Monday, August 24, 2009

In China, taste for wine comes of age ~ The Hindu

During Mir Global's recent promotional trip in China I was lucky enough to be enlightend about North-Eastern China's drinking habits. Dongbei ren as they are called in Mandarin seem to love to drink.

This article, "In China, taste for wine comes of age," published by the Hindu is a interesting summary of Ananth Krishnan's perspective on the ever developing Chinese wine palate.

I've copy and pasted a few excerpt for your viewing pleasure and I recommend checking out the full article by clicking here or on one of the other various links I've provided in this post.

Deep in the cellars of a sprawling industrial complex in China’s northern Hebei province, a row of giant steel vats runs as far as the eye can see. At first glance, they seem to be just another massive manufacturing plant in China’s northern industrial heartland. But the vats in this cellar do not hold chemicals or dyes. Each container holds some 1,000 tonnes of grapes, and this plant in Hebei’s Huailai County is at the heart of China’s wine revolution.

A local girl serves wine to greet college volunteers in Guiyang Railway Station
Guiyang, capital of southwest China's Guizhou Province. Photo: Xinhua

In China, even the business of wine, that most refined of indulgences, is all about quantity. The country now has the world’s fastest growing market for wine, with an estimated 600 million consumers. In 2007, Chinese wine consumption was estimated at a huge 800 million bottles. (India’s annual consumption is around 10 million bottles.)

The import of high-end European wines has been steadily rising in the affluent southern cities of Shanghai and Guangzhou. Now, more high-end boutique wines, set up as collaborations with European houses, have begun to emerge such as Grace Vineyards in Shanxi, which was set up by Spain’s well-known Torres wine house.


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1 comment:

  1. Comment emailed to me from a reader --

    Hi Bennett,

    "Coming of age" stories about the China wine scene have been coming out regularly for a decade, even longer. Nothing wrong with that, although such stories are sometimes light on fact-checking.

    For example: the statement in The Hindu that Grace was set up by Torres. I emailed Grace CEO Judy Leissner re this. Her tongue-in-cheek reply: "Really? I didn't know we were 'set up by Spain's well-known Torres wine house'."

    As far as I know, Torres' major cooperation with Grace is in terms of distributing its wines in China and jointly creating a Muscat in Shanxi with Grace last fall.

    By the way, anyone interested in how Torres ended up distributing Grace wines can check out this interview with the head of Torres China, Alberto Fernandez:

    http://www.grapewallofchina.com/2008/04/03/interview-torres-china-gm-alberto-fernandez/

    Cheers, J. Boyce
    www.grapewallofchina.com

    ReplyDelete