Dillon
Between Atlantic trade winds and sugarcane fields, Dillon turns Martinique into a concentrated ribbon of sweetness. The house’s philosophy is uncompromising: cane sugar should taste like cane sugar—pure, deep, with no artificial shortcuts.Its cane syrup is crafted at the Sucrerie du Galion in Trinité, the island’s last operating sugar mill and a keeper of century‑old know‑how. Freshly cut cane is washed, shredded and pressed; the juice is patiently reduced, layer by layer, until an amber, silky texture and a naturally intense aromatic density emerge.
This is a cane‑sugar specialty made for precise finishing: it sweetens without masking, adds body without heaviness, and brings a warm, tropical signature to cocktails, coffee creations and pâtisserie—captured straight from field to bottle.
Dillon
Between Atlantic trade winds and sugarcane fields, Dillon turns Martinique into a concentrated ribbon of sweetness. The house’s philosophy is uncompromising: cane sugar should taste like cane sugar—pure, deep, with no artificial shortcuts.Its cane syrup is crafted at the Sucrerie du Galion in Trinité, the island’s last operating sugar mill and a keeper of century‑old know‑how. Freshly cut cane is washed, shredded and pressed; the juice is patiently reduced, layer by layer, until an amber, silky texture and a naturally intense aromatic density emerge.
This is a cane‑sugar specialty made for precise finishing: it sweetens without masking, adds body without heaviness, and brings a warm, tropical signature to cocktails, coffee creations and pâtisserie—captured straight from field to bottle.