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LUISITA RUM FOR DELIVERY 2

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    - So when you think of rum,
    you'll always think
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    of pirates or beach.
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    Rum always have
    that connotation or that reputation.
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    We want to push
    the needle further.
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    You know how people
    enjoy single malt?
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    It has that sipping culture—
    that's what we hope
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    to build for rum.
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    With Luisita Rum,
    we want to show the consumer
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    that it can be enjoyed
    as a sipper as well,
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    not just in cocktails
    but as a sipper.
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    - Hi! I'm John Go.
    I work with an importing
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    and distribution company
    called Grand Cru.
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    So our purpose is
    to make more niche
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    and boutique brands
    available locally.
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    I think Filipinos drink
    so much rum
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    because it's
    a very accessible spirit.
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    Like, we're a tropical country.
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    It's easy for sugarcane to grow
    in a tropical country.
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    We have Tanduay
    which is, I think,
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    one of the biggest
    rum producers in the world.
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    So the different brands
    of rum you can find here
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    in the Philippines
    are Clairin, Flor de Caña,
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    Doorly's, Tanduay,
    and of course, Luisita Rum.
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    For me, what makes a good rum
    is it has to have texture
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    and flavor.
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    - In Tarlic City, Philippines,
    the first and only
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    single estate rum
    in the country has been crafted
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    from soil to bottles since 2016.
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    Inspired by a deep fascination
    with wine,
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    father and son duo,
    Nando and Paco,
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    have been meticulously creating
    Luisita Rum with the vision
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    of producing a premium,
    farm-centric wine of the tropics.
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    - They know what it's all about.
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    - I believe so. Yeah.
    We have explained.
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    Cheers, pop.
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    Wow. The ----- stuff is really good.
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    - Oh, wow. It's really good.
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    - Yeah. I haven't tried
    this one in a while
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    but it's delicious.
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    Of course, the bird.
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    - This is the bird
    I was telling them.
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    - Philippine hawk-eagle.
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    - Yeah. 2136.
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    - What's important with the brand
    is that we really stick
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    to the core value.
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    So we're trying to make
    a spirit that you can really
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    be proud of,
    something that's done
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    in the classic,
    traditional way of making
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    a world-class spirit,
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    and there are certain things
    you cannot compromise on
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    and you have to stick to that.
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    - The three most popular ways
    to make rum
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    is the Spanish style,
    the English style,
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    and the French style.
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    The most familiar style
    we have here is Spanish style.
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    Luisita is different
    from other rums made
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    in the Philippines because,
    one, they're single estate,
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    so all of the molasses they use
    all come from the sugarcane
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    in their land which gives them
    more quality control
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    with the raw material
    and also gives a higher chance
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    to expressing terroir.
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    So it's essentially grass to glass.
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    - Luisita actually was founded
    in 1881—the estate.
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    It was founded, at that time,
    the Philippines, our country,
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    was a colony of Spain.
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    So it was put up
    by a company called Tabacalera.
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    So Tabacalera was involved
    at that time,
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    they were the biggest
    tobacco traders in the world.
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    So the original plan
    of that company
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    was to plant tobacco here
    in Luisita,
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    but they found that the climate
    was not suitable
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    for tobacco farming.
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    So around... some time
    in the early, well,
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    the third of the century,
    early 1900s,
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    they shifted to, okay,
    let's start planting sugarcane.
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    So in 1927, our family,
    we had no stake here in Luisita.
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    My paternal great grandfather,
    actually he and his siblings,
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    they had a sugar mill
    further up north
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    called Paniqui Sugar Mill.
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    So it closed down already
    some time in the 90s,
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    and they actually had a rum
    at that time.
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    And this rum was being sold
    and really prevalent
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    in the market after the war.
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    Looking at the history
    as I started, like,
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    asking stories from relatives
    and looking at history books,
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    I slowly realized
    that rum making
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    is actually, not in our blood,
    but we've been doing it
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    for a long time
    without us even knowing.
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    So here we have
    what we call a sandy loam.
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    Actually, they called it
    Luisita soil,
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    they gave it its own designation.
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    And this kind of soil,
    it's easily workable,
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    high in organic matter.
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    When you have good soil,
    everything else follows.
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    So the philosophy
    is always just focus
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    on the ground.
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    So with sugarcane farming,
    and any farming really,
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    you have to be very observant,
    take care of the soil,
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    and that is actually 99%
    of the battle.
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    ***- Yung pagtatanim namin, yearly nagiimprove yan eh, di lang nagtatanim kami ng tubo pati yung soil inaalagaan namin yan. Kailangan may crop rotation or kaya maglagay ka ng organic matter para yung fertility babalik, dahil naging acidic na yung lupa. Kung di maganda yung lupa mo, pangit din yung production mo dahil di lalaki yung sugarcane.
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    - Once you take care of the soil,
    the process
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    is setup seed beds,
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    so these would be nurseries
    where we grow specific varieties
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    that we pinpoint
    to specific soil type.
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    Sugarcane is actually
    not grown from seed
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    but we propagate it
    from the stalk itself.
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    There are eye buds
    in the sugarcane plant,
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    so sugarcane
    is actually a grass,
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    you plant it, and then it grows
    from these eye buds.
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    Come harvest time,
    we cut it by hand
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    in the first plant,
    and then we also use
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    mechanical harvesters now.
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    ***- Kaya nga ang ginawa nila, lahat ng nauna dun, ikakarga nila tapos mamaya iaatras nila yung truck nila para yung mga nakakalat pa dun, ilalagay lahat dito sa truck, ikakarga lahat. Halimbawa kakargahin yan hanggang 10-15 or 19 tons, ayan. Pero yung nakakarga nila ngayon wala pa sa 19 tons yan. Magtatabas sila ulit. Pagkatapos magloading yan, dadalhin na sa central. Pagkatapos pupunta na sa ticket booth at for milling na nila yun.
    - Ang unang nameet ko si boss Paco nung nagtanim tayo sa bahay kubo, naghahakot ka pa eh, nagfefeeders ka pa, tapos yung malalaking bato inaalis mo pa sa bahay kubo. Diba nandun ka rin?
    - Oo nagtabas din.
    - Nagtabas din ako. Kaya alam na alam ko yung trabahong yan.
    - Dinatnan ko sa may Hacienda Bantug, nagtabas kayo dun sir kasama si Boss Juan. Umakyat sila ditong ganun.
    - 47 trucks.
    - Oo yun.
    - 2015.
    - Naexperience niya rin tong ginagawa ng mga ito. Hinakot niya, sa ladder umakyat ganun.
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    - Actually, I wanted
    to be a lawyer.
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    ***So growing up, grade school pa lang, my father is a lawyer so I was like, okay, I want to be a lawyer.
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    And I tried it out,
    spent three months
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    in his law firm
    in his little cubicle...
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    And I'll be honest,
    I didn't have fun.
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    So I talked to him
    and I said, "Okay.
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    I don't think this is for me."
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    He sent me here.
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    "Okay. Try it out in Tarlac."
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    I thought I was going
    to be a farm manager right away,
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    you know?
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    Like, okay. Top position,
    here we go.
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    And apparently, my first job
    was to cut sugarcane.
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    I don't know if it was planned,
    that maybe he wanted me
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    to have the hardest job
    so that I'd go back and say,
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    "Okay. I'll be a lawyer."
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    Maybe it backfired.
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    Probably did.
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    I fell in love with it
    and I still really remember that.
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    So I look back on that now.
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    At that time,
    it didn't make sense to me.
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    It's a difficult job.
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    But now that I look back on it,
    it gives me confidence
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    in myself that, okay,
    I really love this,
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    'cause I wouldn't have done that,
    I wouldn't have...
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    and I'd do it again.
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    And it reminds me
    that I'm passionate about it.
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    When I cut that cane
    in 2014, 2015,
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    I didn't go home,
    I never left this place.
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    So I've been here
    for 10 years now.
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    Almost 11, actually.
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    So here in Luisita
    in Central Luzon,
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    we actually have
    the biggest fleet
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    of mechanical harvesters
    and we're really pushing
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    to mechanize the industry,
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    at least for sugarcane
    which is what we're involved in.
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    The reason being so that
    the labor now can transfer
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    to jobs that cannot be mechanized.
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    So it's really bringing them
    to where the human touch
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    is required.
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    Once that cane is harvested,
    it's now sent here to the mill
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    and it's dumped.
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    So we have a special technology,
    we lift the truck up
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    and the special technology
    is called gravity.
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    The cane falls down
    from the truck.
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    ***-Ito pala yung tinatawag naming mill processing ng kung paano iayos yung truck namin para bago idump sa mill. Bale ginagawa po is dalawang area yan, para di madelay yung pagpoprocess yung pagtutumba ng truck, pagkayari ng isa, yung isa naman, para yung pagdudump ng truck tuloy tuloy, walang delay.
    Bale pantay na siya, di tulad ng unang dumping, magulo yung pagkakadump niya. Pero pag dumaan na siya ng equalizer, magiging pantay na, magiging ayos na. Tapos pagkayari nun, dadaan ng mill, dun na pipigain yung mga chips na galing sa crushing tapos yung juice niya ilalabas niya, pipigain na doon.
    Yang mga truck na yan nanggagaling ng iba't ibang lugar, may Victoria, may Nueva Ecija, meron din sa Pangasinan, meron din sa Gerona. May iba't Ibang lugar din pong pinanggagalingan.
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    - So once that cane is dumped,
    it goes through a series of,
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    they call it a Unigrator.
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    To keep it simple,
    it's a lot of cane knives crushing it.
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    Inside the mill,
    you can just imagine
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    it's a sugarcane juicer
    but in a large scale.
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    The cane is really now squeezed,
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    we extract as much juice
    as we can,
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    and that juice now gets sent
    to the boiling house.
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    It's heated up,
    we evaporate as much water
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    as we can, really to concentrate
    the sugar content
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    in the sugarcane juice.
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    But inside the mill,
    that cane juice now goes
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    to the boiling house
    and whatever's left over,
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    'cause 78%
    of that sugarcane stalk
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    is actually fiber,
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    and that fiber
    is now really crushed
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    and we send that now
    to the boiler.
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    And in the boiler, it's burnt
    and that generates steam,
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    that steam is now sent
    to our turbine generators
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    to generate power.
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    So everything you need
    for sugarcane factories
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    and the sugar industry
    is almost, there I say,
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    carbon neutral
    because the energy required
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    to process the sugarcane
    and the sugar is also in the plant.
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    So that part is...
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    I'm always amazed by that.
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    We call it bagasse—that fiber.
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    It's now burnt,
    and then, of course,
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    people now think,
    "Oh, you're throwing pollutants
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    into the atmosphere."
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    So what we did, again,
    going back to taking care
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    of the soil is we put a,
    they call it a scrubber,
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    so it's just water jets
    that shoot into the chute,
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    the chimney, and now
    all the particulates fall
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    to the ground
    and it's called mill ash
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    which is very high in potassium
    and other trace elements—
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    molybdenum,
    all of that good stuff.
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    That mill ash now
    we apply it back into the field.
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    So again,
    it's a closed loop system.
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    So that's what happens
    with the fiber.
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    The juice, which is now
    in the boiling house,
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    once it hits the clarity
    that's needed,
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    the bricks that's required,
    we send that now
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    to the evaporators
    where more water is evaporated.
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    ***- This is the pan floor station. So ito yung evaporation station, so dito inaalis yung tubig. We concentrate the juice from 30 brix to 65 brix. So after boiling sa taas, after 24 hours of curing time, ito na yung C sugar. Sineseparate ito ng ating continuous centrifugal basket. Ito yung ating C sugar, and then yung molasses naman nito is the final molasses.
    This is the final molasses na naextract dito sa boiling house, and then ito yung isesend sa distillery for fermentation to product the alcohol.
    - So mola
Title:
LUISITA RUM FOR DELIVERY 2
Description:

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Video Language:
Filipino
Duration:
33:51

English subtitles

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