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Dancer turns wine importer
May 27, 2004 16:10:06
Dancer turns wine importer By SUSAN HOUSTON, Staff Writer
The News & Observer (Raleigh) newsobserver.com Wednesday, May 26, 2004 7:43AM EDT
When Edgar Vardanian finally hangs up his ballet slippers as a dancer for Carolina Ballet, he has a second career all lined up: wine importer.
And one of the first wines to be offered in the Triangle by his Ararat Import Export company will be pomegranate wine from Vardanian's native Armenia. Pomegranate wine should be available in early June at Whole Foods in Raleigh, with other locations to be announced later.
"It's delicious. It's very popular in Armenia and in Russia, but because of the Soviet Union, nothing could leave the Soviet Union. Now Armenia is separate, it can export the wine," Vardanian said.
The wine is made from the pomegranate, a fruit grown throughout Asia and the Mediterranean. About the size of an orange, the pomegranate has a thin, reddish skin and hundreds of tiny seeds surrounded by bright red pulp.
In Armenia, this pulp is pressed to extract the juice and a light-colored red wine is made from it, Vardanian said. Pomegranate wine has been imported to America before, but "now only goes to California, because there are so many Armenians living there."
Vardanian and his business partners -- fellow dancer Vlad Bourakov of Charlotte and importer Arnie Slutsky of Raleigh -- are working with two Armenian wineries to produce a wine that Ararat calls simply "Pomegranate: Semi Sweet Red Wine." Its colorful cubist-style label was created by Vardanian's uncle, an artist.
Vardanian hopes the novelty of wine made from pomegranates as well as its health benefits (it is higher in cancer-fighting antioxidants than red wine from grapes) will attract mainstream American wine drinkers.
Scott Brown, wine buyer for Whole Foods Market in Raleigh, is sold.
"We've all tasted and all really liked it," said Brown, who recommended serving pomegranate wine chilled. "It's fairly sweet, but not as sweet as Zinfandel or Riesling. It's really refreshing, a good white wine alternative."
The wine will retail for about $9 a bottle.
Food editor Susan Houston can be reached at 812-4109 or shouston@newsobserver.com.
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submitted by Emil Lazarian
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