Now you all know me well enough to anticipate that I'd be the first to review a Hamilton rum. Of course I thought about it, but truth be told I knew that my motivations would surely be questioned. Hell, even I'd question my motivations; thus I resisted ordering and reviewing one.
It didn't help to see Hamilton backtrack on his original labels for the Jamaican rum which stated "no additives or coloring", but which turned out to be a "Gold" and a "Black", both made of the very same, unaged new make (!) and whose only difference was the amount of non-traditional soft drink color added. Accordingly and according to a mail order retail clerk the Jamaican label no longer makes the claim.
So I was more than interested when Josh of Inu a Kena apparently scored five freebies of Hamilton's new line. I found it curious that of all the usual reviewers available that somehow Inu was selected. Could it have anything to do with Josh's scoring, where by far most rums get high or exceptionally high ratings (see Reviewer's Review)? His most common score is 90-100.
Seriously, how is it that these rums - bottled by the Pope of Rum, and available for months - have not been widely promoted, tasted, or reviewed, especially since Our Grace's rep job is to get these done? And the first belated reviewer is a noob? Beats me. Now to be fair, I like Josh and find some of his horizontal comparisons interesting; too, he has a nice way with words. But in his review it's clear that he's a bit starstruck, especially in his adoring claims:
"Ed has maintained a level of transparency that is unique in the spirits world", and... "Nothing has been added, save for water and in the case of the Jamaican expressions, a bit of caramel color". Oh, and lest I forget, "...the Ministry of Rum Web site—a place where I have personally learned a lot about rum.". BJ, anyone? I'm in...
To this I hadda respond and comment at the site...
So many questions, so few answers. It's up to Josh now, so how will he respond? Stay tuned...Moi to Josh:
"Nice to finally see a review on this rum. Your profile is intriguing, particularly your observations that this rum displayed cane juice qualities.
You've also raised the issue of transparency in labelling/marketing, which is quite valid, in that there is so little transparency. You've set a high bar for Hamilton though, when you say "Ed has maintained a level of transparency that is unique in the spirits world".
You also note that by entering the bottle's batch number, that you are transferred to a page with all these alleged details. Are we? Not really. All you will learn on this page is that the rum is a blend of four barrels of rum wholesaled and shipped from St. Lucia. We learn nothing of these barrels beyond their barrel number (eg #443-12-03). An age and a proof is stated. In sum we know it's a blend, its claimed age and its proof.
This is hardly different or unique from most rums.
We were very intrigued though by your observation that "Nothing has been added, save for water and in the case of the Jamaican expressions, a bit of caramel color". If true, this would indeed be special, but only if so claimed and/or appearing on the label. For example Panamonte XXV Reserva ($400) states "There are no additives, colorings or other barrels used". Diplomatico Ambassador ($312) similarly and clearly states "..."...no sweetener, caramel or other additives...(and) no chill filtering". Pretty impressive.
Since Hamilton's site makes no mention of additives, coloring or filtering, on what do you rely? Are there any statements on the back label? And speaking of the label, Hamilton once promised that the following would appear on his labels...
Raw Material
Fermentation ABV
Date Distilled
Distillation ABV
Barrel Number
Date Barrel Filled
Barrel Volume
Date Barrel Emptied
Barrel ABV
That was mighty impressive and if true, would go toward the claim of "unique transparency". These were promised, but which if any of these actually appear? So far the information given is rather typical, though to be fair the profile remains intriguing...
Best wishes for a happy holiday..."
*******
Citations:
http://inuakena.com/spirit-reviews/rum- ... an-7-year/
http://caribbean-spirits.com/labeldetails.php?id=63
Special Note: Josh rated this rum at a stellar 9.5 (out of 10), normally a brilliant score. Unfortunately, his most common scoring category is - you guessed it... 90-100, just what the Pope ordered.