http://www.slate.com/articles/life/roads/2013/11/indian_wine_industry_will_indians_trade_their_whiskey_for_wine.single.html

NASHIK, India—Late last month, LVMH—the French luxury conglomerate
responsible for Louis Vuitton, Fendi, and Bulgari—threw a major,
booze-soaked high fashion event. But instead of the customary
champagne-filled soiree in a European castle, LVMH gathered Bollywood’s
best to celebrate their subsidiary, famed champagne house Moët & Chandon,
in a lavish Mumbai hotel. The unusual occasion—a launch party for their
foray into the fledgling world of Indian wine.

Indians rank among the lowest wine consumers in the world. Even though the
industry has blossomed in the last decade, growing from six to 50 domestic
wineries, persistent social stigmas hamper further progress. Only a third
of Indians drinks alcohol; those who do like to stick to harsh, local
Indian spirits.

In spite of these challenges, a wine industry thrives on the gentle sloping
hills of the Maharashtra region, near the Hindu holy city of Nashik. For
centuries, these hillsides have nurtured microclimates with hot days, cool
nights, and reliable rainfall ideal for table grapes. But India has only
recently tried to cash in on its potential as a South Asian Little Tuscany.

In the shadows of Mumbai’s skyscrapers, workers clocking out from a dairy
factory duck into a grungy neighborhood bar. Here, local “whiskey” reigns
supreme—distilled from molasses and smelling like varnish, it’s the only
thing on tap. Before I can pull up a stool, a toothless man hands me a
glass. Soon, nine new friends cluster around, and I bring up the subject of
wine. Only one person has ever tried it. He makes a face and says, “Too
sour.”

For the enthusiast looking to get serious about Indian wine, the
unquestioned first stop is Sula Vineyards. Here in 1993, Rajeev Samant, a
Stanford-educated Silicon Valley dropout, returned to his family’s humble
estate to explore why the region’s profitable table-grape industry had
never expanded to include wine grapes. Six years later, he planted the
country’s first sauvignon blanc and chenin blanc grapes. From the paltry
initial batch of 1,000 liters, Sula has grown into an empire producing 6
million liters of nearly two-dozen varietals in 2012.

The 35-acre estate has two restaurants, an outdoor bar, and a 32-room
resort. I admire Samant’s ambitious effort to try to jump-start wine
tourism in India. But as I sit down to dinner at Sula’s Indian restaurant,
I watch the two men seated next to me look at the menu perplexed, then
order coconut juice. When the waiter informs them that coconut juice is not
on the menu, they both order local Indian whiskey instead.

This is the market battle Sula has waged for more than a decade. The best
hope for wineries like Sula is to lure some of India’s 300 million whiskey
consumers away from the varnish-liquor. But that is no small task: Eight
out of the 10 best-selling whiskeys in the world are from India, with most
of them only sold domestically.

The waiter begrudgingly places the men’s order but not before a bit of
gentle ribbing. “Why don’t you walk to a wine shop for that whiskey!” the
waiter teases. In working-class restaurants in India, BYO-whatever is
customary. The words wine shop in the West might conjure images of sleekly
minimal design, but the reality in India is quite different. Wine shops are
dusty, government-run affairs that dole out whatever they have in
stock—usually some concoction of fermented molasses.

Though challenges abound, converting die-hard whiskey drinkers into wine
drinkers may be in the best interest of all of India. As the country
continues to guzzle booze made popular under colonialism, the sugarcane
factories that supply its molasses continue to deplete the country’s water
resources. While introducing more sustainability into India’s farms, the
Nashik region’s vineyards also aim to prop up a steady, long-term industry
by cultivating a fruit with an ancient history.

Education and marketing are the best hopes in the uphill battle to get
Indians to drink wine. I meet Prashant Bhalerao, a hospitality manager, as
he is finishing a tour and pulling glasses to do a tasting for a married
couple visiting from Andhra Pradesh. As he pours a glass of his
award-winning sauvignon blanc, his eyes light up. He patiently teaches the
couple how to hold their glasses and thoughtfully responds to questions
like, “Which white and red do you mix to get rosé?”

But he starts to lose the visitors as we move on to sample the reds.
Grimaces and trips to the spittoon abound. “Too sour?” Bhalerao asks the
husband, as he spits a shiraz. “It tastes like cough medicine,” the man
replies.

While Sula boldly declares itself to be “at the forefront of the Indian
wine revolution,” smaller wineries like York, just a few hills over, have
to produce a particular blend to suit Indian taste: That means sweet. “Wine
in India has two problems: People like to get drunk, and people like
sugar,” Vishal Mahajan, a former winemaker from Sula tells me.

Leaning against a balcony overlooking an unpretentious 6-acre estate, we
taste York’s late-harvest chenin blanc. York produces far less wine than
their neighbors down the road, but sipping on their saccharine chenin, with
its notes of guava and a lingering taste of honey, it’s clear that they’re
playing to the base.  As we pour another glass, I ask Mahajan about the
darker of India’s two alcohol vices—a propensity for drinking too much.

India is only beginning to try to cash in on its potential as a South Asian
Little Tuscany.
“I’ve heard some wineries talk about increasing the alcohol volume to 20
percent,” Mahajan says. With the Indian liquor market releasing special
editions of high-alcohol booze, the wine industry is feeling the pressure
to compete. As we leave the tasting room, one sommelier shows us a Marathi
meme floating around the Internet. It states that it takes an hour of
drinking wine to speak English but only a few minutes of local whiskey to
accomplish the same task. “At university, our parties only had whiskey.
Maybe only 5 percent of the people knew about wine,” the sommelier laughs.
A member of India’s glut of MBA graduates, he hopes to help expand the
country’s drinking frontiers.

About 20 miles south, near the serene Mukhne Dam, I meet two young
winemakers, Sanket Gawand and Asmita Pol, at Vallonné Vineyards. Founded in
2009, Vallonné produces a fraction of the wine made by other vineyards. “We
want to be known as India’s premier boutique winery,” Pol says. With a
lower percentage of contract farming than other area wineries, Vallonné is
able to keep a more watchful eye on their crop rather than deploy
viticulturalists to check on far-flung farms.

A small upstart, Vallonné has the freedom to make bold choices—like
experimenting with different oak barrels, a risk for such a small crop. But
who is their market?

“My generation. We pursue what we like and what we want,” Gawand smiles.

The youth may be the most promising target for India’s nascent wine
industry, but the lingering concern among the homegrown wineries is what
effect the introduction of foreign names—like the sparkling wine of Moët &
Chandon—will have on domestic production. India’s young people have a huge
appetite for luxury products, but it’s unclear whether they like luxury
products made in India.

“Chandon might push some wineries out of the market. Or it might make the
world finally pay attention to wine in India,” Mahajan says. Moët &
Chandon’s sparkling wine launch certainly perked up the local industry—it
was no coincidence that one winery released its first brut and Sula
re-launched its own sparkling wine with a new blend and new packaging one
week prior to the French powerhouse’s splash into the Indian market.

But the market can be fickle. In June 2008, the New York Times ran a
glowing article about the rise of Indian wine. But less than a year later,
the economic crisis, coupled with a glut of new wineries, wreaked havoc on
the industry.

“Growing wine in India is tough, but we think we’re doing it well,”
Vallonné’s Gawand insists.

After three days of touring vineyards, Mahajan and I kick back in a dingy
hotel restaurant. With no wine or ice in sight, we settle for Indian
whiskey. It only takes a couple of tall glasses to catch a buzz, and
Mahajan begins gesticulating, wide-eyed about schemes to grow the industry.
Grapeseed oil. Tourism. Brandy. What kind of brandy, I ask him skeptically.

“Without a doubt, it will taste better than this,” he grimaces.

-- 
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