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Sale
Spirits
750ml
Bottle: $22.80 $24.00
12 bottles: $17.10
This bold and complex rum shows dense flavors charred caramel, dark chocolate, and pastry crème. The palate...
UBC
93
BTI
91
Sale
Spirits
750ml
Bottle: $20.52 $21.60
12 bottles: $15.44
Clear color. Creamy, elegant aromas and flavors of coconut custard, candy corn, vanilla latte, and toasty nut brittle...
BTI
90
Sale
Spirits
750ml
Bottle: $41.04 $43.20
12 bottles: $37.62
Chairman’s Legacy is a tribute to Laurie Barnard, the “Chairman” of St. Lucia Distillers who inspired and...
12 FREE
Sale
Spirits
750ml
Bottle: $27.36 $28.80
12 bottles: $25.08
Chairman’s Reserve was first blended in 1999, overseen by then Chairman, Laurie Barnard, as a special project to...

Mencia Petite Sirah Rum Saint Lucia

Petite Sirah was first brought from France to America in the 1880s. It later went on to become one of the only grapes to make it through the devastating Phylloxera virus in the 1890s, both World Wars, and the Great Depression. During Prohibition, it was a main ingredient used to make sacramental wines. In fact, through the 1960s it was a major blending grape in a number of the finest wines produced in California.

By itself, a bottle of Petite Sirah usually has no problem making a quick impression on consumers. With a large amount of natural color and tannins, wines made with the grape commonly feature intensive sweet fruit characteristics like fresh raspberry or blackberry jam, black pepper spice, and plenty of backbone or structure.

There are a number of different styles available. Some concentrate on highlighting fresh, fruity flavors; others are bigger, more voluptuous; and it keeps going up the ladder until you reach the powerful, more machismo-style category.

It is difficult to categorize rum as a single spirit, because of all the spirits found around the globe, rum is perhaps the one which varies most dramatically from place to place. Clear, white rum - a favorite for cocktail drinkers - is perhaps the most prevalent example found today, but there is a whole world of darker, spiced and molasses-rich rums to explore, thanks to the fascinating history and wide reach this drink has.

Rum came about during the colonial times, when sugar was a huge and world-changing business. The molasses left over from the sugar production industry could easily be distilled into a delicious alcoholic drink, and provided extra income for the sugar traders. Before long, it became a favorite of sailors and transatlantic merchants, and it quickly spread across the Caribbean and Latin America, where it remains highly popular today.

The production of rum is a basic and simple one - you take your molasses, add yeast and water, and then ferment and distil the mixture. However, as is often the case, the devil is in the detail. The variation in yeasts found from place to place, the maturation period, the length of the fermentation and the type of stills and barrels used provide the rainbow-colored variation that gives rum its spectrum of styles and characteristics.