Wray & Nephew Overproof Rum
#1
Posted 10 December 2007 - 08:15 PM
Well, I finished up a bottle a few months ago and bought a new one, and, man oh man, the new one sucks. What had been a fruity, potent front nose is now a garish, punitive burnt rubber tire assault; what had been a layered effect, with heat giving way to nuance, is now a safe tossed from a cliff onto your wily noggin.
It's a tragedy, I tell you, similar to Gaja cranking out Thunderbird or my foie gras order from D'Artagnan replaced with Frito-Lay chili cheese dip in a can. What the hell happened here? Have Wray and his nephew been abducted by aliens with horrible palates? Or did I score one or two bottles of mislabeled wonder and have now, finally, tasted the true dreck?
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#2
Posted 13 December 2007 - 11:43 AM
#3
Posted 13 December 2007 - 09:30 PM
What had been a fruity, potent front nose is now a garish, punitive burnt rubber tire assault; what had been a layered effect, with heat giving way to nuance, is now a safe tossed from a cliff onto your wily noggin.
I can't say your new bottle sounds entirely outside of my experience with the brand.
It is unaged industrial rum after all. I don't think it is even really blended, is it? Maybe they rest it for a day or two in stainless tanks before putting it in bottles.
Frankly, when I've tried it I seem to get a hangover before I get drunk.
It's got a certain rough charm, but it's more like a boxing match than a purring cat.
I don't know, you might want to let it sit around for a while...Sometimes the nose on rums seems to mellow a bit after a month or two of being open. Either that or I just get used to the funk.
edit - Oh, funny to look at the picture in the food blog! The rum still had a metal closure. You have had that around the house for a while. I think it has had a plastic top for at least 5 years.
Edited by eje, 13 December 2007 - 09:34 PM.
#4
Posted 14 December 2007 - 05:58 AM
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#5
Posted 14 December 2007 - 10:05 AM
So perhaps I'm inadvertently bottle-aging W&N rum -- and surely the only person in the world who tries to drink the stuff neat on occasion. I should be able to deal with the ridicule, I suppose, if I'm an iconoclast, right?
i drink it straight every now and then to the horror of my coworkers... delicious only on the right occasions...
#6
Posted 14 December 2007 - 10:43 AM
You and the vast majority of Jamaican drinkers.So perhaps I'm inadvertently bottle-aging W&N rum -- and surely the only person in the world who tries to drink the stuff neat on occasion. I should be able to deal with the ridicule, I suppose, if I'm an iconoclast, right?
Apparently it accounts for 90% of the rum sold in Jamaica*.
Personally, I was kind of surprised Jamaican Rum wasn't called for in the Duppy Cocktail. Would make a lot more sense than Scotch.
*Source, Appleton website.
#7
Posted 14 December 2007 - 11:19 AM
You and the vast majority of Jamaican drinkers.So perhaps I'm inadvertently bottle-aging W&N rum -- and surely the only person in the world who tries to drink the stuff neat on occasion. I should be able to deal with the ridicule, I suppose, if I'm an iconoclast, right?
Apparently it accounts for 90% of the rum sold in Jamaica*.
Personally, I was kind of surprised Jamaican Rum wasn't called for in the Duppy Cocktail. Would make a lot more sense than Scotch.
*Source, Appleton website.
so with 90% of jamaica behind it the recipe is not likely to change...
i knew the "duppy" by the name the "sunset gun" which i read on a blog and thoroughly enjoyed... i'd use a rum like appleton vx if i didn't use a whiskey...
'tis the season for that kind of a drink...
#8
Posted 16 December 2007 - 04:33 PM
Also, typically, they don't mix it. If you order a rum & Coke outside of a tourist area, then you get a little cup of W&N and a cup of Coke. Good stuff :)
#9
Posted 16 December 2007 - 06:35 PM
#10
Posted 09 January 2008 - 10:52 AM
Brown-Forman Sales and Marketing Agreements with Wray & Nephew and Distell to End
Brown-Forman Corporation announced today that its U.S. agreement with Wray & Nephew Group Limited of Jamaica and its agreement with Distell Group Limited of South Africa will be ending. The decisions are unrelated and conclude six-year marketing relationships between Brown-Forman and the two separate companies.
In the U.S. agreement with Wray & Nephew, Brown-Forman has marketed and sold Appleton, Wray & Nephew, and Coruba rums since October, 2001. Brown-Forman and Wray & Nephew have grown the total range of rums in the U.S. from annual sales of 96,500 nine-liter cases in 2001 to approximately 180,000 cases in 2007. The strategic marketing focus on the premium Appleton Estate range yielded growth from under 20,000 cases in 2001 to a current annual total of over 50,000 nine-liter cases.
Brown-Forman will represent Wray & Nephew brands through April, 2008 or until Wray & Nephew reaches agreement with a new importing partner.
#11
Posted 18 January 2008 - 12:55 PM
all they apparently make as promo are extremely cool calenders...
the scene on the calender...
a concrete bar on a jamaican street corner
two roughnecks playing dominos while sipping over proof rum out of plastic cups...
and then three of the most pornographic looking barely dressed women posing and following along wth the game...
its even autographed by the models...! passion, tamara, shauna...
what a brand image...! if i every get any of my liqueurs to market i'm copying their branding strategy... i'm gonna call my wormwood vermouth "krunk juice" and take it right to the club...
overproof rum is still the most under stocked and under utilized cocktail tool... i love a spoonful floated on a drink for its aromatic funk or a single ounce to power a drink showcasing close to non-alcoholic mixers with intensity... (i miss my kola nut tonic... its still being reformulated because its dyes where banned in the U.S.)
#12
Posted 20 January 2008 - 07:39 AM
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I took my potatoes down to be mashed
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#13
Posted 20 January 2008 - 12:06 PM
yup I have great memories of W & N
Edited by hummingbirdkiss, 20 January 2008 - 04:44 PM.
#14
Posted 16 August 2008 - 05:49 PM
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I took my potatoes down to be mashed
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#15
Posted 16 April 2012 - 07:37 PM
ETA: anyone ever made a mojito with one of these?
Edited by Hassouni, 16 April 2012 - 08:19 PM.
#16
Posted 18 April 2012 - 04:20 AM
#17
Posted 23 April 2013 - 08:46 PM
I dunno, it's hard to beat post 12. Imagine dropping this, completely out of context, into a conversation:
... when making a float for a Test Pilot recently, I noticed that the rubber nose was gone and the floral notes were there ....
eGullet will make me go bankrupt yet. I'd read several things about W&N here, so of course last weekend we had to buy some. First drink last night - wow! (White Witch - rum, Cointreau, crème de cacao, lime)
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#18
Posted 23 April 2013 - 11:26 PM
Oh wow. Post #13 deserves all the love.
”In Demerara some of the rum producers have a unique custom of placing chunks of raw meat in the casks to assist in aging, to absorb certain impurities, and to add a certain distinctive character.” -Peter Valaer, "Foreign and Domestic Rum," 1937
#19
Posted 24 April 2013 - 01:02 AM
this might just be my desert island rum....
#20
Posted 24 April 2013 - 08:29 PM
My workmate and I are having fun slipping "Wray" into everything we say and make.
"Tomorrow I'm going to push DaiquiWrays"
#21
Posted 24 April 2013 - 08:53 PM
Wray & Nephew Cosmos. Wray & Nephew Lemon Drops. $500 dollar Champagne with a float of Wray & Nephew Overproof.
”In Demerara some of the rum producers have a unique custom of placing chunks of raw meat in the casks to assist in aging, to absorb certain impurities, and to add a certain distinctive character.” -Peter Valaer, "Foreign and Domestic Rum," 1937
#22
Posted 25 April 2013 - 04:11 AM
W&N Martini? (Rum shaken and strained between to tins, served in a conical glass filled to being convex, garnished with a lime twist, jerk seasoning rim.)
Edited by EvergreenDan, 25 April 2013 - 04:11 AM.
#23
Posted 25 April 2013 - 07:18 AM
I'd drink that.
”In Demerara some of the rum producers have a unique custom of placing chunks of raw meat in the casks to assist in aging, to absorb certain impurities, and to add a certain distinctive character.” -Peter Valaer, "Foreign and Domestic Rum," 1937
#24
Posted 25 April 2013 - 08:25 AM
Wray & Nephew Cosmos. Wray & Nephew Lemon Drops. $500 dollar Champagne with a float of Wray & Nephew Overproof.
About seven years ago I worked at a place with a cheese cake factory across the street. Somehow the girls started coming over for cocktails between their shifts. Despite being clad in white these women were wild. Anyhow, I slowly got them all addicted to Wray & Nephews cocktails to the horror of everyone else I worked with. The other bartender would refuse to make the drink or he'd use plain white rum. And the girls would complain.
"tropical cocktail"
1.5 oz. wray & nephews
.5 oz. goslings "old rum"
.75 oz. grenadine
.75 oz. tart unsugared passion fruit juice
dash angostura bitters
#25
Posted 25 April 2013 - 09:06 AM
What is the Gosling's "old rum"? I'll have to use frozen passion fruit puree for this, but it sounds damn tasty... in a fruity way. ![]()
#26
Posted 25 April 2013 - 10:15 AM
What is the Gosling's "old rum"? I'll have to use frozen passion fruit puree for this, but it sounds damn tasty... in a fruity way.
the "old rum" was a special bottling that they did. I think it is still around in some markets. I'm pretty sure all their stuff is made in Guyana so it is basically just a nice older Guyana rum.
the passion fruit juice we were using back then was something marketed to pastry chefs as a sorbet base. it was delicious stuff with enough acidity that it could substitute for citrus in a cocktail.
Edited by bostonapothecary, 25 April 2013 - 10:17 AM.
#27
Posted 26 April 2013 - 04:29 AM
Because I'm the highly suggestible type, the revival of this thread combined with a nearly-empty bottle of homemade Swedish Punch that is taking up more than its fair share of room in my refrigerator resulted in my making a Doctor Cocktail with Wray and Nephew last night. Which, if you haven't done it, is pretty worth doing.
#28
Posted 26 April 2013 - 01:22 PM
the passion fruit juice we were using back then was something marketed to pastry chefs as a sorbet base. it was delicious stuff with enough acidity that it could substitute for citrus in a cocktail.
Boiron's by any chance?? I've used the mango and the blood orange in cocktails to excellent effect. I'm sure the passionfruit is equally delicious. Goya or La Fe make a pretty good frozen passionfruit puree you can find in most Latino markets or larger supermarkets with a significant Hispanic clientele.
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