Diplomatico Rum Tasting and Dinner at Barcelona Wine Bar (South End, Boston, MA)
I recently had the opportunity to taste the line of Diplomatico Rums at a tasting and dinner held at Barcelona Wine Bar in Boston's South End with Diplomatico's master distiller, Maestro Gilberto Briceño.
Diplomatico was founded in 1959 and adhere to the traditional Venezuelan way of making rum. They have their own yeast strain for fermentation and use sugar cane molasses and honey from sugar cane for their rums. Diplomatico's distillation process differs from most Caribbean countries which use column distillation. Diplomatico uses column distillation for their light rum, copper pot (to get heavy alcohols), and batch kettle for medium alcohols. The copper pot tradition came about because Seagram's used to make whiskey in Venezuela.
Anyway, the rums. We tasted six different rums from Diplomatico.
This is their youngest product, which is aged up to 4 years and a mix of light and heavy alcohols (which they get from the different distillation processes). The rum itself has a hint of vanilla and with light sweetness. This rum is good for cocktails and a great value at about $15 a bottle!
The white rum is made from 50% pot distilled, 50% column distilled spirit. Unique to Diplomatico, this white rum actually had 6 years of aging (most white rums in the market are 6-12 months aged), then they do sieve filtration to get the clear color back. As a comparison, Venezuelan government requires a minimum of 2 years aging. There's a lot of fruitiness and coconut notes. The rum is sweet but complex.
This rum was aged in sherry barrels from Spain up to 8 years. Lightly sweet, smooth, more oaky, with hints of citrus peel. Made up of 50% heavy alcohol. Good for mai tai and Manhattan variations.
This is their flagship rum and is best for sipping. This rum is aged up to 12 years. Sweet caramel, vanilla, and coffee notes. Retails for about $30 - again, a great buy.
This is the 12-year rum aged an extra year in sherry cask and has 43% ABV. Light sweetness with some bitterness. Diplomatico only produce 40,000 bottles of this rum per year.
This rum is somehow more like port wine and has a smoky (leather) notes. Light sweetness, well balanced, with a hint of dried fruit (prunes). They produce only 5000 bottles per year.


Bacon-wrapped quail, sherry jus. Can't go wrong.

Marinated beets with mint chimichurri Omni-pair

And ... tableside jamon service! This jamon is a special one since it's a Mangalitsa pork leg.


Seared red snapper, blood orange, snap peas, pea tendrils paired with Daiquiri Royale


For dessert, different Venezuelan chocolates, as well as a Chocolate pudding with bananas foster puree paired with The Chocolate Factory.

The drink was also paired with three different Venezuelan cacao (60%, 70%, and Chuao (DOC chocolate from Venezuela).
This last drink, which I think was my favorite, is inspired by a Venezuelan tradition called El Ritual, whic his how they take a shot of rum. You dip one side of a lime wedge in brown sugar, the other side in instant coffee powder. Suck on the lime wedge and take your shot of aged rum!
![]() |
Thanks to Maestra Briceño and the Barcelona's bar and kitchen team! |
0 comments:
Post a Comment