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  • Today's flavored liquors are good enough to eat

    Cherry Hill Courier Post, NJ
    June 3 2007



    Today's flavored liquors are good enough to eat

    By EILEEN SMITH
    Courier-Post Staff

    Zach Brinley believed he had a recipe for rum that Jolly Roger never
    imagined, a boutique-style vanilla blend.

    The rub was designing a bottle that would get it on liquor store
    shelves already crowded with an ever-growing array of flavored
    spirits.

    "We had a flavor we knew would help to set us apart," he recalled.
    "But we had a flask-style bottle with a ship on it that stores didn't
    like because it had too big a footprint."

    Brinley, of Montclair, substituted a tall, slender bottle with the
    Brinley Gold label that took up one-third the space of the original.
    And he quickly rolled out three more flavors -- mango, coconut and
    coffee -- at a distillery near the family's second home in St. Kitts.

    "Now we are bottling as fast as we can," he said.

    In recent years, sales of flavored spirits have soared as distillers
    focus on fruity vodkas, rums and liqueurs, many of which appeal to
    the lucrative market of well-heeled women.

    While Absolut and Stolichnaya first poured peppery shots in the
    1980s, it took until 2000 for flavored vodkas to claim a 5 percent
    share of the market. That has since doubled, with 12.4 percent of
    vodka sales going to flavored brands, according to the Distilled
    Spirits Council of the United States.

    "Flavor is more than a trend," said Amy Underwood, senior brand
    manager at DeKuyper. "It will become an ingrained part of the
    beverage world."

    Grey Goose, the French-made super-premium vodka, comes in four
    flavors, La Poire, L'Orange, Le Citron and La Vanille. That's pear,
    orange, lemon and vanilla.

    Stolichnaya just came out with Blueberi, the eighth flavor entry in
    the Russian vodka line.

    "Consumers' palates are accustomed to flavors in everything from
    coffee to vinegar so it's a natural progression to spirits," said
    Shawn Starbuck Kelley, spokeswoman for Pernod Ricard USA, parent
    company for Stoli and more than a dozen other labels, including
    Malibu flavored rum and Hiram Walker Liqueurs.

    There are 38 flavors alone in the Hiram Walker line, which is still
    expanding.

    "The latest are pink grapefruit and pear," Kelley said. "In the fall,
    we're coming out with pumpkin."

    DeKuyper appeals to women from 21 to their late 30s with its Pucker
    line, characterized by a sweet-and-sour taste profile. The liqueur
    maker offers 59 flavors and will roll out at least three more this
    year.

    "There's definitely a female skew, women with high energy who enjoy
    going out for cocktails," Underwood said.

    Amanda Hamm, 24, of Woodstown gravitates toward light, sweet drinks
    when she goes out with friends.

    "It's part of girls' night out," she said. "I love Midori, the melon
    drink."

    She stocked her home bar with two types of flavored vodka, Three
    Olives raspberry and watermelon.

    "It makes a nice, fruity cocktail when I mix it with Sprite," she
    said.

    At the Landmark Americana bar in Glassboro, Sprite is blended with
    orange juice and Stolichnaya orange vodka to make a cocktail
    christened the 007.

    "We have 12 bottles of Stoli at the bar at all times, usually two
    plain and 10 flavored," said manager Tom McGuigan.

    He estimates 90 percent of the flavored spirits are served to women.

    "The women drink margaritas and cosmos, while nine out of 10 guys
    drink beer," he said.

    Brinley said women in their 20s and 30s are the primary target for
    his flavored rums, which are priced at $20 for 750 ml. The company
    will introduce a lime rum in coming months to appeal to women who
    enjoy citrusy cocktails.

    "The young females are looking for fruity drinks," he said.

    NUVO, a sparkling pink vodka liqueur flavored with peach and
    raspberry, was specifically designed to appeal to women. The creator,
    Raphael Yakoby, packaged the liqueur in a square glass container
    reminiscent of a perfume bottle. The price: $30 for a 375 ml bottle.

    "Whether it is at the spa or a $400 pair of shoes, today's women are
    willing to spend more on themselves," he said.

    The husband-and-wife vodka makers at Los Angeles-based Modern Spirits
    believe they are poised to catch the next wave, pairing foods and
    spirits.

    Melton Khosrovian, who sipped vodka and ate spicy grilled meats with
    his Armenian family, concocted complex infused vodkas to please his
    wife, Litty Matthew, a classically trained French chef.

    "At cooking school, it's all about the wine," Matthew said. "But
    spirits are great with food, too, and cleanse your palate between
    courses."

    Modern Spirits offers such sophisticated blends as grapefruit honey,
    made with locally grown fruit; and black truffle, infused with
    seasonal truffles from Oregon. The top seller, chocolate orange, was
    inspired when Khosrovian accidentally dropped a piece of chocolate
    into his drink. Prices average $40 for 750 ml.

    "We appeal to foodies," Matthew said. "It's the person who goes to
    Whole Foods and stands in front of that long row of vinegars and
    thinks of wonderful things to make with them."

    http://www.courierpostonline.com/apps /pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070603/BUSINESS/706030363 /1003

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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