Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Rum: People, Passion and Pain

Rum
by Dave Broom
Reviewed by Elliot Essman
Full Review at www.stylegourmet.com.

I could kick myself for digging through a shelf of quotation books to find Lord Byron’s “There’s nought no doubt so much the spirit calms as rum and true religion.” Rum, by Dave Broom, a luxuriant keeper volume published by the Wine Appreciation Guild, has got the very same quote emblazoned on the back cover. Of course, Byron used the term “rum” to refer to all potent alcoholic beverages. If anything, the usage attests to the wide historical and social reach of rum. “Here is a drink,” Broom writes, “that has been the catalyst for the birth of nations.” The scope of Rum, the book, aided immeasurably by the superb photography of Jason Lowe, does true justice to the beverage.

Rum is distilled from sugar cane, and like sugar, it reveals a history of misery and pain. “Rum was slavery’s currency; it made some people vast fortunes and helped others forget their misery,” Broom reflects. Caribbean sugar production was so labor-intensive that it almost mandated that slaves be worked to death and periodically replaced. The rum and slave trade went hand-in-hand, enriching cities like Bristol in England and Newport, Rhode Island. American rum, sugar and slave trade with the Caribbean led to the first major commercial rifts between the American colonies and England; these soon escalated into heated debate, then gunfire and revolution. America’s founding fathers reached for rum above all other beverages when they needed to stiffen their resolve. Read the Full Review at www.stylegourmet.com.

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