Cadenhead Hampden
Cadenhead Hampden
I'm in the middle of a glass of the Hampden by Cadenhead a 12year old pot still rum I've added 10ml of water which you have to let the glass sit for 10/15 mins. I have to say it's a nice rum deep liquorice taste is the main taste sensation I'm not one for picking up a multitude of flavours just the basics for my palate. I can't tell you what the gnat had for breakfast when he pisses in my glass. I'll leave that to the frozen one. The flavour remind me of mount gilboa not the exact flavour but the same vain so to speak. Yes a bottle of this would definitely go down well.
I'll have look those two up in the new year. Also the wife threatened to buy me the Cadenhead for my birthday in Feb I might hold her to it.Hassouni wrote:Remember Smith & Cross is a Hampden productRum-pelstiltskin wrote:I've a bottle of Hampden Estate Gold which is VERY Jamaican. Almost Smith and Cross like. Much heavier than Appleton's such as the VX or Reserve.
http://www.hampdenrumcompany.com/distillery.html
http://hampdendistilleryjm.blogspot.co.uk/
Just for a read over the holidays
http://hampdendistilleryjm.blogspot.co.uk/
Just for a read over the holidays
Drink Supermarket have the Hampden Gold. Around £17 a bottle. If you like Jamaican style then its well worth a try. Similar to Myers's but without the treacly molassesDai wrote:I'll have look those two up in the new year. Also the wife threatened to buy me the Cadenhead for my birthday in Feb I might hold her to it.Hassouni wrote:Remember Smith & Cross is a Hampden productRum-pelstiltskin wrote:I've a bottle of Hampden Estate Gold which is VERY Jamaican. Almost Smith and Cross like. Much heavier than Appleton's such as the VX or Reserve.
- Capn Jimbo
- Rum Evangelisti and Compleat Idiot
- Posts: 3550
- Joined: Mon Dec 11, 2006 3:53 pm
- Location: Paradise: Fort Lauderdale of course...
- Contact:
A nice read indeed. Managed to snag a pic of Hampden's classic pot with two thumpers - one for low wines, one for high - with a tubular condenser, all copper. This is a magnificent setup. What happens is that the wash is distilled in the pot still, with the vapors running through a smaller, first thumper filled with low wines (first run distillate). This increases the alcohol somewhat. The vapors from the first thumper bubbles up through the second thumper, for the same purpose (further distillation), then the final vapors are condensed by the tubular condenser at the end.Dai wrote:http://www.hampdenrumcompany.com/distillery.html
http://hampdendistilleryjm.blogspot.co.uk/
Just for a read over the holidays
This is a first class, classic rum setup. The actual purpose is to avoid having to distill twice with the pot still, and achieve a similar result by the further distillation in the thumpers. It is fair to call this a classic, pot stilled rum. This system was common in Jamaica, and is still used to their great credit. This is the way rum should be made, with the proviso that no additives or further tweaking occurs (unlikely as pot stilling is MUCH more flavorful and unique than any column or Coffey output).

Last edited by Capn Jimbo on Mon Feb 02, 2015 5:58 pm, edited 4 times in total.
Trying a glass of the Guyanese rum and all I'll say as it's the first glass is, go get you some. This stuff is really nice. It's not a heavy rum like ED more akin to a Barbadian rum sort of. Well worth £33
https://www.masterofmalt.com/rum/mezan- ... -1998-rum/