Single Cane Estate Rums Consuelo Dominican Republic Bacardi 100 cl 40%
There's something refreshingly simple about the idea. One sugar cane. One region. One character. Not a blend of the best from everywhere — just exactly what grows from Dominican coastal soil, and nothing else.
Single Cane Estate Rums is Bacardi's take on what happens when rum is treated with the same seriousness as single malt whisky. The Consuelo expression comes from sugar cane plantations along the coast of south-eastern Dominican Republic — an area with plenty of sunshine and cool Caribbean sea breezes, which together produce a sugar cane with a softer, more fruity character than what comes from the highlands.
The rum is column distilled from molasses and aged in oak casks for five years. It's not a long maturation by Caribbean standards, but it's long enough to give a proper body and to smooth out any sharp alcohol edges. The result is a calm, well-balanced rum — not a showman, but one that actually tastes of the place it comes from.
Nose: Honey and toffee upfront, some dried stone fruit and nuts behind. There's a gentle floral note and a hint of tea that makes it all a bit more interesting than it could have been.
Palate: Soft from the start. Honey again, dark cocoa, oats and a touch of citrus. It's creamy and round — not complex in the nerdy way, but genuinely tasty with a nice texture.
Finish: Fades quietly with light sweetness and a discreet pull of oak. No abrupt ending.
Smooth · Honey · Cocoa · Creamy · Light citrus · Floral notes · Oaky
Facts
Name: Single Cane Estate Rums Consuelo
Distillery: Consuelo Distillery / Bacardi
Region/Country: South-eastern Dominican Republic, Caribbean
Type: Aged rum
ABV: 40%
Size: 1000 ml
Distillate: Molasses, column distilled
Cask type: Oak casks
Maturation: 5 years
Serving suggestion: Best as it is — possibly with a single ice cube
Did you know? The Single Cane Estate Rums range was launched in 2015 exclusively as a travel retail product in selected European airports — including Copenhagen. The idea was to give rum the same terroir thinking that the whisky world has had for decades. Whether it worked, you can taste for yourself.