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Tough sell: Baijiu, China's potent tipple, looks abroad
By Pauline FROISSART in London, Dan Martin in Luzhou
Luzhou/London, China (AFP) June 17, 2019

5 things to know about China's national drink, baijiu
Luzhou, China (AFP) June 17, 2019 - Baijiu is China's national drink much like vodka is to Russia.

Yet while the latter has become a staple of bars, homes and restaurants abroad, baijiu is either unknown overseas or viewed as undrinkably strong and harsh.

Now major producers are looking to expand into global markets. Here are five things to know about China's favourite tipple, which may soon be coming to a bar near you.

What is baijiu?

Baijiu, pronounced "buy-joe" means "white" or "clear alcohol" and is distilled mainly from sorghum, but rice, wheat, barley, millet or a mixture of cereals also are used.

It has a resulting wide flavour range, but nearly all baijiu features an intense and complex flavour profile prized by connoisseurs.

Production methods vary but generally involve steaming grains then fermenting them for months after adding a yeast-like substance called "qu."

The fermented grains are then distilled and the resulting liquor is aged, often for years.

How much is consumed?

Around 10.8 billion litres of baijiu (2.9 billion gallons) was consumed in 2018, more than whisky, vodka, gin, rum and tequila combined.

That much baijiu would take an hour to slosh over Niagara Falls and weigh as much as 1,000 Eiffel Towers, says Jim Boyce, a Beijing drinks blogger who launched the August 9 World Baijiu Day several years ago.

China produces enough baijiu each year to fill 4,000 Olympic swimming pools, he adds, and if you poured all that into shot glasses and stacked them up, they would reach the moon.

What's baijiu's story?

Production goes back several hundred years and has mostly been a mom-and-pop affair.

But Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping and other Communist rebels were big fans, quaffing baijiu to ease the rigours of revolution, and after taking over China in 1949 they merged local producers into larger companies and created production standards.

The official support helped trigger a baijiu boom.

In particular, Kweichou Moutai - now the world's most valuable spirits company - gained enduring fame when Premier Zhou Enlai and President Richard Nixon raised glasses of it to toast the historic 1972 US-China rapprochement.

But baijiu came to rely excessively on procurement by the government and military, and President Xi Jinping's launch of a crackdown on corruption and official excess in 2012 has jolted producers into exploring new revenue streams.

Where does it come from?

Baijiu is produced nationwide but its epicenter lies in the neighbouring southwestern Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Guizhou.

There, Guizhou giant Kweichow Moutai, along with Sichuan rivals Luzhou Laojiao and Wuliangye Yibin, form what's known as baijiu's "Golden Triangle".

The rugged area is famed for producing baijiu's most celebrated flavours, attributed to a unique terroir including clean local water and a warm, humid climate conducive to the micro-organisms that help convert grain into alcohol.

How strong is it?

Baijiu's alcohol content ranges between 35-55 percent.

That's more or less on par with spirits like gin, vodka and tequila, but baijiu's reputation for potency is enhanced by the way it is consumed.

Unlike many spirits, baijiu is drunk straight up as shots during meals, usually in the form of a toast and with a cry of "ganbei!" which means "dry the glass!".

Baijiu producers and bar owners, however, know this will be a tough sell for foreign consumers, which has prompted a movement to create baijiu cocktails, something long considered sacrilege in China.

It may be China's national spirit, but for London bartender Ellie Veale it's clear from the first swig why baijiu has not caught on overseas.

After some initial fruity notes, Veale crinkles her noise as the crystal-clear booze reveals its intense, earthy essence.

"I worked on a cattle farm in Australia and this kind of aftertaste reminds me of the smell of ... cow manure, hay, and horses," she says, in the London bar Demon, Wise & Partners.

"It's not the beverage for me," she concedes.

And yet baijiu's popularity in China has propelled demand -- making it the most consumed spirit in the world, and its major producers the most valuable distilleries globally.

"Baijiu belongs to China, but also the world," says Su Wanghui, information director at Luzhou Laojiao, one of the country's biggest and oldest brands.

"We hope to have people around the world try baijiu, and like baijiu," she adds.

There's just one problem: the taste.

Kinder critics say it evokes truffles or burning plastic, while less generous descriptions have included "industrial cleaning solvent" and "liquid razor blades."

Ranging from around 35 to 55 percent alcohol, baijiu packs a searing, sickly-sweet punch, an intensity that evolved to match the powerfully spicy cuisine of southwestern China, baijiu's heartland.

Many foreigners in China relate horror stories of being bombarded by baijiu toasts at banquets.

"The foreign view of baijiu is: very spicy, like a rocket blasting to heaven," Su told AFP at Luzhou Laojiao's headquarters on the upper Yangtze in rugged Sichuan province.

- Rocket fuel -

Most Chinese people cannot imagine major celebrations without it, particularly the Lunar New Year holiday, when excessive toasting leaves revellers staggering toward brutal hangovers.

Around 10.8 billion litres of baijiu (2.9 billion gallons) was consumed last year, nearly all in China, according to International Wine and Spirit Research.

That's more than whisky, vodka, gin, rum and tequila combined and would take an hour to slosh over Niagara Falls according to WorldBaijiuDay.com.

But baijiu has been on a roller-coaster in recent years.

A government corruption crackdown launched in 2012 hit hard: premium brands had become the go-to gift for bribing Communist officials.

Sales fell off a "cliff," Su says.

And many younger Chinese, exposed to French wine and German beer, shun a rotgut they equate with rural regions and drunken businessmen.

Forced to adapt, manufacturers have found success with milder new varieties and brightly packaged single-serving mixed drinks.

Sales have recovered, igniting share prices.

In 2017 the market value of Shanghai-listed Kweichow Moutai surged past London-based Diageo, maker of Johnnie Walker whiskey and Smirnoff vodka, to become the world's most valuable distiller.

Now around 900 yuan ($130) per share, it could become China's first 1,000-yuan stock.

Emboldened distilleries are now looking abroad, staging tastings and developing smoother, export-oriented brands, while touting centuries-old artisanal production methods.

At Luzhou Laojiao, sorghum is fermented for months in deep microbe-rich earthen pits, some in continuous use since 1573.

Staff, resembling shaolin monks in bright yellow and red outfits and performing all work by hand, distill the fermented mash in steaming-belching wooden pot stills. The end-product is then aged, sometimes for decades, in giant clay pots in nearby caves.

- Challenge for customers -

Water, soil, climate and other factors make baijius from different regions as "different from each other as a whiskey is to a mescal," said Bill Isler, CEO of Ming River, an export-only brand created by Luzhou Laojiao.

But he says there is a "lot of prejudice" to overcome, before baijiu can follow once-obscure "local" spirits such as vodka and tequila and go global.

A wave of "baijiu bars" opened in China, the US, and Europe in recent years as a buzz swelled. But many have since closed.

"It's a challenge for the customers. It hasn't really caught on in the West yet," said Demon, Wise & Partners owner Paul Mathew.

The price of top brands is one hurdle. Mathew charges 12 pounds ($15) for a glass of Kweichow Moutai.

"It is also a very unfamiliar flavour for guests, so we need to tell them the story, how baijiu is made, why it has the characteristics it has, before it becomes more accessible," he said.

Jim Boyce, a Beijing blogger on China's booze scene who launched annual August 9 "World Baijiu Day" in 2015 to raise awareness, said baijiu is hampered by how it's consumed in China: straight up, with food.

"The fact is, people, at least in North America and Europe, don't drink lukewarm straight 52-percent alcohol, so the people promoting this tend to be really into traditional baijiu culture," he said.

Boyce advocates creative cocktails or novelties like baijiu ice cream, suggestions that provoke blank stares from Chinese baijiu executives seeking his advice.

"It's been frustrating, frankly," he adds.

Overseas sales are growing, however. Kweichou Moutai earned 2.89 billion yuan ($418 million) abroad last year, up 27 percent year-on-year. But that's a drop in the bucket of its 73.6 billion yuan overall revenue.

"We're trying our best to make the world understand, to spread the word about baijiu, just like whiskey and red wine are now known within China," Su said.

"But there is still a long road ahead."

burs-dma/lto


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