Persistent readers of this blog have probably twigged that rum is my spirit of choice – even if tequila/mescal have made a recent surge for my affections. Read a rather comprehensive  account of my fermented molasses affiliations via this link.

Hence one of the key dates in my calendar has been Manchester Rum Festival. It was there two years go among the Hawaiian shirts, straw hats and high octane excitement that I first ran into Lewis Hayes, founder of the spanking new DropWorks distillery in Nottingham.

Ebullient Lewis was glad to be back in the city where he went to university, helping fund his studies through some committed bartending. That had sowed the seeds for his ambitious project to import the finest molasses, ferment it with his own cultivated trinity yeast strain, distil it in bespoke stills, then blend and mature it in barrels across three unique ageing locations.

This trail, with stop-offs at Stray, New Century Kitchen (for a Pusser’s tasting) and Festival hotel partner Indigo, was organised by Festival head honcho Dave Marsland to promote a major expansion of his pioneering event. Naturally, as brand ambassador, he poured a rare Chairman’s Reserve ‘single vintage’.

Step forward Manchester Rum Week (July 21-27). The centrepiece, of course, will be the Rum Festival proper, now in its eighth year, on Saturday, July 26, at the New Century Hall. The Rum Week alongside exists to whet your appetite and whet your whistle. It will enable aficionados and newbies alike to take a tour of the city centre’s best rum and cocktail joints, where bartenders and venues showcase their curated serves and killer cocktails. Participating venues will be announcing their rum vibes over the coming weeks via Instagram.  


What to expect from Manchester Rum Festival 2025?

Rum cocktail bar partner MONIN and new food vendor Elijo’s will headline the show, alongside some of the world’s most iconic rum brands of Mount Gay from Barbados, Chairman’s Reserve of Saint Lucia, Guyana’s Pusser’s and Don Papa from the Philippines. Newcomers making their debut in Manchester include Jamaica’s West Grove Rum Punch, a selection of unique single cask rare rums from the team at Precious Drops, and Henstone Distillery of Shropshire.

For just £27.50 a ticket, entrants will be treated to unlimited rum tastings, live entertainment with Soca and Reggae music by DJ Dom, discounts on bottles and a barrel load of frivolity. This year, super rum-fans can also upgrade to join in with the Rum Ramble – an exclusive series of seminars and talks by the UK’s top rum talent. Buy tickets via this link. You can also take advantage of early bird discounts and exclusive news by joining the mailing list at www.manchesterrumfestival.com

The salt cod milestones of my life? We’ll stick with three. Flash back to 2006 when Portugal knocked England out of the World Cup on penalties after Wayne Rooney was sent off. It prompted a notorious wink from his Manchester United team-mate Ronaldo. Not long after, at an intimate Sunday preview of a new Portuguese restaurant on Bridge Street, I was introduced to the still gauche CR7. 

Neither of us was going to step over the chance to order Salt Cod Gomes Sa, served with poached egg, crushed potatoes, black olives and spring onions. The Bacalhau was as good as his mum Dolores used to make in Madeira, he told me. And Wayne was still a pal.

A decade later, at a Naples restaurant devoted to what the Italians called Baccalà, I was treated to a six course tasting menu of the stuff, culminating in a dessert that paired the salt cod with chocolate and pine-nuts. Reader, I gagged.

Of course, on markets across the Med, you’ll find those unappetising yellowy strips of dried fish caked in salt that need to be soaked before cooking. The ubiquitous treatment is what the Provencals call Brandade de Morue and the Spanish Brandada de Bacalao. It’s there (main image above) on the new spring menu at Exhibition on Peter Street in Manchester, where the Baratxuri kitchen has smoked the potatoes for the whipped olive oil emulsion and boosted it with Basque chorizo. The fish flakes offered intense flavour that has finally won me over to salt cod’s charms.

Keen to dissociate itself from your average food hall, Exhibition is offering a single combined à la carte fusing Baratxuri with fellow fixtures Jaan by Another Hand and OSMA . It is a game to guess which dish came from which chef. Just don’t peep at the latest counter your server is arriving from.

All three operators are a destination in their own right and for OSMA it will be their sole outlet after closing their acclaimed Prestwich restaurant in search of a new city centre equivalent. Spoiler alert. Billed as Scandi-influenced, at Exhibition they puzzlingly offer tuna sashimi and panko chicken thigh tonkatsu. Now that’s what I call mix and match.

Why Bacalhau à Brás remains Ronaldo’s comfort fave

Well over two decades later, as a muscled-up veteran Ronaldo plies his trade for Saudi Pro League club Al Nassr FC, traditional salt cold remains an essential part of a rigorous high protein diet dedicated to career longevity. It may be his one (slight) self-indulgence. Indeed at the CR7 Corner Bar & Bistro Baixa inside the superstar’s Pestana CR7 Lisboa boutique hotel you can order Bacalhau à Brás. Wash it down with a ‘Ballon d’Or’ cocktail.

Brás or Braz in English alludes to its inventor, a bar owner in Lisbon’s Bairro Alto. Brás has since become a technique that can be used to cook various types of fish and even vegetables. It has an onion, garlic, and potato base that is held together by creamy scrambled eggs. The olives are optional. 

Buy salted cod (or its Northern European counterpart, stockfish) at Manchester’s Arndale Market or Out of The Blue fishmongers in Chorlton. Essential before you start give it a 24 hours plus soaking. Now create your own Bacalhau à Brás.

INGREDIENTS

500g potatoes

400g salted codfish 

1 large onion 

2 garlic cloves

5 tbsp olive oil

1 bay leaf

5 eggs

Salt and pepper to taste

Parsley, spring onions and olives.

METHOD

Peel the onion and thinly slice. Set the oven temperature to 230°C.

Peel the potatoes and slice them into thin strips, then into sticks of equal size. Rinse the sticks thoroughly, drain, and pat dry with absorbent paper or cloth. Place them in a bowl and top them with about 3 tbsp of olive oil. Place the sticks on an oven tray sprayed with olive oil. Check that they don’t overlap. Cook until golden in batches, flipping halfway through.

Place the cod in a pan, pour boiling water and keep the heat on a high flame. Cook for around eight minutes. Drain, reserving the water in a bowl.

Heat 2 tbsp olive oil in a large frying pan and over a medium heat.Fry the onion until it becomes transparent. It should take roughly six minutes. Cook for three minutes more after adding the garlic and bay leaf.

Manually shred the cod, eliminating any bones or skin. Introduce the cod into the onion mixture, stirring occasionally and cook for 5 minutes.

Pour the eggs into a small bowl and whisk them together. Incorporate them into the fish mixture. Cook it on a low heat while continually stirring.  The eggs must be cooked while remaining fluffy. Stir in the potatoes and season with black pepper and salt to taste. Garnish with the parsley, spring onions and olives.