Rum Runner Labs

We Tasted 9 Zero Proof Rums Blind; Here’s What We Reccomend.

We Tasted 9 Zero Proof Rums Blind; Here’s What We Reccomend.

We Tasted 9 Zero Proof Rums Blind; Here’s What We Reccomend.

A horizontal roundup of all the zero proof rums we tried.

Why did we do this?

In a word: Dry January. We think it’s a great idea to reset your alcohol tolerance and to give your palate a bit of a break. But alas we’re creatures of habit, and there’s something about sipping a neat pour after work or mixing up a Mai Tai on a weekend that we didn’t want to give up.

The allure of zero proof rums: all of the fun, and none of the hangover! So we cast a wide net to test 9 zero proof rums to see if an alcohol-free alternative would help us stay sober, or just remind us that we’re missing out this month.

We used our standard testing procedure, though we had to adjust a few parameters to make it work for zero proof rums; primarily in the transparency category: most of the information we want to know about regular rums (fermentation time, distillation method) just doesn’t apply to alcohol free alternatives. So instead we were generous with our transparency ratings. One perk of zero proof rums: they have nutritional information! Although most of the important ingredients fall under the all-mighty “natural flavoring” label. In general, we gave points for specifically naming where the product was made, and deducted points for leaving any important information (like if the product is meant to be diluted before consumption) off the bottle.

Are Zero Proof Rums Even a Good Idea?

Before we get into it, I want to call out a few points:

1. None of these really taste like rum. In the US, rum must legally be at least 40% alcohol by volume. These zero proof rums, by definition, are 0% alcohol (actually, a few of them like Strykk and Lyre’s have small amounts, but all are under 1%). While I think many of them do an admirable job of evoking the interesting flavors you can find in rum, none of these would pass for actual rum in a blind taste test. And I don’t think that should be the bar we hold them to.

2. There are lots of other delicious things to drink that aren’t trying to be rum. Maybe the right call is to get into soda during dry January. Or ginger beer. Or shrubs! I love this Pineapple Shrub from Liquor.com, and I think it makes a great highball. On some level, going from drinking rum in December, to drinking zero proof rum in January, is pretty lacking in imagination. That being said, I think some of the zero proof rums we tried are totally worth your time, and can make good drop-in replacements in your favorite cocktails.

Dark Rums

Dark rums seem to dominate the zero proof space; we ended up selecting six, and we could’ve added another two or three to the lineup. Two we meant to include but couldn’t get in time were ArKay Non-Alcoholic Dark Rum and Seir Hill Biscane. Of the rums we tested, more than one was pretty nasty, but several were pretty enjoyable. Here’s what we thought:

 

Crystal Barbados

This zero proof rum from Crystal gave us insanely strong notes of bubblegum and not much else. Perhaps there was a bit of peach. We thought it was pretty bad as a neat sipper (3.8/10) but okay as a mixer (6.8/10).

Overall Score

2.8/10

Monday Zero Alcohol Rum

This zero proof rum from Monday gave us strong notes of cereal and oak, with subtler hints of oak, caramel, citrus, banana, and decaf coffee. We thought it was okay as a neat sipper (5.2/10) but pretty good as a mixer (7.6/10).

Overall Score

7.8/10

Ritual Zero Proof Rum

This zero proof rum from Ritual gave us strong notes of cereal and baking spice, with subtler hints of charred apricot, oak, ginger, cinnamon and citrus. We thought it was okay as a neat sipper (4.8/10) but pretty good as a mixer (7.4/10).

Overall Score

6.9/10

Lyre’s Dark Cane Spirit

This zero proof rum from Lyre’s gave us strong notes of caramel, with subtler hints of cola, butterscotch, baking spice and mint. We thought it was pretty good as a neat sipper (7.8/10) and great as a mixer (8.9/10).

Overall Score

7.9/10

Strykk Not R*m

This zero proof rum from Strykk gave us strong notes of mint and ginger, with subtler hints of black tea, orange, vanilla, and oak. We thought it was okay as a neat sipper (5.8/10) and pretty good as a mixer (7.8/10).

Overall Score

7.5/10

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage Dark Caribbean Blend

This zero proof rum from 270º Botanicals gave us strong notes of latex and burnt meat, with subtler hints of caramel, artificial coffee, and nondescript nut. We thought it was absolutely vile as a neat sipper (1.2/10) and really quite bad as a mixer (2.3/10).

Overall Score

2.0/10

White Rums

In general, there seem to be fewer zero-proof white rums on offer. In fact, all the white rums we tasted came from lines that also offered dark rums: Lyre’s, 270º Botanicals, and ArKay. And on some level, it makes sense: even for many rum nerds white (and/or unaged) rums are little more than a vehicle for getting alcohol into a cocktail. They don’t need any distinct flavor themselves, and most of the white rums you’re most likely to find at a supermarket are unlikely to have much (we have to call out that there are so many incredibly tasty and complex white rums, and we’re purely speaking in generalities here).

This makes a zero-proof white rum’s job quite hard: how do you make a drink that is practically water and ethanol, with no ethanol? It’s a difficult needle to thread–do too little and the rum may just taste like water. Do too much on the other hand, and you’ll end up making something putrid. We had white rums that flirted with both of these problems:

ArKay front shot

ArKay Alcohol-Free White Rum

This zero proof rum from ArKay gave us strong notes of vanilla cake and refrigerant, with subtler hints of bubblegum, cotton candy, coconut, and crayon.. We thought it was okay as a neat sipper (4.7/10) but pretty good as a mixer (5.5/10).

Overall Score

5.8/10

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage White Caribbean Blend

This zero-proof rum from 270º Botanicals gave us strong notes of latex and pineapple, with subtler hints of bubblegum. We thought it was really quite bad as a neat sipper (2.2/10) but okay as a mixer (5.5/10).

Overall Score

4.1/10

Lyre’s White Cane Spirit

This zero-proof rum from Lyre’s gave us strong notes of pineapple and coconut, with subtler hints of butter, ginger, flowers, chile, citrus. We thought it was pretty good both as a neat sipper (7.2/10) and as a mixer (6.7/10).

Overall Score

7.1/10

Winners and Reccomendations

Dark Rums

There are several dark rums worth your time. If you’re looking for the bottle that we most thought tasted like rum (though I’m not sure that should be your goal) I’d recommend Monday, or at a lower price point and greater availability, Ritual. If you’re looking for a rum that packs a punch and will add a somatosensory kick to a cocktail, check out Strykk Not R*m. If you’re looking for something that strays a little bit further from a classic rum profile, but is absolutely delicious in a snifter or a Mai Tai, try Lyre’s Dark Cane Spirit.

If you’re interested, I would try all three (I wouldn’t recommend getting Ritual and Monday, as they’re fairly close in profile)–they all offer something different, and they’re all compelling in their own way.

White Rums

Thinks look a lot more bleak on the white rum side. While we had fewer chances at success with only 3 contenders, all of them let us down in one way or another. 270º Botanicals was only slightly better than its dark cousin and had very offputting latex notes. ArKay had an interesting burn, but on the nose and palate, it had a very artificial sweetness to it. Lyre’s was delicious neat, but it was so delicate it totally got lost in a cocktail. When push comes to shove if I were to recommend one it would probably be Lyre’s, unless you only plan on mixing and really want a kick, in which case I would recommend ArKay. But if you’re sober-curious and just looking to pick up a single bottle, I would start with a zero proof dark rum.

Best Zero Proof Rum

Lyre’s Dark Cane Spirit

Most Believable

Monday Zero Alcohol Rum

Best Burn

Strykk Not R*m

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage White Caribbean Blend

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage White Caribbean Blend

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage White Caribbean Blend

4.1/10

2.2/10

Neat Rating

5.5/10

Mixer Rating

Poor

Value at $26.99
After a pretty poor experience with 270º Botanicals’ Dark offering, my expectations for the White Caribbean Blend were about as low as they could be. That being said, they were exceeded! A bit. On the nose, there are notes of latex and pineapple (this time we knew to dilute the spirit before trying it neat—and that definitely improved the experience) but there’s still something a bit off. On the palate, things are thin and watery. A mild bubble gum note seems to be all there is in terms of flavor which, truth be told, is a major improvement over its dark sibling. There’s no real finish to speak of; a couple of weeks ago I would’ve assumed this came with the territory of zero-proof, but now it’s hard not to critique when I know Strykk and ArKay can pack reasonable punches. In a daiquiri, it did fine (netting a mixer score of 5.5) at which point it’s pretty clear it’s being carried by fresh lime juice and simple syrup. If you try hard enough, you could almost imagine the off-notes are a zero-proof rendition of some Jamaican funk, but I would only recommend this if you’re dying to build out a zero-proof bar, and even then caution against putting too much in a single drink. As with the Dark Caribbean Blend, it’s worth noting that this Cane Beverage avoids a major problem plaguing other zero-proofs: a lack of concentration. Straight out of the bottle it measured 6.8ºBx, suggesting more than three times the dissolved solids of our lowest white. The fact that the bottle’s 700mL can be diluted to almost 3L of drink means you can really stretch it out if you’d like, unfortunately, you’re more likely to wish it was already gone.

Distillery

Unknown Distillery

Minimum Age

0 years

ABV

0%

Volume

700mL

Refractometer

6.8ºbrix

Estimated Additives

N/Ag/L

Price Acquired

$26.99
Expert Reviews:
Community Reviews: 6.2
Neat Rating: 2.2
Mixer Rating:5.5
Transparency Rating:4
Presentation Rating:6
Personal Rating:4

Overall Rating:

4.1/10
Rating Notes:
Lyre’s White Cane Spirit

Lyre’s White Cane Spirit

Lyre’s White Cane Spirit

7.1/10

7.2/10

Neat Rating

6.7/10

Mixer Rating

Okay

Value at $41.02
As we learned from their Dark Cane Spirit, Lyre’s can construct a stellar bouquet, and they don’t pull any punches with their White Cane Spirit. On the nose you get pronounced notes of pineapple, coconut, and butter, which are all very pleasant. There’s a little orange, and some nondescript floral notes as well. If you dig deeper you might get a hint of toasted almond. It smells incredible—but does it smell like rum? Yes and no. It’s a little as if you asked a rum aficionado what they smelled in a high-ester unaged Jamaican and then created something with those notes without ever having smelled a high-ester unaged Jamaican. On the palate things are a bit more muted. The coconut and butter are gone, and you’re mostly left with the pineapple. The finish comes quickly with a heat that is difficult to distinguish between ginger and chile (perhaps both). It’s not an overpowering finish, but a pleasant one; as the heat dissipates you’re left with ginger, pineapple, and some of the more nuanced notes from the nose—citrus, flower shop, and a vague nuttiness. We can hem and haw about whether or not it was a convincing rum profile, but the sipping experience was solid—in our test, it received a 7.2 neat. In a daiquiri, it scored a little lower (a first in all of our zero-proof tests) at 6.7, largely because it didn’t seem to add too much to the drink. Its compelling nose may have been damped by the ice, and its subtle flavor profile was lost in the lime juice. In subsequent cocktails increasing the dose called for by ~50% seemed to help its pineapple-y goodness show up. Lyre’s White Cane Spirit smells incredible, and is perfectly enjoyable on the palate, but I wish it was a bit more concentrated so it didn’t get washed out in cocktails.

Distillery

Lyre's

Minimum Age

0 years

ABV

0%

Volume

700mL

Refractometer

3.6ºbrix

Estimated Additives

36g/L

Price Acquired

$41.02
Expert Reviews:
Community Reviews: 7.2
Neat Rating: 7.2
Mixer Rating:6.7
Transparency Rating:8
Presentation Rating:8
Personal Rating:7

Overall Rating:

7.1/10
Rating Notes: Rating Notes: Rated as a zero proof rum, not meant for comparison with actual rums.
ArKay Alcohol-Free White Rum

ArKay Alcohol-Free White Rum

ArKay Alcohol-Free White Rum

5.8/10

4.7/10

Neat Rating

7.2/10

Mixer Rating

Poor

Value at $45.01
When I first opened the box containing our bottle of ArKay, I think I subconsciously started thinking about it like Waffle House. Waffle House isn’t a particularly pleasant place to be. The bathroom always has vomit in it somewhere. The seats are uncomfortable. But it’s able to be all these things ********because******** they can make you some damn good hashbrowns. To put a fine point on it, the bottle looks kind of goofy. But maybe (I thought) ArKay gets away with having a goofy bottle because it’s just that good. I couldn’t have been more wrong, because, in reality, it’s just okay. On the nose there’s vanilla cake, bubblegum (why does everyone insist on making their zero-proof rums smell like bubblegum?), and something I can only describe as mild refrigerant. Many other zero proofs use vapor-rub-like menthol to spoof the burn of alcohol, but this feels a little less like menthol, and a little more like opening up a chest freezer and inhaling deeply. On the palate, any attempt to investigate its flavor is cut short by the immediate and powerful burn. They’ve clearly figured something out because the burn is difficult to place. It’s not exactly a ginger burn, nor is it a menthol or capsaicin chile pepper burn. If anything, it feels closest to a wasabi burn (that I have come to learn is due to a compound called *allyl isothiocyanate*) but without any of the normal accompanying taste. The burn sticks around, and it made it difficult to finish our blind taste test without copious amounts of water. The kick is more pleasant than it is strange, but mostly it’s just impressively strong. Back on the palate (once you’ve gotten used to the continual searing sensation) there’s not too much more to it than could be found on the nose. There’s an artificial sweetness, that continuing note of refrigerant, and weaker notes of cake, cotton candy, coconut and crayon. It’s worth noting that ArKay has been at this since 2011, as far as I know, earlier than any other zero proof producer we’ve tried, and we can kind of see why. Particularly if your definition of success is providing a powerful burn that mixes well, ArKay has you covered. However, if you’re looking for an interesting tasting experience in its own right, you’d be better off looking elsewhere.

Distillery

N/A

Minimum Age

0 years

ABV

0%

Volume

1000mL

Refractometer

2.2ºbrix

Estimated Additives

22g/L

Price Acquired

$45.01
Expert Reviews:
Community Reviews: 6.4
Neat Rating: 4.7
Mixer Rating:7.2
Transparency Rating:8.0
Presentation Rating:2.0
Personal Rating:6.0

Overall Rating:

5.8/10
Rating Notes: Rated as a zero proof rum, not meant for comparison with actual rums.
270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage Dark Caribbean Blend

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage Dark Caribbean Blend

270º Botanicals Non-Alcoholic Cane Beverage Dark Caribbean Blend

2.0/10

1.2/10

Neat Rating

2.3/10

Mixer Rating

Poor

Value at $26.99
When I first encountered the Dark Caribbean Blend in our blind taste test, my first thought was “This is actively vile.” The strong aroma of overly-sweet artificial coffee (the kind you might get in a can from a vending machine) belied an unsettling kind of latex-y savoriness, and on the palate, things weren’t much better. Reactions around the table were similar; a food scientist who previously worked on plant-based meat mentioned it had a distinct artificial beef flavor and others noted teriyaki and earth. Later in our daiquiri round, as most other zero-proof rums were receiving much more love as mixers than they did as neat sippers, the Dark Caribbean Blend was still giving a cloying sort of mocha, and meaty notes that would be more at home in a stew than a citrusy cocktail. It was, in fact, so bad that we figured something must be wrong. And there was! Sort of. Per the guidance of Spirits of Virtue (the makers of 270º botanicals), “THIS PRODUCT IS PRODUCED TO BE MIXED WITH WATER OR A MIXER OF YOUR CHOICE IDEALLY AT A 3:1 RATIO. IT IS NOT DESIGNED TO BE DRUNK NEAT.” Unfortunately, this guidance was not on the bottle, it wasn’t on the general Spirits of Virtue website, and it wasn’t on the 270º-specific site linked on their main site (that link led to a Wix error page saying the site didn’t exist). We found this recommendation on a sales listing of a third party—but I do appreciate that where it showed up, it was in bold and all caps. After sitting with the blend again, now diluted with (ostensibly) their recommended ratio, I can say things have improved, but not much. The vending-machine coffee nose is still there, but it’s tempered. The latex and meat are notes subtle if noticeable. The palate is arguably serviceable, with some caramel and nondescript nutty notes that, while not particularly rum-like, gave something to dig into. I’d be very interested in hearing from proponents of this bottle—especially if it seems as though there may have been something defective in the one we tested. It seems as though the brand is under renovation (see: website not found), and I’d be open to revisiting even if it is unlikely I will ever finish this bottle. It’s worth saying that 270º avoids one of the main problems I have with many zero-proof rums: a lack of sensory intensity. But sadly in this case is a case of curing a nosebleed by cutting off one's head.

Distillery

N/A

Minimum Age

0 years

ABV

0%

Volume

700mL

Refractometer

7.4ºbrix

Estimated Additives

74g/L

Price Acquired

$26.99
Expert Reviews:
Community Reviews: 5.4
Neat Rating: 1.2
Mixer Rating:2.3
Transparency Rating:8
Presentation Rating:5
Personal Rating:1

Overall Rating:

2.0/10
Rating Notes: Rated as a zero proof rum, not meant for comparison with actual rums.