MAURITIUS DRINK Rum
If you are travelling to Mauritius, make sure
you return with a bottle of rum. The island is home to the more elusive,
seasonal variety, different from the mass-produced stuff
As we sit facing the sea, incredibly shaded in
different hues of blue, one thing becomes instantly clear: in the laidback
tropics, the only thing to consider drinking is, well, a trop ical drink. I
have visions of piña coladas and mojitos float ing up in tall glasses as we
soak in the salt and sand.
Not that I am a cocktail drinker, really -vino
worship per is more like it. And Mauritius does have its share of heavy-duty
French, eminently drinkable South African pinotage, and Aussie red shiraz -both
by virtue of its history and geography. It's a country where the cultural
heritage is as mixed up as the dazzling colours of the landscape. But as we lie
on the white sand, or sail out into the deep blue with the breeze on our faces
in a cata maran, it is inconceivable to think of a drink that doesn't remind
you of the sea.
At first, it is just piña colada. Endless
glasses that taste innocuous enough. The first of the many I have on this trip
is quite the definitive one: the cocktail is lighter than what I have known
before; less coconut, more sugarcane juice, and there's even a hint of vanilla
(because, after all, this is also a pod country -both coffee and vanilla are
abundant and it is advisable to take back some of both home). It is entirely
possible to sit back on a deck chair or in the pool and sip your time away on
this island. The perfect beach life.
It is on my second day in Mauritius, however,
that I fig ure out the truth: it is rum, not rum-based cocktails, that defines
life and lifestyle in this country. Sailors, pirates and the Carib: These are
possibly the three words that spring to mind when you think rum. If you are
from India, “Old Monk“ would definitely be the other two (just trawl the depths
of the internet and you will be shocked at the passionate poetry India's best
known, best loved liquor brand seems to have inspired). But regardless of
whether you are acquainted with just the desi pleasures of “India's national
drink“, as it has been also described, or the super premium spirits from
Barbados, Cuba et al, now trending globally, Mauritian rum will surprise you.
Rediscovery of Rum
Globally, rum is on the upswing. Much like the
image makeover that gin and whisky got a couple of years ago, the rum story is
being painted over by a better, brighter brush. Instead of the rough drink for
sailors, aged and infused spirit is being packaged smarter, marketed harder and
consumed with more gusto and pride than ever.
“There is an increasing general interest in
flavours across the spirits industry, which has benefitted rum as well, opening
up new avenues for the drink. And these are both in the dark and white rum
categories,“ says Lisa Srao, founder of I Brands Beverages, an affordable
luxury liquor startup. The Bengaluru-based company manufactures and distributes
alcoholic beverages in India. “As it is a sugar-based product, it mixes well
with fruit juices or cocktails, which has a positive impact on the
category.Drinks like mojitos and daiquiris are very popular with women too,“
adds Srao, while pointing out that the spirit is usually appreciated by “those
who know their drink“.
Are there any “rules“ for appreciating rum? Like
wine? That is a tricky territory and literally one man's meat may be another's
poison. “Someone gifted me an outstanding 21-year-old Barbados rum. But to me
it tasted just like some fine malt,“ says a chef, a fan of Old Monk instead of
fancier, imported bottles. But whatever it is that you prefer, finding a
balance between “not too rough...but with an edge“ is difficult. Each drinker
may have his her own style and preferred flavour: dark, light, gold, sweet,
treacly, rounded, spicier... Rocky Mohan, executive director, Mohan Meakin, the
maker of Old Monk, explains: “Rum must have an edge to it and should never be
too smooth where most of the elements have been neutralised making it more of a
whiskycognac type [of drink], where one tends to judge by so-called
smoothness.“ But it is precisely for its “character“ that people are ostensibly
rediscovering rum globally.
Before I set foot in Mauritius, I am only
vaguely aware of all this.
Rhum Drum
While not many know about the “rhum“ from
Mauritius, the relatively young industry here is thriving and its boutiquey
offerings increasingly sought after. Like in the West Indies, Mauritian rum too
is the fallout of sugarcane cultivation and indentured labour. The dark
underbelly of the now trendy spirit was, of course, the slave trade. At its
height, it worked like a triangulation: Carib colonies sent barrels of molasses
-a byproduct of sugar production -to Europe, where this was distilled into rum,
which was used to buy slaves from Africa, who were then shipped to the West
Indies to work on sugar plantations.
Mauritius was the first place where a new social
ex periment began. Instead of slavery, which was banned after the French
Revolution, indentured labourers, working on contracts, were brought to work in
the plantations by British colonialists. Shiploads of people from Bihar, Tamil
Nadu, Maharashtra and other regions in India arrived at what is today called
the “Aapravasi Ghat“.The “Immigration Depot“, the first in the erstwhile
British Empire, in Port Louis is a Unesco World Heritage Site today. And as we
take in the brick walls, tiny cell-like spaces, as well as ledgers of contracts
the labour force entered into with plantation owners, the sheer scale (and
injustice) of this “social experiment“ hit us.
From this Immigration Depot, labour was
distributed to work in sugar plantations throughout the British Empire. From
1849 to 1923, half a million Indians passed through this depot. The lives they
made for themselves in alien countries changed societies. Perhaps nowhere as
much as in Mauritius, where a majority of the island's population is
Indian-origin, where French, British, Dutch and African bloodlines have mixed
and cultures have blended to give us chilli bites (dal pakora like fritters)
and crepes on the same table and where everyone we meet is proudly “Mauritian“,
speaking that wonderful, mixed-up language, Creole.
Rhum fits right into this lifestyle; rooted in
the island's history but very much a part of its modern-day, affluent lives as
well. Every home and certainly every restaurant has its own blend of rum. The
house rums are infused with coffee, lime, vanilla and spices. And almost everyone
we meet here is a rum expert! It is only in the 1850s, we are told, that one
Pierre Charles François Harel floated a local distillery and, as the story
goes, pinched cane from the Pamplemousses Garden Estate he was managing! Even
today, there are only six distilleries on the island. But what is exceptional
is that at least two of them also produced rhum agricole, the elusive
“agricultural rum“, made from sugarcane juice, seasonal and more prized than
the “rhum industriel“ all of us are used to.
The distilled, mass-produced stuff that
dominates retail shelves around the world, accounting for almost 90% of rum,
has to be mandatorily made from molasses, a byproduct of sugar production. In
fact, Mauritius is one of the few places, where you do have agricultural rhum,
a simpler, more flavourful product, now protected under French and EU laws with
an “Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée“ (controlled designation of origin) tag
-that licenses use of the term for goods specific to a certain region
(Champagne, Dijon mustard, Roquefort cheese et al). And there is no better way
to appreciate this than take a tour of the estates that produce this
traditionally.
Touring the Estates
One rainy afternoon, we drive down to St Aubin,
a pretty château, set in the midst of a garden, on the southern part of the
island. Named after one of its first owners, the estate has been cultivating
its own sugarcane since 1819.There is an artisanal distillery on the premises.
St Aubin is one of the three distilleries where rhum agricole is produced in
Mauritius. Sugarcane is manually harvested -ostensibly at dawn, the juiciest
cane selected, pressed and the juice left to ferment into a wine. This is then
distilled in a traditional copper alembic. The pot still, as it is called, is
an old way of distilling and allows for the retention of flavours of the
original ingredients, unlike the modern column distillation, where the spirit
obtained is much purer.The resulting spirit is used as a base to age and blend
and make different types of rhum.
Both vanilla and coffee are also grown at St
Aubin. And both find their way into the agricultural rhum. You can take back
bottles of the popular vanilla rhum and coffee rhum from St Aubin -both make
for great bases for cocktails. Last Christmas, for instance, I used the vanilla
rhum to spike the hot chocolate that I make and it is a match made in
(tropical) heaven. Or you can sip the rhums by themselves, as neat little
shots.
Rhumerie de Chamarel, near the famous touristy
spot “seven coloured earth“ is the other estate where sugarcane, vanilla, tea
and so on all grow and where traditional rhum is produced in a boutiquey way.
The rhumeries have tasting rooms attached and you can sample what you please.
Then there are the bigger distilleries -Grays, Indian Ocean Rum Company and
Oxenham -all of which mass produce the distilled spirit that we know. But
whichever one you try, Mauritian rum has a distinct character to it: sweeter
and smoother, would perhaps describe it.
Anoothi
Vishal
ETM22MAR15
No comments:
Post a Comment