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agic Alambic Rum Distillery is an island treasure, home to Koh Samui’s best (and only) home-grown rum. While Thai whisky and Singha are the local tipples, tourists can trot straight to Magic Alambic for
cocktails and concoctions with pure island taste.
Koh Samui’s rum distillery is rustic and 100% home-grown – a tiny, charming, rather French, alcoholic farmer’s market around long before ‘local’ became a buzzword. New-ish ownership is breathing
brilliant new life into this lovely spot – and the on-site French restaurant (La Route du Rum) is utterly fantastic.
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Like anything worth having, you must commit to your rum excursion. How to get to Magic Alambic? Unless you’re staying way down on Samui’s south coast in nearby Bang Kao or Laem Sor, the distillery and on-site tasting
room aren’t in a location you’d otherwise encounter. We really recommend renting a car and adding an afternoon Alambic stop on your island tour.
Arrive at Alambic down a gravel driveway and announce yourselves in the open-air tasting room, built from coconut-thatch. If you stop for rum-tasting, shots are 60 baht (approx US $1.75/£1.30). But wait!
Avoid this beginner’s mistake: Before you begin your taste-test, consider if neat rum is something you could feasibly enjoy. 40 proof isn’t for the faint of heart. If you weren’t in the British Navy before 1970,
you might prefer to mix your rum with soda, tonic or 7-Up. Try your taster instead as a mixed drink – there’s a bar fridge with a variety of mixers (tonic, 7-Up, Coke, etc)
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s real Samui rum enthusiasts (there’s always a bottle on our shelves and we worry constantly it will run out before our next visit), these are our recommendations for your best Magic Alambic experience:
Reward your driver: First, it’s only polite to reward your designated driver with a bottle of his/her own to enjoy later.
At sunset: Magic Alambic rum is magic indeed at sunset – mix it up with the sugar syrup and some tonic. Perfect!
Get cheeky: Love indulging in ‘vacation rules’? Any of Alambic’s flavours makes a nice addition to a coconut or pineapple shake. At what time of day did we discover that? Not telling.
Thank your plant-waterer: Koh Samui rum makes a fantastic present! You can buy a boxed set if you’d like to dress it up.
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asty tip: Whether you’d like to taste some Koh Samui rum on site, or just buy a few bottles for later, you must try it with the house-made mixer syrup. It’s a
secret recipe of brown sugar and lime juice, amongst other things.
Magic Alambic changed ownership in 2014 – same great rum, younger French faces serving/selling it to you. Magic Alambic’s original owner (in business long before our first visit in 2003)
learned rum-making in her native Martinique.
The distillation process takes 4 months to dilute to 40 degrees (40 proof). In 2014, the distillery was producing approximately 8,000 bottles a year, but on a recent visit, we spotted
new tanks and distilling equipment: signs of bigger things to come. When fully stocked, Koh Samui rum comes in 4 flavours: pineapple, orange, coconut and a fourth we can’t remember …
possibly just rum-flavoured?
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Why take a bottle of Magic Alambic home for your own consumption? For starters, one sniff and you’re right back on Samui. Add it to banana bread. (If you have an ice cream maker at home,
it’s magic when added to a plain vanilla concoction).
If we had to pick just a handful of souvenirs to buy in Thailand, Koh Samui rum would be well up there.
To the best of our rummy recollection, bottles of Magic Alambic are THB 280–380 (depending on the flavour). At under US $10 / approx £5 per bottle, why not stock up?
Tasty tip - Visit Magic Alambic early in your holiday – as soon as you’ve rented wheels. That way you can buy a bottle to enjoy during your trip, and a few to take home.
How to find Magic Alambic: Look for the yellow sign: Magic Alambic is in Bang Kao, on Koh Samui’s south coast – a very pretty, very quiet part of the island.
Article:https://www.kohsamuisunset.com/koh-samui-rum/
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