Rhum
Produit dans diverses régions du pays, le rhum canadien est souvent élaboré à partir de mélasse ou de canne à sucre locale, puis vieilli en fûts de chêne pour développer son caractère riche et onctueux. Nombre de ces rhums sont influencés par la diversité du climat et du terroir du pays, ce qui donne naissance à des spiritueux uniques et complexes qui se démarquent sur le marché mondial. Qu'il soit dégusté pur, avec des glaçons ou en cocktail, ce rhum offre une expérience de dégustation agréable et polyvalente.
Canadian Rum is the collection I point people to when they want something a little warmer and more playful than whisky, but still made with real craft. On My Wine Canada, you’ll find Canadian-made rums in a few styles, from clean, lightly sweet white rum for cocktails to richer amber and dark rum with notes of vanilla, baking spice, and caramelized sugar.
Why Canadian Rum belongs on your bar cart
What “Canadian rum” usually tastes like
Most Canadian rum leans smooth and approachable. Expect flavours like toffee, molasses, cocoa, dried fruit, and a gentle oakiness in aged styles. If you like bourbon’s sweetness or a spiced whisky, you’ll probably get along with an amber or dark rum. Prefer crisp, mixable spirits, start with a lighter, fruit-forward rum and keep it simple with soda and lime.
When to choose rum over whisky or vodka
Rum is my go-to for casual hosting, game nights, and cottage weekends, anything where you want easy pours that still feel special. It also plays nicely with Canadian comfort snacks, think jerk chicken, pulled pork, or even butter tarts if you like a sweet pairing.
Canadian Rum for cocktails, gifts, and easy sipping
Canadian Rum for beginners
If you’re new, choose a smoother style and try a rum and ginger ale first. You’ll learn what you like fast, no fancy glassware required.
Exploring beyond the basics
Once you’re curious, compare light, amber, and dark side by side. You can also browse our wider Canadian spirits collection to see how rum stacks up against other local favourites.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q: What counts as Canadian Rum, and how is it different from Caribbean rum?
A: Canadian Rum is rum made and bottled in Canada, often with a focus on smoothness and easy-drinking balance. You will still see familiar rum flavours like molasses, vanilla, and spice, but the house style here tends to be a bit cleaner and less funky than some tropical, high-ester rums. If you like rum that behaves nicely in cocktails, Canadian options can feel very user-friendly.
Q: What does Canadian Rum usually taste like, and is it sweet?
A: Most Canadian Rum tastes warming and rounded, with notes like toffee, caramelized sugar, baking spice, and sometimes cocoa or dried fruit. It often reads as sweet because of those flavours, even when it is not sugary on the palate. If you want the least “sweet-feeling” pour, start with a lighter style and mix it with soda and citrus.
Q: Which style should I choose, white rum, amber rum, or dark rum?
A: White rum is typically clean and crisp, great for highballs and citrusy cocktails. Amber rum usually adds gentle oak, vanilla, and a softer, richer mid-palate. Dark rum leans deeper and dessert-like, think molasses, spice, and a fuller body, which can be great for sipping or bold mixed drinks.
Q: What are the best cocktails and food pairings for Canadian Rum?
A: Rum is a natural fit for simple drinks like rum and ginger ale, a classic Daiquiri, or a Rum Old Fashioned if you like richer flavours. With food, try jerk chicken, pulled pork, smoked salmon, or even butter tarts if you are in the mood for a sweet pairing. For a relaxed hang, rum with cola and a squeeze of lime is hard to mess up.
Q: Is Canadian Rum a good choice for beginners who normally drink whisky or vodka?
A: If whisky feels a bit intense, rum can be a softer landing because the flavours skew vanilla, caramel, and spice. If vodka is your usual, start with a lighter rum in a tall drink so it stays clean and refreshing. Taste is personal, so I always suggest trying one simple highball first, then deciding if you want to go richer and darker.