Mar 102017
 

Photo copyright whisky.dk

Rumaniacs Review #029 | 0429

Issued around 2011, the El Dorado 25 YO received an update from the original 1980 version, with the blend tweaked a little. The enclosure and bottle remained the same, however, and unfortunately for the modern rumporn brigade of the millenial teens, not enough was done to upgrade the rum to what a current (2017) connoisseur would consider par for the courseunadulterated and cask strength. Instead, sticking with the tried and true formula which sold so well in the past, it remained 43%, and perhaps we should consider it a favour that the reported 51 g/L sugar of the 1980 version was reduced to 39 g/L here. I suppose that’s why this one scored incrementally better. But still, a 25 year old rum made from some of the most famous stills in the world should be a world beater. And it isn’t. Not even close.

Colourdark red-amber

Strength – 43%

NoseMarginally better than the 1980 (I tried both side by side). While still too anemic, it was vaguely crispier and fruitier, nuttier and brinier. Bags of anise and dark dried raisins, jam, molasses and caramel, given some edge with notes of tobacco and oak and some minerally ashy background. A very good nose.

PalateTakes the promise and trashes itworst part of the experience. This is a €400+ rum, aged 25 years (with all the attendant expectations such stats engender), and a depressingly liqueured might-have-been. If one strains the nose almost out of its original shape, one can sense (rather than actually taste) black cake and honey, vanilla and oak, philly cheese on toast, plus traditional fruits, raisins, anise, prunes, backed up by a nice creme brulee. And to that extent I liked it. But the sugarit was just too overbearingit was like you could never quite come to grips with what was on offer, not because of a low ABV (though this did absolutely nothing to enhance the experience) but because the sweet dampened everything. It made for a thick, muddy sort of mangrove swamp, instead of the crisp, complex, fast-flowing river that would have been better.

FinishToo short, to pale, too sweet. Nothing much going on here.

ThoughtsWhat the rum provides is still ahead of spiced nonsense like the Kraken or Don Papa, but that’s damning it with faint praise. Those cost 1/10th of this and have fewer pretensions, raise fewer expectations. Seven years ago I enjoyed the 25 YO El Dorados I tried because I knew less and was more satisfied with 40-43% rums. That time has now passed and I can see more failure than achievement here. One of my idols proved to have feet of clay, alas.

(81/100)

Other Rumaniacs liked this rum even less than I did. You can see their evaluations on the official website.


  2 Responses toEl Dorado 25 Year Old Rum (1986)”

  1. I tried this at the 2016 Copenhagen Rum & Whisky Festival with a friend. We thought it was ok but that was it. We also both agreed that it must have had sugar added to it and you just confirmed that. We tried many different rums that day so my only memory of it is ‘ok, sugar added and very far from being worth the price’. Going by memory I would say it would be a decent rum in the 50-80 Euro price bracket. All in all a waste of the aged rum they used to make it. We liked the Havana Club Unida better and it was 100 Euros cheaper.

    Aging by itself is also an interesting question. Where is the sweet spot? Mount Gay 1704 is a bit too much of liquid oak to me for example even if it tastes like a quality product….

    • 1. I thought it was just a little better than ok in that you could sense and almost taste the complexity and balance, even if coming to grips with it through the feather blanket of sugar was a chore….and that’s why I scored it above 75 (which would have been a middle of the road average score). However, as far as money-for value goes, utter waste of $$.

      2. Each person’s sweet spot and balance of age-with-flavour-with-sweet is different. The people doing most of the loud discussions on facebook are clearly those who have no use for sugar at all. Beginners on reddit, on the other hand, seem to start with the sweet and young stuff, and then move on.

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