Category: Company Profile


On Tuesday night (February 22) Vallonné Vineyards hosted a winemaker’s dinner at Bungalow 9 in Bandra.  A very intimate affair, Vallonne’s winemaker Marie Barbé took us through their range of wines and Chef Rajeev Basak put together a special menu to be paired with the wines. I’ve been planning to try Vallonne’s wines and the food at Bungalow 9 for a while now and the winemaker’s dinner was the perfect time.

Vallonne wines are created at their 20 acre Nasik estate which is nestled amidst the Sahyadri hills and extends to the beautiful Mukne dam. Shailendra Pai, who set up Vallonne in 2007, has several years of experience in the wine industry and chose to bring on board Marie Barbé who brought with her an expertise in wine-making from Bordeaux.

The first course was warm brie cheese melt with roasted sweet peppers paired with Vallonne’s 2011 Rose. The Rose made of Cabernet Sauvignon grapes is vibrant and fresh. With notes of cherry, plum, melons, berries, a crisp acidity and a refreshing finish, it is easily one of the best Indian Rose wines I’ve tasted to date. With just 3,600 bottles of their first vintage, Shailendra Pai said that this is currently their best selling wine.

The second course: Merlot 2010 paired with grilled roulade of chicken breast, red pepper cous cous with vinaigrette of the deliciously flavourful argan oil. The dish also paired well with the Sauvignon Blanc 2010 which has flavours of melon, gooseberry and freshly cut grass. The wine is very fresh, almost no sugars and a good acidity.

For the main course, Chef Rajeev wowed us all with his Cabernet braised lamb with garlic mash, cabbage and sautéed bacon. Lamb and bacon – divine. This was paired with Cabernet Sauvignon Classique 2010 which has flavours of spices and blackberry.

Loved Aneesh Bhasin's tweet

Of course after such an exquisite meal we had to finish with a bang. And Chef’s signature single origin chocolate Madagascar ice cream with rosemary, extra virgin olive oil and sea salt is the bomb! Enough to make anyone keep going back to Bungalow 9 over and over again. And when it is paired with Vallonne’s dessert wine Vin de Passerillage 2011 it is only that much better.

Barbé educated us about the process of Passerillage which is the shrivelling the grapes. For the Vallonné  dessert wine, Chenin grapes were suspended on a wire for three weeks to facilitate evaporation and concentrate the sugars. This year the grapes will be dried in nets and Barbé even plans to oak the 2012 vintage. We’ll just have to wait to see how that turns out. Going by all the other wines I tasted that night, it is definitely something to be excited about.

Picture courtesy: Vallonne vineyards

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Related articles:

http://www.cntraveller.in/content/wine-vine-and-food

I had the most amazing weekend. I was one of the lucky few bloggers to be invited to the Fratelli estate in Akluj.

We set out from Bandra at 7am, and after a seven hour journey and a few hiccups (we blamed it on the curse of Friday the 13th) we settled into the spacious and extremely comfortable  rooms at the Fratelli guest house. With bay windows opening onto a sprawling lawn and a view of the vineyard, I barely wanted to leave the room. But what we were treated to after was more that any of us could have asked for.

Here’s a photo journey of the trip:

The guest house

Equipped with four spacious bedrooms and a lounge area completely pimped out with a pool table, flat screen TV and home theatre. The staff is extremely warm and they all went out of their way to make our stay comfortable.  They share a very obvious friendship and mutual respect amongst themselves which creates a very homely environment.  The food tastes so good, very ghar ka khana (home food) like.  We overate at every meal!

Our BLUE room

And the blue bathroom

A room with a view

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

Tour of the winery and cellar

We missed Fratelli’s Tuscan Viticulturist and Oenologist Piero Masi on our trip to the vineyard, but Sandeep, the Assistant Winemaker took us through the entire winemaking process in their state of the art winery. The post-modern winery designed of glass and metal is modelled after a European Ferrari showroom.  The cellar houses the Sette, which is the Fratelli Reserve oaked for a year, and currently only available for purchase at the vineyard.

Italian equipment with the capacity of 6 lac litres

The oak casks in the cellar hold the 2011 reserve

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

Wine tasting

Sipping eleven Fratelli wines directly under millions of stars in the sky in the early January chill. What more could you ask for?! If it is crackers, cheese and olives, we had that too.

I’m partial to the whites and loved the Chardonnay 2011. I also enjoyed the Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Sangiovese. More tasting notes here.

The entire range

All set for the tasting

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

A night at the vineyard

Fellow bloggers Sonu and Jasleen from Fashion Bombay and Anisha from The Backpackers Co. were my travel mates. And as the wine flowed, so did the conversation :)

Settling in for the night

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

ATV awesomeness

The ATVs are the perfect way to get around the vineyard around the winery, and such good fun!

Vrooooomm

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

Vineyard tour, grape tasting, Syrah hill

A 20 minute ride away from the estate is Fratelli’s 150 acre vineyard where they’ve created three reservoirs to irrigate the entire property. We tasted different grape varieties as we drove up to the quaint hut on Syrah hill. A beautiful 360 degree view, cool breeze and chilled wine – the perfect spot to spend a couple of hours in the afternoon, enjoying the beauty around.

Bunches and bunches of grapes all around

Vineyards as far as the eye can see

Syrah Hill

————————————————————————————————————————————————————–

Our last night at the vineyard ended with a cultural performance (lejhim) by a troupe from the village as we huddled around the bonfire. A great end to a great weekend. I’m looking forward to going back there during harvest next month.

See more pictures here

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The story of Fratelli Wines

In the Sholapur district of Maharashtra, near the town of Akluj, lies a 240-acre vineyard. This sprawling vineyard belongs to three sets of brothers – Alessio and Andrea Secci, Kapil and Gaurav Sekhri and Ranjit and Arjun Mohite – Patil, who came together in the first Indo-Italian wine partnership in the country. Each set belonging to different industries, their joint venture brought together experts in wine production, business and distribution. Rather fittingly then, they decided to name their wines Fratelli meaning ‘brothers’ in Italian.

This labour of love for the brothers began in 2006 and was no easy feat. What followed was a year long process of grading the soil, digging trenches and properly irrigating the land – all without shortcuts in keeping with the owners’ belief that good wine starts in the vineyard. But perhaps their best move yet was bringing on board the reputed Tuscan Viticulturist and Oenologist Piero Masi.

Piero Masi tending to the Fratelli vineyards

The state of the art Winery is equipped with 58 multi-capacity tanks imported from Velo, Italy (a first by anyone in Asia) and installed at the Co’s Motewadi site, ensuring that once the grapes are harvested, within an hour they are processed in absolutely fresh condition. The Winery also boasts a fully equipped high-tech laboratory for testing at each and every stage of the production process from grapes to finished product. The winery has an installed capacity of around 6 lac liters.

In late 2007-2008 Fratelli’s first saplings were sown. The 350,000 wine saplings that were imported from France and Italy were specially handpicked by Masi and his team. Their first vintage reached consumers in 2010 and in the year that followed Fratelli went from one milestone to the next. Today they are easily one of the most promising vineyards to be born of out India’s wine production boom.

Fratelli Wines now cultivates 13 varietals -

1.         Pinot Noir

2.         Sangiovese

3.         Cabernet Sauvignon

4.         Marsalan

5.         Petit Verdot

6.         Merlot

7.         Syrah

8.         Cabernet Franc

9.         Chenin Blanc

10.       Sauvignon Blanc

11.       Chardonnay

12.       Gewürztraminer

13.       Muller Thurgau

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

KF Beered Up

If I wasn’t sold on the positives of being Twitter-literate earlier, I definitely am now.

The #KFBeerUp was legendary. And for any beer enthusiast, nothing matches the excitement of a tour through the brewery of their favourite beer. On 17 September, 30 Mumbai tweeps won a trip to the KF brewery at Taloja, followed by a KFBeerUp nite at California Pizza Kitchen, BKC.

Here’s what our timeline looked like -

11.00am: Arrive at BKC where all the tweeps are gathering.

11.30: In the scorching heat, about 25 people huddle in the shadow of the bus.

11.55: The sound of the engine is accompanied by 4 seconds of cheering, followed by a minute of complete silence. Time to tweet. #surreal

12.16: There’s a chilled can of KF Premium in my hand! (Later that night I remember one of the tweeps distinctly telling me that he noted the exact time that the drinking began) And @kingfisherworld even remembered the chakna. Geniusness, I say!

12.15 – 2.00pm: En route to Taloja- the beer keeps flowing, lots of twitter talk and about three pee/smoke breaks.

2.00: Touchdown at KF brewery. You can feel the bubbling excitement in the bus, and you can read it at #KFBeerUp. Live tweets all the way.

2.30-3.30: Lunch. Who said ‘do not preach to the hungry?’ #wiseman

3.30 – 4.00: The KF brewery tour. How is beer made? From the malt, hops and yeast to the bottling and packaging. AND heartbreak at seeing the amount of beer that goes to waste due to bottle breakage.

4.15: We’ve seen how it’s made, so we sit around the UB conference table, sip on some Heineken and discuss the appearance of a young-Vijay-Mallya (in the pics).

4.30: And we were off again. Headed to California Pizza Kitchen for the after party hoping we won’t get traffucked. We did of course (Mumbai on a sat night, whaddya expect?) but this time the driver drowned out all the ‘Bhaiya susu karna hai’ comments. I must admit the beer stretched the boys’ vocab quite a bit – piss, susu, pishab, toilet…I heard it all.

7.30: Shoved off the bus by the boys running toward the loo. CPK here we come!

7.30 – 11.30: Fun. Food. KF. And another 70 tweeps.

11.30pm: Time to go to the party after the after party.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

I don’t think anyone left #KFBeerUp not raving about how great it was. Then again after a night with quirky tweeps, pizza, unlimited KF beer and lotsa goodies you can’t find much fault with the world.

Aditya Pawan, Group Product Manager and the go-to guy at the #KFBeerUp, says that since many other brands have followed suit and have started doing tweetups, they will continue to innovate and push the limits of the #KFBeerUp,  surprising people with new formats through the year. Count me in coz once a year just isn’t enough.

In the mean time I suggest that someone get started on the the #DIY #KFBeerUp. What is it? A do-it-yourself version of the event where tweeps who want to organize a tweetup can do so. KF helps with a venue and free beer. All we have to do is tweet using the #KFBeerUp hashtag.

Delhi tweeps it is your turn on September 24, 2011, make the most of it.

Doh! A deer!

When I saw pictures of BrewDog’s The End of History beer, I was pretty disturbed, but looks like that was just the beginning. 

On July 22, 2010 BrewDog released their new craft beer – The End of History packaged in road-kill. Yes, you read right, road-kill. What was touted as the world’s strongest ever beer at 55% abv was also the world’s most expensive beer, selling at between £500 ($770) to £700 ($1,080). They created 12 of these taxidermy bottles, all of which were sold before they could finish a day on the market.

According to BrewDog, they were living up to their offbeat fashion by ‘tearing up convention, blurring distinctions and pushing brewing and beer packaging to its absolute limits’. But if they considered pouring beer out of the mouth of a frigid-yet-furry looking squirrel was the absolute limit, they’ve definitely outdone themselves.

“The impact of The End of History is a perfect conceptual marriage between art, taxidermy and craft brewing. The bottles are at once beautiful and disturbing – they disrupt conventions and break taboos, just like the beer they hold within them.” -BrewDog

Now James Watt and Martin Dickle, the BrewDog duo, have launched a bar tap where the beer is served through a taxidermy stag head. The Ghost Deer beer (aptly name, don’t you think?) achieves 28% abv simply from the normal fermentation process. After fermentation it is aged for 6 months in whisky, bourbon, rum and sherry barrels. This blonde ale is also the world’s strongest fermented beer.

“There is only one Ghost Deer head and this beer will only ever be available on draft, served in a stemmed glass, direct from the mouth of the deer himself. The elusive deer is going to be resident in BrewDog Edinburgh for a very limited time period commencing at 7.30pm on Wednesday the 7th of September. The deer himself will decide where he will next appear.” -BrewDog

I don’t particularly think the whole ‘art meets beer’ thing fits their taxidermy collection, but it does get them talked about. And after all, that is what BrewDog claims to be here to do – to get the world talking about craft beer. I will always prefer my beer out of plain-old, relatively boring bottles, but all the animals have died from natural causes, so maybe there is nothing to complain about. What do you think?

Images courtesy: BrewDog.com

Let me tell you a story. A story of two boys who wanted to change the oppressive world they were living in. So they dreamed. A dream to break the shackles of bureaucracy and guide people onto the correct path. A dream that would set the world free. A dream that would….. Okay, so when you realise the world is actually the ‘monotone corporate’ beer industry and the two boys are James Watt and Martin Dickle who are on a mission to elevate the status of craft beer, the analogy might sound way too dramatic. But intrinsically, the tale of two best friends rebelling for a noble cause still fits the bill. Call them Rebels, call them Heroes, or call them Punks. Either way, you can’t ignore them!

Napoleon Bonaparte had said “If you want a thing done well, do it yourself”. Watt and Dickle decided to take his advice. Since they were bored of the industrially brewed lagers and could not find any beers they liked in the UK, they decided the best way to remedy this undesirable predicament was to start brewing their own beers. They had been brewing at home for a couple of years, spending weekends brewing in a garage and so both the 24 year-olds quit their jobs, leased a building, got some bank loans, spent all their money on stainless steel and started making some hardcore beers. Consequently in April 2007 BrewDog was born with one goal – to make other people as passionate about great craft beers as they are.

James Watt and Martin Dickle

“This is pretty much all we care about! We want to show people there is an alternative to the mainstream generic mass market beer made by assholes who only care about profit and market share. We want to put the enthusiasm, passion, craft and integrity back into beer drinkers’ glasses. And we want to have fun and unsettle a few stuffy old institutions and rattle a few cages whilst we are doing it,” says Watt, and in the 4 years  since BrewDog has been around, it has certainly been doing so. In this short span, BrewDog have radically changed perceptions of craft beer by breaking down convention and unsettling institutions; while creating some rock n’ roll , award- winning brews along the way.

But it hasn’t always been smooth sailing for BrewDog. “The process was a little bit scary at first. When all your worldly possessions are some second hand stainless steel tanks it spooks you out a little bit. Martin and I moved back in with our parents to save on rent and neither of us took a salary for the first 2 years. There has been a lot of 24 hour shifts, sleeping in the brewery and not many days off.

It was really tough for us to sell our beers locally initially. The north east of Scotland is a dessert for good beer. People were not at all receptive to what we were doing and the beers we were making despite the fact they were local. 6 months in we were selling 5-6 cases per day and on the verge of going out of business completely. I would drive a beat up old delivery van around and try and persuade pub owners to stock BrewDog beers with very little success. It was either too expensive, too bitter, too hoppy or had too much flavour for them. We could have easily watered down what we do to meet their pretty low standards and get some sales. But that would be the antithesis of everything we are about. So we though ‘screw them’ we will export our beers instead. Our beers got some great reviews on some overseas blogs which generated a lot of buzz around the brand and we were then able to speak to importers about buying some beers. The first export market we ever sent beer to was Sweden and it is still our biggest export market today,” sums up Watt succinctly. Today BrewDog beers are available in 24 countries worldwide. In 2010 they grew from a turnover from £1.8m in 2009 to over £3.8m and are now the largest independent brewery in Scotland.

The owners have very effectively translated their passion, sense of humour and spunky personality into not only the brewing of their beers, but also in creating unique identities for them, perhaps the most pronounced of which are the whacky titles. 5 A.M Saint, 77 Lager, Paradox and Punk IPA are only some of them. So where do the names come from? “The Beers speak to us. We are crazy. We always speak to our beers and sometimes the beers speak back. So we listen. When is comes to naming new beers I sit in a very quiet, dark room and slowly nose and sip the beer. I take my time. As the room is quiet and dark all my energies are focused on my sense of smell and taste. Here the beer comes alive and really speaks to me. So I listen, and the beer tells me what it wants to be called.

Punk IPA is aggressive, bitter, spikey, in your face and really does not care if you like it or not.  The taste of Tokyo reminded me of the skyline of Japan’s capital city at night. Dark, rich, encapsulating with flashing neons and endless depth and energy.”

With BrewDog Watt and Dickle wanted to do something, quirky, edgy, innovative and different. They feel that by causing controversy, unsettling institutions and really pushing the envelope we can raise awareness for craft beer in the UK and get more dispassionate consumers starting the journey towards becoming bonafide craft beer aficionados. In keeping with this, BrewDog pushed the threshold of strong beers to create ‘Extreme’ ones.  Tactile Nuclear Penguin, Sink the Bismarck and The End of History are some of the extremes. “The End of History will be our last strong beer of 55 per cent ABV. The beer is an audacious blend of eccentricity, artistry and rebellion. It is the final instalment of our efforts to redefine the limits of contemporary brewing,” says Watt.

Craft Beer is on the rise all around the world and Watt doesn’t see this rise as just a temporary swing. “Craft beer is the future, make absolutely no mistake about that. People are becoming more and more disillusioned with products which are generic and mass produced and becoming more interesting in where things come from. People want something with integrity, ethical, natural ingredients, local and hand crafted by passionate people. Craft beer is all of those things. And it is cool,” says Watt.

So when can we order a Trashy Blonde over our Indian bar counters, experience The End of History or mull over a Tactile Nuclear Penguin? Well, we don’t know yet. All we can do for now is keep our fingers crossed!

Watt on BrewDog Brews

5 A.M. Saint: An uber-hoppy red session ale. Bucket loads of dry hops and eminently drinkable. This beer is not cool. You may think it is, but that is merely a beautiful lie fabricated by clowns and gypsies.

Dogma: Scottish Heather Honey, Californian Poppy, Kola nut and Gurana. The beer is a combination of active stimulants and depressants. Consequently when we launched this beer we called it Speedball. That lasted about a week.

Hardcore IPA: An ostentatious and grandiloquent hop bomb. 150 IBUs punish your pallet and mountains of hops hammer their resinous oils into the pores in your tongue. This is an extreme beer rollercoaster for freaks, gypsies and international chess superstars. Won the Gold Medal at the 2010 World Beer Cup.

Paradox: An imperial stout which we age for 6 months in Scottish single malt whisky casks. The flavours, aromas and character of the finest Scotch whiskies get infused deep into the texture of the beer. Drink at room temperature, unless you live in an igloo.

Trashy Blonde: A titillating, neurotic, peroxide, punk of a pale ale. Combining attitude, style, substance and a little bit of low self esteem for good measure. Made with hops specially imported from America and imagination especially imported from Alice in Wonderland.

Punk IPA: An irreverent and aggressive international pale ale. English, American and stunning New Zealand hops combine to provide a avalanche of tropical fruit flavour and an uncompromising bitter bite!

Riptide Stout: A contemporary Scottish take on an age old Russian classic style originally brewed for the Tsars. Best enjoyed with an air of aristocratic nonchalance.

Tokyo: An 18.2% Imperial Stout brewed with Jasmine and Cranberries. It is all about moderation. Everything in moderation, including moderation itself. What logically follows is that you must, from time, have excess. This beer is for those times.

Sink the Bismarck: This is IPA amplified. With the volume turned full up, it is important you that you be careful with this beer and show it the same amount of sceptical, tentative respect you would show an international chess superstar, clown or gypsy.

Tactical Nuclear Penguin: This is an extremely strong beer. It should be enjoyed in small servings and with an air of nonchalance in exactly the same manner that you would enjoy a fine whisky, a Frank Zappa album or a visit from a friendly yet anxious ghost.

The End of History: This 55% beer should be drunk in small servings whilst exuding an endearing pseudo vigilance and reverence for Mr. Stoat. This is to be enjoyed with a weather eye on the horizon for inflatable alcohol industry Nazis, judgemental washed up neo-prohibitionists or any grandiloquent, ostentatious foxes.

via Ambrosia magazine

Published in Ambrosia magazine, March 2011

With Indian drinkers getting more wine-literate over the last five years, wine etiquette is becoming increasingly important. And I’m not talking about just that pretentious bunch that has the four S’s (See, Swirl, Smell, Sip) down pat and swirl their wine and inhale deeply every chance they get, but even the average Joe who enjoys a glass of wine every now and then. If you like wine it would add immense value to know which glass enhances which wine. If you’re not from the wine fraternity but have paid attention to all those Hollywood flicks which revolve around ‘Upper East Side’ type royalty (Yes, I watch Gossip Girl!) Riedel might be familiar to you. To those who aren’t, Riedel Crystal is the 250 year old European brand credited with revolutionizing glassware for the enjoyment of wine. Often costing the earth, these gorgeous decanters and glasses are very hard to resist.

Eleven Riedel generations have owned and operated the business, but it is the last three, over the last 50 years that have done more to enhance the oenophile’s pleasure than even most winemaking dynasties. I had the opportunity to speak to Georg J Riedel – 10th generation master-glassmaker and head of Riedel.       

What according to you makes the brand Riedel so different from its competitors?

Our brand carries one very interesting detail – that Claus J. Riedel, the 9th generation of the family, was the first person in history to create wine friendly stemware. Over time we have developed the knowledge of how to shape glasses so that we increase the enjoyment of consuming a beverage. Whether water or alcoholic beverages, it makes a big difference what glass you consume it in. Riedel is the pioneer when it comes to becoming the taste maker and this makes us unique.

Georg J Riedel

The idea of the tongue map has been discussed amongst scientists in a controversial way, and I can confirm that the idea of the tongue map is not what it is in this very strict way. However the mouth feel, in which taste plays a minor role, is something which we believe makes a diff in how wine is delivered.

Water from different glasses has no flavour, however, people are able to point to one over the others by their liking. This means the mineral content of water is being perceived in one glass as sweet and soft, and rather salty and more intense in other glasses. So whether the tongue map exists or not, consumers can clearly identify their preferences when it comes to enjoying the same beverage, at the same temperature, from different shaped glasses and this is what we are interested in. Science has not come up with a clear explanation for this. But it is human nature for people to identify precisely what they like more and what they like less.

What is the research process that Riedel follows to identify the ideal stemware and decanters for different beverages?

Internally we identify shapes that we believe are suitable for the specific beverage. Then we travel to different regions and invite a panel of experts to give their judgments. Based on the judgements, we create special shapes. We have had no disappointment in the past. Whenever we have created shapes, there have been an overwhelming 98 per cent of people who have experienced the combination between the beverage and how it evolved in the glass. 98 percent of the people would say, ‘Yes, this is the shape I like best’.

Decanters are aerators, so we develop decanters not based on the typical varietal specific characteristics. They are only there to aerate wine, and the aesthetics is something which is an addition to it. We believe that decanters are very important as they are the most intimate with the wine and they soften and polish the wine itself. But it does not make a difference what shape of decanter you use. It is an aeration process that takes place during decanting and meanwhile the wine rests in the decanter.

CLAUS J RIEDEL: Professor Claus J. Riedel (9th generation) was the first designer in history to recognise that the taste of wine is affected by the shape of the glass from which it is consumed. He began experimenting to create stemware that would match and complement specific wines and spirits. In 1961, a revolutionary concept was born when Riedel introduced the first line of wine glasses in different shapes and sizes to match different grape varietals. Claus identified what would become the most important quality of Riedel glassware: that the precise shape and angle of the bowl affected how the wine interacted with all of one’s senses, helping to paint a full “taste picture.”

What are your views on a market like India which is just waking up to wine drinking?

My approach to this market is very modest. As we are tool makers, there has to be an understanding for wine to begin with, and only after an appreciation and respect for wine is developed can the glass accompany the process of enjoying wine.

What is the overall sale of Riedel, pertaining to the Middle East and Asian markets? Which countries have registered highest growth in recent times?

These are new, emerging markets for us. They are markets driven on premise business. As tourism is emerging in these countries, a lot of culture is moving into these emerging markets, which makes them very interesting for us to conduct business.

The countries that have registered highest growth are the ones with the most developed international tourism. Currently those are The United Emirates especially Dubai and Bahrain.

How has your operation in India been so far? Riedel is currently stocked in Delhi and Mumbai, are there plans to distribute to other cities as well?

India is a very new market to us. We are very interested to get closer to the Indian wine industry so that we become friends and we can approach the young Indian pallets with our philosophy.

The distribution currently is limited to the metropolitan cities, but we sell our products around the country. Hotel projects are our main subject. I would guess that retail in India has still some way to go to get to the level of the retail environment in Europe. In India glass wear/table top still plays a minor role. So we are some distance away from opening our own stores in India.

What are the marketing strategies that have been planned for India?

Riedel has encountered two markets in 2010 – India and China. In China we have a company that is in charge of developing Riedel. India is a couple of years behind in our plan of developing and making major investments into the country because of the per capita wine consumption which is very small. In China, the wine consumption in average per capita has already reached half a bottle of wine per person, which is amazing.

So our main emphasis currently is on China. We have approximately 15 stores right now and we are looking at 45 to 50 franchise stores being opened by the end of the year. Thus Riedel is growing and expanding quite rapidly in China, so all our strengths and travel plans presently are taking us more to China rather than India.

Have you tasted any Nashik wines? What is your opinion of it?

I’ve had a chance to taste some Nashik wines and I would say that they are good. It’s a question of identifying the right climate in India to grow grapes which allow the produce of grape juice which is of international repute. So far there are good wines but I think India is still far away from the excellence which a country needs, in order to be proud about the wine making, its regions and so on.