Couvreur Sour’hum Rum 50.5% 700ml

Michel Couvreur

Couvreur Sour'hum Rum 50.5% 700ml

Style Spirits > Rum
Producer Michel Couvreur
Origin Burgundy (Bouze-lès-Beaune)
Bottle 700ml
Caravan buyer note

Nose: Dark molasses, pastry spice, tangy ester lift.Palate: Surprising, dark and rich — pastry spice and intense tangy fruit on a long, persistent finish. Couvreur's rum statement.

C Caravan teamBottle shop notes
$229 / btl
6 pack mixed six eligible

Build a mixed six around the bottle. Free Australia-wide delivery from $250.

2 left Ships from Brisbane
Open this first

What it tastes like.

Nose: Dark molasses, pastry spice, tangy ester lift.

Palate: Surprising, dark and rich — pastry spice and intense tangy fruit on a long, persistent finish. Couvreur's rum statement.

Nose

Dark molasses, pastry spice, tangy ester lift.

Palate

Surprising, dark and rich — pastry spice and intense tangy fruit on a long, persistent finish. Couvreur's rum statement.

The house

About Michel Couvreur.

Burgundy (Bouze-lès-Beaune) ·Est. 1978

Michel Couvreur was a Belgian independent whisky bottler who set up his maturation operation in 1978 in Bouze-lès-Beaune, Burgundy — using the natural-spring tunnels of an old wine cellar to age single-malt Scotch sourced from Scottish distilleries. Couvreur's philosophy was that 90% of a whisky's quality comes from the barrel, and his preference was for ex-sherry casks (particularly PX) over the bourbon-cask Scottish norm. He died in 2013; the operation continues under his successors at the same Burgundy site.

View 28 bottles from Michel Couvreur →
At the table

How to pour it.

  • Temperature

    Room temperature. No ice for the first pour — taste the spirit before diluting.

Bottle questions

Before you open it.

A few practical answers for storage, delivery, and choosing the right bottle.

How should I store it before opening?

Keep it somewhere cool, dark, and steady. Wine prefers cellar temperature; spirits are happier away from heat and direct sunlight.

How long will it keep once opened?

Wine changes quickly after opening; spirits and liqueurs generally hold longer if capped tightly and kept out of heat. If it is a special bottle, ask before opening and the team can give product-specific guidance.

Can I ask for a similar bottle?

Yes. Contact Caravan with this bottle name and the occasion; the team can suggest a close match, a safer gift, or a step up or down in price.

How is it packed for delivery?

Orders are packed in bottle-safe cartons. If anything arrives damaged or looks wrong, contact the team with your order number and a photo so they can sort the next step.

What about hot weather shipping?

The team avoids making one-size-fits-all promises around heat and carrier timing. For heat-sensitive or cellar bottles, contact Caravan before ordering and they can advise the safest dispatch window.

Flavour map

How the bottle moves.

Profile

Molasses Pastry spice Ester Dried fruit
Couvreur Sour’hum Rum 50.5% 700ml
Producer visit

Why Caravan backs Michel Couvreur

Burgundy (Bouze-lès-Beaune)

Michel Couvreur (1928–2013) was Belgian-born and trained in the wine industry — work that drew him to Burgundy in the 1950s. In 1964 he moved to Scotland and took up employment in the Scotch whisky industry, where he developed what would become the foundation of his life's work: a strong preference for malt whisky aged in ex-Sherry barrels (particularly Pedro Ximénez), and a dim view of the bourbon-barrel-finished norm that defines most Scotch. In 1978 he returned to Burgundy and set up an independent whisky operation in the village of Bouze-lès-Beaune, just outside Beaune in the Côte de Beaune.

The Couvreur cellar in Bouze-lès-Beaune is unconventional: behind stone, ivy-draped walls, the property contains 150 metres of natural-spring tunnels — once a wine cellar — that now hold whisky casks ageing under cool, humid Burgundy conditions rather than maritime Scottish ones. Couvreur sourced unaged spirit from Scottish distilleries (he never named them publicly, preferring 'Scotch' to a single distillery designation), shipped it to Burgundy, and matured it in ex-Sherry casks for periods ranging from 6 to 40 years. He even grew Bere Barley — the oldest Scottish barley variety — in Orkney for use in his commissioned distillations.

Couvreur's central conviction — that '90% of a whisky's quality comes from the barrel, only 10% from the distillation' — runs against Scotch industry orthodoxy that emphasises distillery character and provenance. His whiskies are accordingly identified by ageing profile (Vintage, Single Malt, Bere Barley) rather than distillery. Couvreur died in 2013; the operation has continued under his successors. The current line includes the Vintage releases (single casks at varying ages), the Blossoming and Cap a Pie blends, the Clearach (Sherry-cask single malt), and the Bere Barley releases.

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