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Taking Stock Of Armenia's Wine Industry

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  • Taking Stock Of Armenia's Wine Industry

    TAKING STOCK OF ARMENIA'S WINE INDUSTRY
    by Yigal Schleifer

    EurasiaNet.org
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/65577
    June 20 2012
    NY

    In a recent post, this blog ran an interview with the founder of
    Zorah, a new winery that's trying to revive Armenia's ancient (as in
    millennia) wine industry and reintroduce the use of certain native
    grape varieties.

    Turns out Zorah is not the only winery trying to take Armenian
    winemaking back to its roots. In a very informative article in Palate
    Press, an online wine magazine, Becky Sue Epstein, the website's
    international editor, reports on a recent visit to Armenia, where she
    was able to visit some of the country's established wine and brandy
    makers who are working to update their offerings as well as a handful
    of other new wineries with lofty ambitions. From her report:

    Going out from Yerevan in the opposite direction (west), I also took a
    day trip to the Armavir area, specifically to Armavir Vineyards, which
    has an international group of winemakers working at its 400-hectare
    site. Originally, most of the grapes planted here were "cognac
    varieties" that were sold for industrial production. This is gradually
    evolving to wine grapes that are vinified in modern production methods
    on the property. Grapes are hand-harvested here, because of tradition,
    available manpower and, I suspect, lack of machinery. This winery is
    owned by an Argentinean-Armenian industrialist, and his winemakers
    also treated us to a lovely traditional Armenian lunch with fresh
    salads, meat and cheese dishes breads and herbs. (Though I later
    noticed the young workers who came into the dining room had a range
    of dry cereals for their snacks, just like young people in the West.)

    As a contrast, the Vedi-Alco company tugged at my heart with its
    brave bootstrapping of an old Soviet wine factory, bit by bit. We
    tasted around a kitchen table set in the barebones laboratory-also
    set with a small offering of cheeses and breads for a snack. After
    the collapse of the Soviet Union, they didn't know how to sell their
    brandy, so they made cheap vodka for a while. Now they make brandy
    mainly for the Russian market, and fruit vodkas. With their new line
    of wines, everything from last September's harvest was already gone,
    so it looks like if they can improve production numbers and methods,
    they may finally be on an upswing.

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