Tiki’s Missing Ingredient: “Martinique Rum” of Yore

One of the hallmarks of the modern Tiki revival is the obsessive attention paid to recreating the classic recipes of Donn Beach and Trader Vic using the most authentic ingredients one can lay their hands on. But what if I told you that one of those ingredients — Martinique rum — is not at all the same today as it was when Donn Beach called for it in recipes like the Donga Punch, circa 1937?

This isn’t the first time that Tiki’s deep thinkers have raised this question. Martin Cate gets all due credit for noting that Trader Vic’s rum lists of the era strongly suggest that the “Martinique rum” Trader Vic referenced in his recipes was likely not rhum agricole. And it was also Cate who suggested that Denizen Rum use a bit of Martinique molasses rum in its Merchant’s Reserve blend. (Merchant’s Reserve raison d’etre is to replicate the flavors of the rums Vic used in his Mai Tai after his bars exhausted the available supplies of Wray & Nephew 17- and 15-year, which they had previously used.)

I agree with Cate’s seminal assessment regarding “Martinique rum” in the Mai Tai. But I’ve always believed there was more to the story than just the Mai Tai and what Vic had available to him.

I’ve recently spent a considerable amount of time trawling through French-language rum writings of the nineteenth and early twentieth century, leading some loosely connected thoughts to gel. Our strong association of Martinique with rhum agricole only came about in very recent decades; before that, “Martinique rum” was a very different beast.

While this observation is relevant to Vic’s 1950s-era Mai Tai, it goes much deeper. What about classic recipes like the Three Dots and a Dash where Martinique rum gets top billing? And more importantly, what about golden-era recipes which solely use Martinique rum, like the Donga Punch, Martinique Swizzle, or Last Rites? [i]

Have we been making our Donga…wronga? And if so, which rum(s) should we be using?

To answer this properly, we’ll need to go back in time.

(Editorial note: In what follows, some of the quoted passages are English-language translations of the original French text.)

Winding Back the Clock

In decades past, the rums exported from Caribbean islands were often different than the rum they drank locally. Such was the case on Martinique (and Guadeloupe) for many years.

You may have read that some Martinique estates began producing cane juice rum (rhum agricole) as early as the 1880s, which is true. But the overwhelming majority of rum exported from Martinique remained molasses-based for nearly a century after that. In fact, before the 1902 eruption of Mount Pelee, Martinique was the largest rum exporter in the world, and the rum exported was molasses-based.

The rhum agricole made on Martinique remained on the island, consumed by locals, and known as inhabitant rum. It wasn’t until the early 1960s that Martinique’s rhum agricole production overtook molasses-based production. Fun fact: Even today, Guadeloupe, Martinique’s French Caribbean sibling, makes roughly the same amount of cane juice and molasses rums.

In his seminal 1939 book Le Rhum Sa Fabrication Sa Chimie, J.G.A. Guillaume explains Martinique’s rhum agricole landscape and why so little agricole rum was exported: [ii]

The rum of the agricultural distillery is for the most part intended for local consumption and consumed either as grappe blanch (unaged) or aged (rhum vieux).

This rum is little appreciated for export because of its cane juice taste, and also by the habit that we have taken in the metropolis to consume and call rum a more full-bodied product.

In short, the folks in mainland France (the “metropole”) didn’t like the flavor of cane juice rum.

In those days, most bottled and branded Martinique rum came from mainland European blenders who imported molasses-based rum from the island. If very little rhum agricole made it to France, what are the odds that Don and Vic had easy access to rhum agricole thousands of miles away in California? Not very high.

Naturally, this leads us to ask: What did the Martinique rums that Donn and Vic had access to taste like? 

Tasting Notes

An early glimpse of Martinique rums of that era available in the US comes courtesy of a Schenley Import Company catalog from 1939: [iv]

RHUM NEGRITA (Les Fils de P. Bardinet, shipper)

Martinique in the West Indies, and the Reunion Islands off the coast of Africa, both have volcanic soil rich with lava ash on which is produced sugar cane famous for the distilling of rum.

These two rums, after voyaging over 10,000 nautical miles to Bordeaux, France, are there blended to produce the rich, soft, smooth rum known throughout the world as Rhum Negrita.

Rhum Negrita, dark and pungent, has a flavor unlike that of any other rum. Rum devotees take it straight, to enjoy the rare flavor. A dash of Rhum Negrita adds delicious, sophisticated flavor to desserts, meats, fruit compotes and sauces.

Rhum Negrita makes a delicious Old Fashioned cocktail, an excellent Collins and highball. In such drinks as Planter’s Punch and Tom and Jerry the flavor of Rhum Negrita is unsurpassed.

“Dark and pungent” doesn’t sound like rhum agricole. And the fact that it’s “unsurpassed” in a Planter’s Punch, which is typically a Jamaican rum forte, is worth noting. Also, take note that Negrita was already a blend of Reunion Island and Martinique rum. It wasn’t just Martinique-made rum.

Another early glimpse came from New York’s The Wine and Food Society, Inc., which hosted a “Holiday Tasting of Rums” in New York’s Waldorf-Astoria ballroom (swanky, no?) on December 3, 1940. Besides a Negrita description cribbed from the Schenley catalog, it also describes another Martinique rum: [v]

Bellows and Co., Inc: MARTINIQUE: This Rum acquires in part its particular flavor through storage in used molasses casks, and is reminiscent of Jamaica Rums but with a less pronounced flavor.

The storage in molasses casks is intriguing. Possibly the guide confused molasses with caramel? It’s not so far-fetched. While the Negrita and Bellows tasting notes are not conclusive, neither seems to describe aged rhum agricole.

Trader Vic Weighs In on Martinique Rum

As luck would have it, Trader Vic himself weighed in a few years later in his book, Trader Vic’s Book of Food & Drink (1946). In the recipe for the Dr. Funk cocktail, Vic writes:

2 ½ ounces dark Jamaica or Martinique rum (Red Heart or Myers’s, or Rum Negrita)

There you have it – Rum Negrita, the most famous French rum for many years, was roughly equivalent to Red Heart or Myers Jamaican rum. At least in Vic’s opinion. No one would say either Red Heart or Myers’s of that era (or today) brings to mind an aged agricole rhum.

Elsewhere in the same book, Vic provides a reasonably good overview of Martinique rum, including tasting notes: [vi]

Martinique Rums: Commonly known as French rums, they are usually heavy in body, coffee-colored, very similar to Jamaica rums, but in many cases have the dry burned flavor of the Demerara. This flavor, however, is very faint. The rum produced in Martinique is, in many cases, shipped to France, where it is aged and reshipped as French rum. One of the finest rums is Rhum St. James, made on the plantations of St. James. Outstanding Brands:

  • Bellows Martinique
  • Black Head
  • Rhum St. James
  • Barum
  • Casa Grazia
  • Goslings Martinique
  • Rhum Charleston
  • Rhum Chauvet
  • Rhum Risetta
  • Rhum Negrita

Martin Cate has previously made note that the “coffee-colored” description caught his eye.[vii] What jumps out at me from this passage is “the dry burned flavor of the Demerara” portion: This sounds like a noticeable caramel flavor, which the Demerara distilleries were also known for. Caramel could explain the coffee color.

From Vic’s list of rums, only two would seem to exist in modern times: Negrita and St. James. Were they rhum agricole in the pre-World War II era? Let’s see what the history books tell us.

St. James Martinique Rum

Saint-James Martinique Rum bottle
Rhum Saint-James, 1890

In the aforementioned Le Rhum Sa Fabrication Sa Chimie, Guillaume notes two St. James distilleries on Martinique: one at St. Pierre, the other at Lamentin. He also notes:

Saint-James whose factories in the Colony work only cooked cane juice. It is these rums that are closest to battery syrup rums.

A few paragraphs later, Guillaume describes the process St. James uses:

This juice thus clarified, is filtered, then concentrated at 35° Baume; it is then a clear and fragrant syrup, carrying in it all the aromas of the cane that will be found in the final product.

35° Baume is equivalent to 65 Brix, approximately the same as the “rich” (2:1) simple syrup we use in cocktails. Although there may be more to the story than Guillaume’s book provides, the available evidence suggests that the St. James rum of that era wasn’t an agricole rum as we know it today.

Negrita

In 2002, historian Hélène Mbolidi-Baron wrote about the Martinique rum market of the 1970s: [viii]

Conditioned by decades of dominance of amber molasses rum, especially Negrita, the French are little aware of the types of rums. Until the seventies (and even until now, for many of them), the difference between agricultural and industrial rums or between white rums and old is inaccessible to them.

Negrita Martinique Rum

I have many more accounts of French rum-making in my collection of historical writings. None suggest that Martinique rhum agricole was what Donn and Vic would have found available in Tiki’s golden era.

A Brief Regrouping

At this point we’ve established that the Martinique rums used by the Tiki forefathers in the mid-1900s wasn’t rhum agricole. Naturally, we then ask, “What rum should we use today to replicate those recipes?”

To answer this question, we need to chase down all available leads, which will lead to us broadening our search beyond Martinique. The little bit of spirit science that follows brings us to some unexpected conclusions.

Grand Arôme

Previously I mentioned that Denizen’s Merchant’s Reserve rum contains some Martinique molasses rum in its blend. More specifically, it includes a style of rum known as grand arôme, made at Martinique’s Le Galion distillery.

That begs the question: Were the Martinique rums available to Tiki’s forefathers perhaps a grand arôme style rum? Much as I enjoy the Merchant’s Reserve blend, the historical evidence strongly suggests Donn and Vic weren’t mixing with grand arôme.

Many who’ve tried grand arôme rum acknowledge its similarity to Jamaica’s “continental” rums, i.e., those with ester levels of 700 gr/hlAA or above. Jamaica’s continental rums were (and still are) essentially rum flavor concentrate. Made exclusively for export to Europe (Germany, mainly), these rums were blended with neutral alcohol to make knock-off “Jamaican rum,” labeled as rum verschnitt. Today, Amsterdam’s E&A Scheer imports and sells grand arôme rum in various blends.

Historical records and modern experts indicate that imbibers of that era weren’t drinking continental-style Jamaican rum by itself; one couldn’t just buy a bottle in a shop. (While some rum geeks today are making Mai Tais with DOK and TECC Jamaican rums, it certainly wasn’t what Donn, Vic, or anybody else was doing back in the day.)

Now, consider our knowledge of continental rum with this passage from E.A. Pairault’s seminal 1903 Le Rhum et sa Fabrication:[ix]

The spent wash that the [French] distillers of the West Indies call “vinasse” and the English “dunder” is the residue of the distillation of fermented musts

Vinasse must be considered as a raw material, because in the conditions where we operate in the French West Indies, it is necessary to obtain these rums with a full-bodied but not very sweet aroma, which are sought after by French importers, only because, thanks to this aroma, they can by addition of industrial alcohol and water make 3 to 4 barrels of rum with just one.

What Pairault describes is the French equivalent of Jamaica’s continental rum — note the citation of dunder. These French rums were aromatic beasts intended for blending rather than everyday drinking.

A few decades later, the noted agricultural writer Désiré Kervegant addressed the same topic: [x]

Rums grand arôme (“big aroma”) constitute a special category of spirits of cane mix, characterized by an accentuated bouquet due to the presence of a high proportion of impurities (higher alcohols, acids, ethers). Their production appears to be limited to Jamaica and Martinique, the latter being the only source currently known on the metropolitan market.Likely to retain their specific flavor, after blending with relatively high amounts of neutral alcohol, they were considered to encourage fraud.

The “fraud” in this case was the creation of the French equivalent of rum verschnitt, i.e., neutral spirit flavored with a bit of highly aromatic rum.

There’s scant evidence that the grand arôme rums of the era were used for anything other than blending. If someone has a 1940s era bottled grand arôme rum, it would certainly be of intense interest.

Le Galion

Today, Martinique grand arôme rum is made by only one distillery – Le Galion. The distillery does not make rhum agricole, and the molasses rums it makes are mainly sold in bulk. However, it’s well worth noting there is a geographical indication (GI), Rhum Baie du Galion, for the rum made at Le Galion. Among the GI’s interesting aspects are its requirements for grand arôme, which include a minimum level of esters and volatile substances:

Grand arôme rum must have volatile substances (other than ethyl and methyl alcohols) of at least 800 gr/hlAA, and an ester content of at least 500 gr/hlAA.

A Jamaican rum with similar esters and volatile substance levels, such as Rum Fire, would be considered quite funky. However, those 500/800 levels are just minimums, and even funkier grand arôme rum is possible. The grand arôme that Le Galion sells is offered in small bottles for the baking/flavoring market rather than drinking. (For more information about Le Galion and its grand arôme rum, check out Lance’s and Nico’s writings.)

Elsewhere in Le Galion’s GI are definitions for “white rum” and “brown rum,” distinct from grand arôme. Their minimum required volatile compounds are 225 gr/hlAA. That level makes for a bold and noticeable rum, but certainly not grand arôme.

Furthermore, 225 gr/hlAA is the minimum for any French rum to use the rhum traditionnel designation, regardless of whether it originated from cane juice, syrup, or molasses. (Aged rum has a higher limit.) Dig deep enough on Le Galion’s site, and you’ll find that Le Galion sells a white and brown rum that aren’t rhum agricole. Have we found what we’re looking for?

Unfortunately, Le Galion’s rum isn’t readily available, especially outside of France. Are we at a dead end?

Other Options

French rum regulations define two broad categories of rum, Traditionnel agricole and Traditionnel de sucrerie. Agricole rum is made from cane juice, while sucrerie rums are made from molasses or syrups and must meet the minimum volatile compound requirements mentioned earlier.

While Martinique-made sucrerie rum isn’t readily available, what about Guadeloupe rum? Guadeloupe makes much more sucrerie rum than Martinique, but it’s mostly sold as bulk rum and flies under the radar. Currently Guadeloupe has two distilleries making sucrerie rhum: Sucrerie Rhumerie de Marie-Galante and S.I.S. Bonne Mère. Unfortunately, it’s challenging to track down bottled versions of those rums as well.

But wait, we’re not at a dead-end just yet!

Many of we rum enthusiasts forget about Réunion Island, a very long-haul flight (or two) for most of us. This French island in the Indian Ocean makes a prodigious amount of rum. Yet the overwhelming majority of Réunion’s rum isn’t rhum agricole, so it also flies below the radar of most enthusiasts. Much of Réunion’s rum winds up in blended rums like Negrita, but not all.

There are three distilleries on Réunion Island: Isautier, Savanna, and Rivière du Mât. Of the three, Rivière du Mât is the largest, by a substantial margin. Luckily, all three distilleries produce eponymously named rum brands, meaning they’re reasonably available, at least in Europe.

The question is: How close are they to the Negrita, Bellows, and St. James of yore? That’s a challenging question to answer. If one could locate a “dark” version of these rums, i.e., heavily influenced by caramel coloring, they could be close to the Martinique rums exported many decades ago.

So, What Martinique Rum Should I Use in My Donga Punch?

Having gone a bit further afield than you may have expected, let’s return to the original question: When a classic Tiki recipe specifies “Martinique rhum,” what could you use to faithfully reproduce the flavor?

The answer may not be particularly satisfying.

If you desire to use authentic Martinique-made rum, your options are limited. Le Galion’s white and brown rums aren’t readily available, and grand arôme by itself isn’t a close match to an old-style Martinique rum.

If you expand your criteria to other French rum-making islands, the options widen considerably. But are these rums “coffee-colored” and “pungent,” as Vic described them? We certainly need some side-by-side tastings to form an opinion.

If we dispense with geographical requirements, we can look at the “tastes like” option. Tasting notes from the 1940s describe Martinique rum as “similar” to Jamaican rum. Others note its deep color, suggesting substantial caramel to give it dark coloring.

Consider “dark” Jamaican rums with noticeable caramel notes that aren’t over-the-top funky. Options that come to mind are Coruba, Blackwell, and Jamaican-made Captain Morgan. Slightly more upscale is Worthy Park 109, although its alcoholic strength is a bit higher than the others.

What I’ve outlined above doesn’t undeniably answer the original question. However, it has laid out a framework to help us evaluate possible options. Perhaps someone with a collection of old Martinique rum from the first half of the twentieth century will assist a group of experts to evaluate them alongside today’s rums. It’s possible there’s nothing quite like those Old Martinique rums made today.

As a final note, none of the above is to suggest that aged rhum agricole doesn’t have a place in Tiki. Such rums have wonderful flavors that work well in many classic recipes like the Mai Tai. The beauty of Tiki is that it evolves and incorporates new flavors that weren’t available when the Beachcomber and the Trader created their legacies.


A special shout-out to Brian Maxwell of Pittsburgh’s Hidden Harbor, who took the beautiful picture of a Donga Punch as made today.


[i] Beachbum Berry’s books and Total Tiki app have these recipes.

[ii] Guillaume. Le Rhum Sa Fabrication Sa Chimie, 1939.

[iii] Aka “Ti punch”

[iv] “Wine without frills: everyday enjoyment of imported wines and spirits.” Schenley Import Company. New York: Schenley Import Corp., 1939

[v] “The Wine & Food Society, Inc. PRESENTS A Holiday Tasting of Rums,” December 3, 1940, 16.

[vi] Trader Vic’s Book of Food & Drinks, 1946.

[vii] Cate, Martin & Rebecca, Smuggler’s Cove: Exotic cocktails, rum, and the cult of Tiki, Berkeley : Ten Speed Press, 2016.

[viii] Mbolidi-Baron, Hélène. “Les Conditions De Durabilite De La Production De La Canne A Sucre A La Martinique : Volume 2,” 2002.

[ix] Pairault, E A. “Le rhum et sa fabrication. Avec une préface de A. Calmette.,” 1903

[x] Désiré Kervegant, “Le Rhum Grand Arôme,” Bulletin de l’Association des chimistes : organe de l’Association des chimistes de sucrerie, de distillerie et des industries agricoles de France etc., 1936.

13 thoughts on “Tiki’s Missing Ingredient: “Martinique Rum” of Yore

  1. Hi Matt,
    One thing you need to consider is that agricole rhums can use limed, defecated, and clarified cane juice or plain fresh juice. Plain fresh juice will be like Cape Verdean Grogue or some but not all Haitian Clairins. Plain fresh juice gives you the “vesoute” aroma that was not favored by the metropolis. Arroyo gives the best articulation of the vesoute aroma.

    https://www.bostonapothecary.com/cape-verde-and-sugar-cane-juice-rum-categories/

    Defecated and treated cane juice or what was sometimes called “battery syrup” gives a different character but it’s a little hard to isolate a perfect example because of the open secret that for many years both Martinique and Guadaloupe include(d) percentages of Grand Arome rum in their blends. The Saint James rhums we drank in Boston of the early 2000’s may be a good example, but how can you really say? (Eric Witz just cracked a bottle and I was so jealous.)

    On a similar note, I think that rums many fell in love with of a certain production era like Ron Zacapa contained Grand Arome rums from outside producers. This was why they were briefly so good despite the distilleries having no production capabilities to create those flavours on their own. The world is/was secretly awash in Grand Arome r(h)um and there is another astounding example that is going to be revealed in someone’s upcoming book (not by me).

    Negrita is unique because I think its character has evolved based on what I think they could find on the market to put in it. At one time in the early 1990’s, researchers examined it for the content of the rose ketone, damascenone (rum oil), and found it possessed ten times more than the finest single malts and bourbons.

    J. Guillaume may have created a rum style at Galion that emphasized rum oil production over esters which is why in all the old data his numbers did not compare to Jamaica, but they were never able to measure rum oil because it was chemically elusive and somewhat still is. Guillaume championed fission yeasts along side his bacteria, just like Hampden, but one other thing he articulated pretty clearly about the Grand Arome style was that it should feature no mineral acids so no sulfuric or phosphoric acid which is also pretty much the rule at Hampden. That was part of his “naturalness” claim for the rum at Galion that faced persecution because the aroma was so incredible. The lack of mineral acids and their ammonia salts create a whole new category to examine rum. It has minor parallels with natural wine making. Its requires a much better understanding of fermentation.

    I have recently been having weekly sit downs with a renowned distillery consultant who specializes in everything but rum. One thing he has wondered about is objective markers of quality in spirits. He thought nothing particular could be quantifiable, but the trend often is the rose ketones; ionone, damascone, and damascenone. Perfumers consider these the most beautiful theoretic odourants. Your immune system is thought to bend around them in a state of relaxation altering inebriation. These aroma must be unlocked and few have ever learned to do it reliably other than Hampden or Guillaume or Arroyo (or Batavia Arrack). Molasses can yield 10 times more than any other spirits category, and, as we all know, drive consumers absolutely wild pursuing it. Distillers and bottlers will commit what nearly looks like minor fraud to get it into their spirits (consumers benefit). Ten or so major teams are working on exploring it around the world, but commanding this aroma is so elusive that no one is confident enough to say anything about it.

    Just the other day, a brilliant colleague who is transitioning to rum distilling from beer brewing just unlocked rum oil with a fission yeast (I presume at high pH Arroyo style) and said: “20 years as a brewer and I’ve never experienced anything this incredible.”

    Embrace rum oil and you will drink better. Best. -Stephen

  2. Records indicate that The Mai-Kai, which follows Donn’s original recipes more closely than anyone, used Negrita when it opened in 1956 and likely continued to do so for years. When I first started going there, I recall having a few drinks that used rhum agricole and were less than stellar, which I found curious. As it turns out, the original recipes were not designed for that style. More recently, they subbed in Hamilton 86 from Guyana in drinks like the S.O.S. (aka Three Dots and a Dash), and the results are much better.

  3. Hi Matt, couple of comments:
    1. this statement from your excellent article “Fun fact: Even today, Guadeloupe makes roughly the same amount of cane juice and molasses rum.” might be correct, but could be a bit misleading, since the majority of the rhum produced in the Guadeloupe archipelago comes from a one industrial-scale distillery, which (to my knowledge) does not have their own brand but sells in bulk to a merchant.
    2. Perhaps the closest rhum we can find in today’s market to replace the old Tiki rhums come from Rhum Bielle on Marie-Galante. Specifically, their rhum with the word “Premium” in the name of the expression are blends made from sugar cane juice but produced in both their creole column and pot stills. Luca’s rhum. Of particular note, Luca Gargano’s “Rhum Rhum Liberation” series undergo an extra long fermentation in isolated tanks before being distilled in Rhum Bielle’s stills. These rhums might be some of the best currently available expressions to substitute for the missing link of Tiki cocktails.

  4. Interesting info that you’ve dug up about Martinique rums. Of course, it’s only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to determining the ingredients of tiki cocktails from the golden era: How intense was the cinnamon syrup? Did Don use falernum syrup or falernum liqueur? How different were Puerto Rican rums from Cuban rums in 1930s and ’40s? When Vic referred to “one whole lime” was he referring to Persian limes or key limes (aka bartender limes)? Etc., etc.

  5. I’ve been on a Tiki kick lately, and this article sent me looking for ways to get Rivière du Mât rhums in the US. You can’t get them in a store here, but there are a handful of online stores that will ship it to some states in the US. https://www.excellencerhum.com/en/ for instance. You’ll pay an exorbitant amount for the rhum plus shipping, but it might be a fun experiment, or a way to compare and identify a more readily available rum for the relevant recipes.

    1. I’ve managed to get some Riviere du Mat rhums, and the ambre does work particularly well in the old drinks, and makes more sense to my palette than an agricole, even and aged agricole. I’m trying to write up some notes, but life has been keeping me preoccupied with other stuff.

  6. The reference to Red Heart rum of South Africa is of interest as it remains a rather unpretentious, pale blend, albeit with rich flavors — many blind tasters would claim it’s Jamaican — in its potent combination of rums from Jamaica, Guyana, Trinidad and Barbados. It certainly brings unique components to tiki cocktails that resonate as elements of a bygone era.

    1. This is the bane of my existence.

      Puts good content out there. Shares widely on social media. Reshares every few months. People still don’t see it.

      I blame Google. 😊

Leave a Reply