Dorchadas Amber Spiced Rum 5cl
Dorchadas Amber Spiced Rum pays homage to the smuggling heritage that inspired our brand. An award-winning unaged blend of Jamaican and Dominican pot still molasses rums, it’s brimming with notes of tropical fruit, dried grass, and clandestine spice!
Sustainably crafted using distilled Scottish seawater, it’s infused with botanicals encountered along its maritime journey — sea buckthorn, cocoa husks, cubeb, grains of paradise, and cassia bark — creating the perfect sipping rum, long serve, or cocktail base.
5cl
41% ABV
Ingredient Sources
Distilled Scottish Seawater: Carefully collected from their sea salt-making process, this water provides a pure and refreshing base for all East Neuk Spirit products. Its clean, smooth character enhances the depth and complexity of our Dorchadas Spiced Rum, letting the spices take centre stage.
Sea Buckthorn: Well, it is a super food! High in antioxidants, however, East Neuk Spirit Co. utilise it for its sweet citrus flavour profile and fantastic amber hue.
Cocoa Husk: Cocoa husks help give Dorhcadas Rum its subtle dark chocolate notes on the nose. The great thing about Cocoa husks is they are a co-product from the chocolate making process!
Cubeb: Indonesian peppercorn, a softer, more floral pepper variety, is great for a more delicate spice profile.
Grains of Paradise: From the West African cardamom family, this spice is a great way to round out the spice in Dorchadas rum.
Cassia Bark: The cool South American cousin of cinnamon. It is said that it also has medicinal benefits, although this is definitely not medical advice...
The Dorchadas Story
"Dorchadas Rum was inspired by tales of our forefathers and their fathers before them. As young men David’s uncle, a local historian (and a man known to scoop as much rum as he could get his hands on) would regale us with stories of times of old.
These arcane stories captivated our imaginations, and when Rory inherited a family heirloom it made these stories all the more tangible. The heirloom in question was a flint lock pistol passed down by his great grandfather and It is said (we can’t verify this) the two notches on the barrel account for the smugglers he shot in his pursuits of the men of the ‘Free Trade” during his time as a coast guard, stationed in Anstruther at the turn of the 19th Century."





