
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Rhum Barbancourt is a square peg to the round holes of rum categorization. It’s made with fresh sugarcane juice in a nation with historic ties to France, but it is not rhum agricole. It hails from Haiti, but there is a world of difference between it and clairin. Its production has aspects associated with all three of the colonial-based French, Spanish, and British categories. To get to the core of what makes Rhum Barbancourt unique, we sat down with the company’s new CEO—and fifth generation member of the family that started the brand—Delphine Gardère. We discussed:
The aspects of production that make Barbancourt distinct from other rums
Barbancourt’s relationship with the 3,000+ farmers that supply the distillery’s sugarcane
Delphine’s vision for the company, and the relationship between maintaining tradition vs. trying new things
What it means as a company to be an ambassador for Haiti
The importance of elevating women in the spirits industry and transitioning from a male-dominated environment
Barbancourt’s approach to aging with a combination of vats and different cask types
Bringing pot still production back to the distillery (and what kinds of releases it might yield)
And much more!
Links mentioned in this episode:
Netherlands Rum Society Facebook Group
Netherlands Rum Society Instagram
Maggie Campbell’s interview with Delphine Gardère for the Daily Beast
Watch Rhum Barbancourt’s livestream with WIRSPA and Zavvy.co
Rhum Barbancourt Website
By Will Hoekenga and John Gulla4.9
129129 ratings
Rhum Barbancourt is a square peg to the round holes of rum categorization. It’s made with fresh sugarcane juice in a nation with historic ties to France, but it is not rhum agricole. It hails from Haiti, but there is a world of difference between it and clairin. Its production has aspects associated with all three of the colonial-based French, Spanish, and British categories. To get to the core of what makes Rhum Barbancourt unique, we sat down with the company’s new CEO—and fifth generation member of the family that started the brand—Delphine Gardère. We discussed:
The aspects of production that make Barbancourt distinct from other rums
Barbancourt’s relationship with the 3,000+ farmers that supply the distillery’s sugarcane
Delphine’s vision for the company, and the relationship between maintaining tradition vs. trying new things
What it means as a company to be an ambassador for Haiti
The importance of elevating women in the spirits industry and transitioning from a male-dominated environment
Barbancourt’s approach to aging with a combination of vats and different cask types
Bringing pot still production back to the distillery (and what kinds of releases it might yield)
And much more!
Links mentioned in this episode:
Netherlands Rum Society Facebook Group
Netherlands Rum Society Instagram
Maggie Campbell’s interview with Delphine Gardère for the Daily Beast
Watch Rhum Barbancourt’s livestream with WIRSPA and Zavvy.co
Rhum Barbancourt Website

78,335 Listeners

32,111 Listeners

38,727 Listeners

6,032 Listeners

16,587 Listeners

6,177 Listeners

415 Listeners

3,085 Listeners

899 Listeners

4,142 Listeners

59,316 Listeners

9,715 Listeners

257 Listeners

1,670 Listeners

14 Listeners