Aroma
Dried Fruit
11 bottles with this note
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Rum Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for dried fruit and related notes.

Chairman's Reserve The Forgotten Casks
St. Lucia Distillers Group of Companies
The Forgotten Casks is the rum world's most eloquent argument for the virtue of accidental patience. Those extra years of unplanned aging produced a rum of remarkable layered depth at a price that would be impossible if it were intentional.

Ron Abuelo Añejo 7 Year Old
Varela Hermanos S.A.
Ron Abuelo Añejo 7 Year Old is estate rum at its purest. The Varela Hermanos family has controlled every step of production — from sugarcane field to bottle — since establishing their sugar mill in 1908 and beginning rum distillation in 1936.

Ron del Barrilito Three Star Rum
Fernández Family (Private Estate)
Ron del Barrilito is Puerto Rico's best-kept secret — a rum that has never left family hands since 1880. The Fernández family survived every upheaval the island threw at them and simply kept blending.

Pusser’s British Navy Rum
Pusser’s Rum Ltd.
Pusser’s is a definitive blended rum. Charles Tobias secured the original Admiralty blending recipe in 1979 and brought it back to life.

Doorly's XO Barbados Rum
R.L. Seale and Co. Ltd.
Doorly's XO is the insider's choice from Foursquare — the same distillery, the same master blender, the same dedication, at a price that makes you wonder if the industry has got its pricing backwards. It outperforms rums at twice its cost and rewards anyone patient enough to nose it properly before sipping. This is the rum that converts whisky drinkers. Serve neat or over a single large cube, take your time, and don't be surprised when you reach for a second glass.

Appleton Estate Joy Anniversary Blend
Campari Group (J. Wray and Nephew Ltd.)
Joy Spence didn't merely make rum — she redefined what was achievable in a field that had underestimated the potential of aged Jamaican spirit. This blend, created to honour her 25th anniversary as master blender, is both a personal statement and an artistic peak. At 25+ years of age, every element has resolved into harmony.

Dictador 20 Year Old
Dictador

Santa Teresa 1796
Santa Teresa

Plantation XO 20th Anniversary
Maison Ferrand (Plantation Rum, est. 1996)
Plantation XO is the purest expression of patience in the rum world — a spirit aged twice, on two continents, over the course of up to 23 years. Alexandre Gabriel's method borrows from his day job as a Cognac producer: he takes aged Barbadian rum and re-barrels it in spent Cognac casks at his château in Ars, France. The tropical aging in Barbados accelerates extraction and concentrates the rum's character; the continental aging in France slows everything down, adding finesse and floral complexity. The result is a rum that drinks like a fine Cognac — but with the warmth, sweetness, and tropical soul of Barbados intact. At $50, it competes with spirits twice its price. The 20th Anniversary label commemorates two decades of this double-aging philosophy, and the rum itself is the best argument for its continued patience.

El Dorado 12 Year Old
Demerara Distillers Limited (El Dorado)
El Dorado 12 is distilled from history. The Diamond Distillery in Guyana houses wooden stills that exist nowhere else in the world — including the Port Mourant double wooden pot still, built from Guyanese greenheart hardwood in 1732, and the Enmore wooden Coffey still from 1880, the last wooden continuous still on earth. These stills produce “marques” — distinct rum styles named for the now-closed sugar estates where the stills originated. The obsession is in the preservation: Demerara Distillers has maintained these irreplaceable stills for centuries, blending their outputs into El Dorado’s remarkably complex range. The 12 Year Old marries pot still richness with column still elegance, delivering a rum that tastes like three hundred years of accumulated knowledge. At $35–42, it’s one of the great bargains in aged spirits.

Ron Zacapa Centenario 23 Solera
Industrias Licoreras de Guatemala / Diageo (Ron Zacapa)
Ron Zacapa broke nearly every rule in rum-making. Start with the raw material: virgin sugarcane honey instead of the molasses most rum producers use. Then defy tropical aging conventions by aging at 2,300 meters above sea level, where cool mountain temperatures and higher humidity slow evaporation to a fraction of what it would be at sea level. Finally, use a solera blending system — borrowed from the sherry houses of Jerez — to marry rums aged 6 to 23 years across four different barrel types. The result tastes like no other rum on earth: rich enough to sip like Cognac, complex enough to hold your attention glass after glass. Voted the world’s number one premium rum at the International Rum Festival for five consecutive years.