Step by step,we're taken through the process of creating Bacardi rum:two types of fermentation,distillation,ageing and then blending. We learn there is rigorous quality control at every step,with more than 200 control tests done,not including the final testing and tasting before bottling. The formula or final blend is a secret,known only by Jose Gomez,maestro del ron.
After our lesson,we sniff our way through an interactive display that shows a multitude of Bacardi varieties and blends. Then we're brought into an art-deco-style bar for a basic mixology class,where we get a lesson on making basic cocktails,such as the mojito and Cuba Libre (rum and coke).
Those who signed up for the mixology tour ($35) are then admitted into the famed Bacardi University,a series of classrooms in which more in-depth mixology lessons are taught,and the rest of us are whisked into the distillery itself. It's an impressive sight – 20 fermentation tanks,spanning 4½ storeys high,each holding about 200,000 litres of liquid to be distilled in copper,cast-iron and stainless-steel columns. Later,the rum will be aged in oak barrels – a whopping 460,000 of them at any given time.
"We produce over 100,000 litres of rum every 24 hours,"our tour guide says as we gawk.
The last stop is a rum tasting at the university,after which the tour would normally end. However,I'm keen to see one of the 25 ageing warehouses that we got a glimpse of from the distillery building,so I reach out to Bacardi's hospitality director,Ivan Puig Gonzalez,to see if I can get a peek inside. Later that day,I'm on a golf cart,wearing a neon vest and hard hat,heading to one of the ageing warehouses.
"For safety purposes,we can't take full tour groups into the warehouses,"says Juan Cartagena,a brand manager who has offered to show me around."Think about it:we have 85,000 barrels stored in each warehouse,stacked floor to ceiling,side to side. It's too much of a safety hazard to bring people through. The alcohol fumes make it additionally dangerous."
He wasn't kidding about the fumes. My eyes begin to water upon entering the warehouse. The air somehow feels flammable,which it is,I'm assured,and the fumes only intensify the further you step inside. I opt to stay at the entrance,nearest the oxygen,where to my surprise I'm joined by the keeper of the barrels:Gomez,the maestro del ron himself."Call me Joe,"he insists,and to my delight he proceeds to give me a long lesson on the ageing process of rum,too detailed to document here.
"We have barrels that are one year old,and we have barrels that are 25 years old,"he says,pointing out the bronze medallions on the side of each barrel. A different year is neatly engraved on each medallion."In case of fire,we never,ever keep barrels of the same age all in the one warehouse."
My curiosity satiated and properly indoctrinated on the ageing process,I'm whisked back to the bar opposite the ticket counter,where I started. I grab a final mojito for the road and prepare for the short journey back to San Juan,but I'm stopped by one of the bar staff.
"You forgot your souvenir,"I'm told,and a small parcel is pushed into my hands. I open it. It's a cup that resembles a chalice,emblazoned with the Bacardi logo. But of course.
The Bacardi Rum Distillery is at Carretera 165,Catano,Puerto Rico. Tours are available seven days a week,Monday to Saturday 9am-6pm (last tour at 4.30pm),and Sunday 10am-5pm (last tour at 3.45pm). Phone +1 787 788 8400 or seecasabacardi.org.