Bacardi is the largest rum producer on earth, and for many consumers, Bacardi is rum. The white expression — that ubiquitous silver label — is the world's best-selling rum by a considerable margin. But Bacardi's range extends well beyond the familiar mixing rum, and Ocho (Eight) is the expression that most effectively demonstrates the company's distilling capability. Aged for a minimum of eight years in American white oak barrels, filtered through charcoal, and blended by Bacardi's master blender, it is a rum that earns respect on its own merits.
The rum is produced at Bacardi's facility in Cataño, Puerto Rico, using the company's proprietary yeast strain — the same strain that has been used since the company's founding in Santiago de Cuba in 1862. The tropical Puerto Rican climate ensures that eight years of ageing here delivers more maturity than the same period would in a temperate climate. The charcoal filtration is a light touch — enough to refine without stripping — and the resulting rum retains genuine barrel character.
On the Nose
The nose is elegant and restrained. Vanilla leads, clean and well-defined, accompanied by caramel and a gentle butterscotch. There is a subtle tropical quality — banana at low volume — and a dried fruit note: apricot and a hint of raisin. Oak spice is measured — cinnamon and nutmeg in careful proportion. There is a floral quality, almost like dried flowers, and a gentle honey sweetness. The nose is not complex in the way that Jamaican or Guyanese rums can be, but it is refined, balanced, and unmistakably the product of skilled blending.
The Palate
On the palate, Bacardi Ocho is smooth and well-crafted. The entry is clean — vanilla and caramel, with a gentle sweetness that is immediately appealing. Mid-palate, the oak asserts itself: a pleasant tannin, cinnamon warmth, and a coconut quality that adds tropical character. Dried fruit — apricot and raisin — provides depth, while a subtle coffee note adds a touch of bitterness. The mouthfeel is medium-bodied at 40% ABV, with a smoothness that reflects Bacardi's mastery of filtration and blending. There is a pleasing balance between sweetness and oak dryness.
The Finish
The finish is medium, with vanilla and oak lingering alongside a gentle warmth. The dried fruit fades slowly, and there is a pleasant dryness at the conclusion. The finish is clean, refined, and leaves the palate wanting more.
Bacardi Ocho is best appreciated on the rocks or in spirit-forward cocktails. In a Rum Old Fashioned, it provides the vanilla and oak complexity that the drink demands. Neat, it is a pleasant, easy-drinking sipper that rewards without challenging. It will not satisfy those who crave the intense character of Jamaican pot still rum or the grassy vibrancy of agricole, but it is not trying to. This is mainstream rum at its best — consistent, well-crafted, and genuinely enjoyable.