Rum
525 products
525 products
Wooden Cork ships premium and aged rum nationwide — from smooth Caribbean sippers to bold Jamaican pot still, rare agricole, and collector bottles. The full lineup includes Diplomático, Zacapa, Appleton Estate, Mount Gay, Bacardi, Plantation, Foursquare, Hampden, Don Q, El Dorado, Brugal, Santa Teresa, Rhum Clément, Rhum J.M, and craft rum producers across the Caribbean and beyond.
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Rum has no single dominant production region, no universal raw material standard, and no consistent aging requirement — and that lack of restriction is what makes it the most varied spirit category in the world. Whiskey is defined by grain and oak aging; tequila by Blue Weber agave and Jalisco production standards. Rum can be made from fresh sugarcane juice (Rhum Agricole), molasses, or sugarcane syrup; distilled in pot stills, column stills, or hybrid combinations; aged in tropical warehouses where evaporation runs 8–12% per year or in cold-climate warehouses where aging is slower; and finished in any cask type from ex-bourbon to Cognac to Sherry. A Jamaican pot still rum aged 10 years in a tropical warehouse shares almost no flavor characteristics with a Peruvian grape-based Pisco, a Martinique Rhum Agricole, or a multi-decade Barbados column still expression — yet all fall under the rum category. This diversity is rum’s greatest strength for the serious drinker and its greatest challenge for the casual buyer.
Caribbean rum production breaks roughly into four regional styles. Jamaican rum is produced primarily in pot stills, generating very high ester content — the banana, overripe fruit, and “funk” character that defines Hampden, Worthy Park, and Appleton. Barbados rum (Foursquare, Mount Gay, St. Nicholas Abbey) uses both pot and column stills, producing a more balanced, elegant style with vanilla, tropical fruit, and wood from careful aging — often considered the most versatile Caribbean rum. Trinidadian rum (Angostura, Caroni) is column-still dominant, producing a cleaner, lighter spirit that takes well to long aging. Martinique and Guadeloupe produce Rhum Agricole from fresh sugarcane juice under AOC regulations — grassy, vegetal, mineral, and fundamentally different in base character from molasses-based rum. Dominican Republic rum (Brugal, Barcelo, Bermudez) is typically light, smooth, and approachable from continuous still production. Guyanese rum (El Dorado, from the Demerara Distillers’ iconic wooden Coffey and pot stills) produces a distinctively rich, dark, molasses-forward character with intense body.