China / World

Raising a toast to rum's heartland

By Xinhua (China Daily) Updated: 2017-03-28 07:26

Cuban plant predicts boom for iconic drink with access to US market

HAVANA - It is difficult to imagine that the modern plant of the San Jose rum company was just 20 hectares of largely obsolete land 20 years ago.

Located about 30 kilometers southeast of Havana, in the Cuban province of Mayabeque, stands the world's largest rum processing plant.

It churns out the country's iconic drink under the Havana Club brand, which is sold in more than 120 countries including China. It is one of Cuba's main sources of exports.

With an investment of $60 million, the plant was built and opened in 1997. It is now run by the joint venture Havana Club International S.A., founded four years ago as an association between the state-run Cuba Ron and France's Pernod Ricard.

The plant contains a distillery, areas for aging and mixing, as well as a bottling section, creating a fully equipped and modern plant capable of processing 30,000 liters a day.

Eight types of rum are produced here, classified according to the type of mixing and length of aging. These decisions are made by master rum-makers, a dwindling group of experts who nowadays number no more than 10 nationwide and hold the secrets of the trade close to their hearts.

Back in 1995, Havana Club only produced around 500,000 nine-liter boxes of rum a year, but it has grown at a steady pace to 4.2 million boxes in 2016.

Heavy investment

Currently, the plant is seeking to continue growing through heavy investment, which will be used to add two new aging areas, a third bottling assembly line and the expansion of storage for raw materials and finished products.

"We are the cradle of light rum," the plant's communications expert Yaima Rodriguez said. She has been in charge of promoting different types of rum to the world for seven years.

Thousands of barrels line the sides of the plant, placed with exquisite symmetry, for the drink to age and blend naturally, with no chemical additives to speed up the process, change the taste or alter its color.

All types of rum have a strong alcohol base, of between 74 and 76 degrees. They are then mixed with water and distilled sugar cane, before being aged in barrels of American white oak.

However, the final say rests with the master rum-makers, who are uniquely capable of coming up with new brands, although their recipes are kept sealed away.

According to the specialized Drinks International magazine, Havana Club rum ranks 21st among the top 100 producers of spirits, despite being unable to access the US market, which accounts for 40 percent of international demand.

For a few years now, the company has been developing its Habanista brand, with the intention of selling it to the US market once the country lifts its economic embargo against Cuba.

Executives believe that the opening-up of the US market would represent a true explosion for the Cuban rum sector.

 Raising a toast to rum's heartland

A bartender pours Cuban Havana Club rum as he prepares daiquiris at the Floridita bar in Havana. Experts predict a boom for the country's iconic drink when the United States finally ends the embargo.Desmond Boylan / Associated Press

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