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From Factories To Chateaux: Russia Bids For Wine Fame

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  • From Factories To Chateaux: Russia Bids For Wine Fame

    FROM FACTORIES TO CHATEAUX: RUSSIA BIDS FOR WINE FAME

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 2 2007

    GAI-KADZOR, Russia (AFP) - Bordeaux, Chianti... Kuban? For Andrei
    Piltakian, a small-time wine grower in the foothills of the Caucasus
    mountains, there is no doubt: Russia can compete with world-class
    wine regions.

    "It's going to be better here than in France or in Italy. All we need
    is investment," said Piltakian, 33, as grape-pickers toiled on his 11
    hectares (27 acres) outside the village of Gai-Kadzor in the southern
    region of Krasnodar.

    Piltakian's vines, formerly part of a massive state wine farm, are
    in bad shape -- meagre and overgrown with weeds -- and the crop is
    mainly sold off to local Soviet-era "wine factories."

    But investment is finally beginning to come to the rolling hills of
    Russian wine country, named after the local Kuban river and centred
    around the resort of Anapa on the Black Sea coast.

    All around Anapa, a former colony of ancient Greece, hundred of
    hectares are being planted with new vines, and investors from Moscow,
    including banking, energy and metals tycoons, are pouring money into
    the region.

    Even so, local wine entrepreneurs complain that quality was sacrificed
    for quantity during the decades of Soviet rule and that Kuban wines
    still have an image problem on the international market.

    "It'll take 20 years... For the moment it's mainly mass-production wine
    around here," said local French wine entrepreneur Frank Duseigneur,
    director of Chateau Le Grand Vostok, a winery set up in 2003.

    Duseigneur, who learnt his trade in France's Rhone River valley,
    was hired by a group of Russian private investors and moved to the
    small Cossack village of Sadovy in the Kuban in 2003.

    The French wine expert also complained about the resistance to change
    among many local winemakers used to Soviet methods. "They just have
    to stop saying we're better, we're Russian," he said.

    Chateau Le Grand Vostok is the new brand name for a former Soviet wine
    farm called Aurora. The winemaker produces some 600,000 bottles a year
    that sell in Russia for an average of 6.5 dollars (4.6 euros) each.

    Other entrepreneurs in the region argue that the quality is just fine
    but that the wine needs better publicity -- both among the growing
    number of wine lovers in Russia and in potential markets abroad.

    Some of the local wines have indeed come a long way since Soviet
    times, when Russian wine was notorious for being watered-down and
    often sickly sweet, industry experts say.

    Winemaking in the region actually dates back thousands of years to
    the times of the Circassian and Adygey tribes and later settlers
    known as the Pontic Greeks, who came from ancient Greece.

    After Russia's conquest of the Caucasus in the 19th century, many
    of the native inhabitants were expelled and these fertile lands were
    re-settled, mainly by Cossacks and ethnic Armenians.

    In Soviet times, the industry was developed under the slogan "Let's
    Turn The Kuban Into The Soviet Champagne." But the anti-alcohol
    campaign of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s forced many
    vineyards out of business.

    Another estate in the region that is aspiring to world-class standards
    is Abrau-Durso, a sparkling wine maker set in a lush valley near
    Anapa that was set up under Tsar Alexander II in 1870.

    "There are some people who come here and put on airs about foreign
    wines being better. But then they always come back," said Yelena
    Petrova, a guide at Abrau-Durso as she showed an AFP reporter round
    extensive 19th-century cellars.

    The estate is 70 percent state-owned and since 2005 has been providing
    sparkling wine for the Kremlin as it did for Russia's Tsars. Visitors
    can see a bottle autographed by President Vladimir Putin in the cellar.

    "We want to bring back the popularity and the quality that our
    champagne had before the Revolution" of 1917, said Boris Titov, the
    Moscow-based chairman of Abrau-Durso and head of a leading Russian
    business group.

    Abrau-Durso produces 2.5 million bottles a year of its classic
    sparkling wine.

    For many local inhabitants of the Kuban, however, wine is not really
    about commercial production or creating fancy drinks. It's what they
    make at home using grape from the vines that grow in their courtyards.

    "Everyone's a wine expert around here. Any old man can open a barrel
    and tell you everything about it," said Samvel Atlanian, 32, an ethnic
    Armenian who used to work on the state wine farm at Gai-Kadzor.

    Atlanian, who makes around 50 litres (quarts) of wine a year from
    the vine in the courtyard of his home, said: "There isn't that thing
    about the year, the taste -- it just has to be good. You have to
    drink and enjoy!"
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