Candycanes have been so far selectively bred away from what an actual "albino Miami" would look like that crossing a candycane to a Miami is often a big step backwards, and the resulting "normals" often don't look nearly as Miami as a good Miami parent does - assuming the Miami parent you bred to the candycane was a good one. In regular old Miami's, the background seems to have a lot of "orange" in it once you remove the black (i.e., grey). Of course, sometimes you get lucky, and Mimai's have ALSO been bred pretty far away from the looks of the original ones used to start the candycanes.
What people don't seem to grasp is the TIME it has taken to get where we are with candycanes. Candycanes now are GREAT comparared to the ones a decade ago...and it took 20 years to get to the leve we were back then....lol. What it comes down to is that if a TRUE albino cornsnake from Dade county was ever collected (i.e., Miami phase albino without released genes mixed in), it almost definitely would NOT be red blotches on a solid white background. Most of us would be unlikely to call what it would likely look like a Candycane at all.....lol.
KJ