pre-revolution Havana Club. What a shame. I read online somewhere that the yeasts were sampled and taken by the family, and the remainder was destroyed just hours before the armed forces took over the distillery. I don't know the lineage of the yeasts being used today in Cuba. |
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arriano
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Thu, Jul 21, 2016 4:18 PM
Excellent point. Also, Bacardi's version isn't made with Cuban molasses and Cuban water, and specific flavors come from all three ingredients. Therefore, it's different than the original. Plus, there's no way of knowing for sure that Havana Club from Cuba isn't using the "original recipe" as well. I would guess that most of the Havana Club workers stayed on after the Revolution and would have firsthand knowledge of the process the company used. |
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mikehooker
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Mon, Aug 1, 2016 12:01 PM
'Nother article, this one way more in depth... From reading previous articles, I was under the impression that in the 70s when the trademark expired the US denied HC the opportunity to renew and eventually Bacardi, who was operating outside of Cuba, took it over. This clearly states that the family opted to not renew the trademark based on bad advice. Regardless, the product Bacardi is calling Havana Club and even the HC that's being made in Cuba these days is not the same as what was on the market before the revolution. Would be very interesting to know the difference between the taste then and now but good luck finding a 60 year old bottle to compare them. As a side note, I found it suspect that during the blind taste test in which they threw in a couple extra variables, they immediately dismissed Cana Brava. I think that's a quality white rum superior to Flor de Cana and other whites readily available to us. The true taste test of these rums would be in a Daiquiri, me thinks. |
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tikiskip
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Sun, Jan 1, 2017 10:10 AM
Well it's here in Ohio. I had a guy bringing me lots of the real Havana Club out of Canada BUT this version at least when I got the first version from Bacardi was not good, I only tried the white. Now the Bacardi Select tastes a lot like Lemon Hart I say, in fact we did a blind taste test and one guy guessed that the Bacardi was the lemon Hart. The First version of Bacardi white. The new stuff. |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Jan 3, 2017 4:35 PM
This was on 60 minutes the day after I posted the above post,1/1/2017. The rumbling trademark feud over the rights to Havana Club rum in the US hit prime time TV last weekend when CBS News’s 60 Minutes programme flew to Cuba to investigate. Who makes the real Havana Club rum? And who owns the rights to sell the liquor under that famous brand name? Sharyn Alfonsi reports from Cuba http://www.cbsnews.com/news/60-minutes-havana-club-rum-cuba-revolution/ |
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mikehooker
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Tue, Jan 3, 2017 8:11 PM
Thanks for sharing. Great piece. I still haven't tried the Bacardi version and don't really care to. Even if they have the original recipe they're producing it from different soil. I will be in Cuba in April and look forward to trying all the different rums produced there. |
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AceExplorer
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Wed, Jan 4, 2017 8:04 AM
Re: Bacardi and Cuba -- the former Bacardi factory in Cuba is producing rums under the "Santiago de Cuba" label. Locals told me unanimously that this is the rum they prefer to drink - not Havana Club. Their 11-year rum was described as being a particularly good spirit and was priced around $40 a bottle in Cuba. Their silver rum was about $3.60 a bottle. These prices do not include the 10% tax you are forced to pay on US dollars at the currency exchanges when you convert your USDs to CUCs. Avoid this tax by bringing Canadian dollars or Euros. At this time there is no limit to how much rum or cigars you personally hand-carry into the US. Bring extra clothes to pack your bottles. Also consider bringing larger (or extra) suit cases. |
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tikiskip
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Wed, Jan 4, 2017 7:27 PM
So wait did you run right out and try the "Santiago de Cuba" Trying now to see if my rum runner can get some. |
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croe67
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Thu, Jan 5, 2017 5:31 AM
We tried most of the Santiago de Cuba range in Havana & had extra suitcase space to bring some home. However, we found that most of their rums were aged in scotch barrels & the older ones definitely had a peaty note like many scotches do. Scotches are one of the few spirits we have not acquired a taste for, so we passed on bringing home that brand and saved the suitcase space for others that we found that were more to our taste. Everyone has a different palette, so I'm sure many will love the Santiago de Cuba Rums |
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rbeyer68
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Thu, Jan 5, 2017 6:54 AM
Very interesting information. In the 60 minutes piece they mention that one of the key arguments that Bacardi makes is that Pernod Ricard is partnering with the Cuban government, who confiscated the assets of the Arechabala family (mainly the distillery as they say the recipe was still in the Arechabala family). Pernod Ricard say that they use a distillery that was built in 2007. Per the info above, Santiago de Cuba is using the confiscated distillery. Lots of semantics there as both try to take the high moral ground. I really need to plan a trip to Cuba while I still can. Who knows what will happen with the US - Cuba relations over the next few years. Rick |
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tikiskip
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Thu, Jan 5, 2017 8:35 AM
I kinda got a feeling the Santiago de Cuba rum may be most popular because it was cheap. So what others Cuban rums did you like best Caroline. |
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mikehooker
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Thu, Jan 5, 2017 9:58 AM
I'm curious as well. I assume there are more options out there than the well known ones. What should I be keeping an eye out for when I visit in a few months? |
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AceExplorer
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Thu, Jan 5, 2017 10:37 AM
To be very clear, the Santiago rum garnered the highest praise from the head bartender at Polinesio and two other locals who were spirits-knowledgeable. I agree, Santiago rum could be what the locals have a palate for, and Havana Club is definitely premium-priced in their home market. But since I had already been collecting Havana Club over the years, and am quite adequately stocked, I found it prudent to bring back mostly the lesser-known Santiago rum on this trip. The silver Santiago is very nice in my daiquiris, but I haven't completed more formal taste comparisons yet. I'm going to be on Grand Bahamas Island this weekend. I'll be looking for rum and local falernum insights, so I'll see what information I come back with. This time I'm bringing a bigger suitcase, lol... |
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croe67
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Thu, Jan 5, 2017 2:33 PM
My recommendations: Wish we had brought back more of both of them!! The Ron Cubay is 10 year & very nice. This would be a regular stock item in our bar if we could get more of it. |
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LaHabana57
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Mon, Mar 19, 2018 8:14 PM
Around the first of the year 2018, Havana Club Rum introduced these substantial swizzles Not Tiki, but if you like Havana Club... TG [ Edited by: LaHabana57 2018-03-19 20:15 ] |