PHOTO BY WILLIAM M. DOWD
Tinkering and adult beverage creation seem to go hand in hand.
For example, the global explosion in vodka products in the past decade or so has caused no end of controversy.
Imbibers and producers alike seem to be divided into two camps. One regards any vodka made with anything other than potatoes or grains to be a pretender. In the other camp are those who see nothing wrong with using various fruits and vegetables.
That debate has been entered into at the highest marketing levels within the European Community as laws governing such things in international commerce are reviewed and rewritten.
Meanwhile, flying below the radar at the moment, are artisanal vodka makers in various parts of the U.S. who don't give a fig -- and, indeed, may even be using them -- what the EC thinks, blithely going on about their business with anything they can turn into a neutral grain spirit.
The same seems to be going on with wine. While the most common base by far is grapes, various fruits have been used for centuries to create wine. A couple of examples in a cluster where New York, Massachusetts and Vermont come together near Albany, N.Y.: The Brookview Station Winery at the Goold Orchard near Albany turns out a line of apple wines. The North River Winery has a tasting room in Bennington, VT, where you can try some of their 18 different wines made from apples, raspberries, pears, blueberries, cranberries ... even rhubarb. And, nearby in the Berkshire Mountains of Massachusetts, the Furnace Brook Winery at Hilltop Orchards makes wine and cider from apples to supplement its line of grape wines.
While not widely known, these places are anything but secret. What is getting little notice is winemaking using very unusual ingredients in places not usually thought about in connection with wine.
Like India and Ethiopia.
Experiments conducted at the Tea Research Association's Jorhat, Assam, facility have resulted in a new product that will be put on the Indian market in about six months.
Mridul Hazarika, director of the TRA's Tocklai centre in Jorhat, claims, "We brewed wine out of pure tea. Of course, we have used some other requisite ingredients to whet the fermentation.
"The uniqueness of our product is that unlike the Japanese tea-based wine we don't mingle red wine with the beverage,'' Hazarika told Commodity Online.com. "The Japanese tea-based wine producers mix the red wine in specific proportion to make the drink. But our base would be pure tea with some added flavors to exude the exotic aromas of Darjeeling and Assam teas.''
The TRA earlier created tea tablets, ready-to-drink tea and tea biscuits.
Pradeep Ghosh, a TRA senior consultant, explained: "The tablet is basically a fine form of quality brew carrying the flavor of popular varieties like Darjeeling and Assam. Consumers can chew it or can dissolve it in a cup of hot or cold water and then relish it as a drink."
In strife-torn, starving Ethiopia, a medical doctor/scientist has developed wine from khat, a leaf commonly chewed in East Africa and parts of the Middle East to extract its narcotic properties.
Dr. Eyasu Haile Selassie, who has made and distributed 500 bottles of the wine so far and is working on plans for full-scale commercial production, told the Retuers news agency, "Khat wine is just as good as any wine produced from grapes and has been well-received by wine drinkers.''
Lest you think his wine would have a double-whammy from khat's amphetamine properties and the alcohol, Eyasu says khat leaves lose their narcotic qualities within 48 hours of harvest.
To Dowd's Spirits Notebook latest entry.
To Dowd's Wine Notebook latest entry.
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To Dowd's Non-Alcohol Drinks Notebook latest entry.
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1 comment:
My great concern with vodka producers making vodka or gin for that matter from non-traditional base ingredients is, why are they doing it?
Is it because materials other than traditional ingredients — i.e., grains and potatoes — are cheaper? Is this just a way of taking more money out of the hands of consumers by using the lowest common denominator to produce vodka?
Why would a producer choose molasses to make vodka over traditional ingredients? And, when distillers use grapes to make vodka are they just using the skins– i.e., the waste from the vineyards?
To be clear, I am in the vodka game and our company uses traditional ingredients for producing vodka, but as an indivdual consumer I have never found anyone to answer why one would use molasses over grains or potatoes to make vodka other than that it is the cheapest route to profit.
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