SANTO DOMINGO (Cuba) March 23 — Rum-maker Cesar Marti says that even after 20 years he feels the same pleasure each morning entering his distillery in Santo Domingo, Cuba, where he is preserving a century-old tradition recently added to Unesco’s intangible cultural heritage list.

An aroma of sugar, spices, ripe fruit and alcohol mix in the cellar of the “Central Rum Factory,” where barrels are piled up to the ceiling.

These are unique fragrances that change regularly but always delight Marti, who has never tired of working in this distillery in the centre of the country, some 270 kilometers (170 miles) southeast of Havana.

“It is here that the oldest rums and spirits in the centre of Cuba relax patiently,” Marti said proudly, showing off the American oak barrels where alcoholic beverages have been matured naturally, some for as long as seven decades.

Marti, 46, is the custodian of a secular tradition that was refined in the 19th century when the first modern stills were introduced to Cuba during a sugar boom.

Cuban rum is unique since it is entirely made from molasses, the viscous residue produced by refining sugarcane, followed by a short period of fermentation and discontinuous distillation, which produces the sweet-tasting product the Caribbean island is known for.

‘Extremely difficult’

Cuban rum masters have ever since been the guardians of this tradition, “picking the molasses, producing the best liquors, ensuring the mixtures, the aging,” said Marti.

He insists rum is “extremely difficult” to make.

Today there are two “first rum masters”, the most experienced ones, seven rum masters, including two women, and five “apprentices” working in Cuba.

Each has been rigorously coopted.

Although a background in studying science at university is a prerequisite to improve technical processes, oral transmission remains essential to passing on knowledge and experience from one generation to the next.

Marti spent his childhood in sugarcane fields before studying science at university.

He was hired by the rum master of the era at his state-owned distillery and has worked there ever since.

He spent nine years as an apprentice before being named a rum master.

After another 12 years of work and a scientific thesis, Marti is the youngest Cuban “first rum master.”

Cuban rum master Cesar Marti (left), with his trainee Mitehel Niebla, tests the smells of one of the rums he makes during an interview with AFP at the Central Rum Factory in the town of Santo Domingo, Villa Clara Province, some 270 kilometres southeast of Havana, Cuba, on March 8, 2023.— AFP pic
Cuban rum master Cesar Marti (left), with his trainee Mitehel Niebla, tests the smells of one of the rums he makes during an interview with AFP at the Central Rum Factory in the town of Santo Domingo, Villa Clara Province, some 270 kilometres southeast of Havana, Cuba, on March 8, 2023.— AFP pic

His talent did not escape the attention of French luxury brand Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy (LVMH), which asked him to create an exclusive Cuban rum to be sold in Europe.

“Creating new products” is part of what motivates Marti as he looks for the right blend of fruity or floral tastes and herbal scents to take consumers “on a journey to the Cuban countryside.”

‘In love’ with rum tradition

Marti now has his own apprentice to train, 42-year-old Mitehel Niebla, who has been learning the trade for seven years, having worked other jobs in the distillery beforehand.

Marti noticed his keen nose and personal engagement.

“I began to understand how important it was for our country, for our culture, to be custodians... of a tradition that has been going on for eight generations,” said Niebla.

As part of his apprenticeship, Niebla is currently concentrating on “the cultural part, the history of Cuban rum.”

The more he learns the more he “falls in love” with this tradition.

Marti says that the role of a rum master is to “assimilate, with humility” the techniques, history, and sensorial diversity of liquors bequeathed by predecessors and “to be generous so that others are able to continue transmitting” this heritage in the future.

While each rum master works in a different state-owned distillery and for a different brand, they are all bound by a code of ethics to ensure the quality and sustainability of Cuban rum.

During their regular meetings, they discuss the threat of climate change, sugarcane cultivation and international norms, among other issues.

This attention to detail has paid off, with the Cuban rum production system becoming the first in the world, last September, to be endowed with intangible cultural heritage status by Unesco. — AFP