The First Tequila From Outside Mexico
South Africa's Agava fills demand while Mexican plantations recover.
Among the sheep and scrubby vegetation of South Africa's dry
and windswept Karoo plains, a group of cactus juice distillers
has taken a leaf out of Mexico's book and started making tequila.
Agave Distillers, named after the Blue Agave plant used in Mexico
to make the fiery liquor, is the first such operation outside
the Latin American country. Mexican diplomats used international
trade agreements to ensure the South Africans did not actually
call their drink tequila, but their "Agava" branded
spirit has the same taste as leading brands, and bottles are flying
off the shelves. More importantly for managing director Roy McLachlan,
distillers as far away as Australia, Europe and the United States
are buying up bulk consignments of concentrated liquor, which
both undercut Mexican products and fill a hole in the market left
by the Latin Americans. That tequila-bottling bottleneck stems
from a scarcity of agaves in Mexico. Since similar species of
the plant grow in South Africa, the Karoo distillers have pounced
on the opportunity to fill the gap. Agaves have been growing in
the Karoo for a century and a half. Legend has it that the plants
were brought to Africa by Spanish and Portuguese sailors, who
used the heavy hearts of the three-meter (10-foot) high plant
as ballast in their ships. Until the late 1990s, the agaves were
used as feedstock for animals. The Karoo entrepreneurs set out
on their liquor-making plan only when they heard that many of
Mexico's prized agave plantations had been wiped out by disease.
The plants take several years to grow, and that, says McLachlan,
opened up a window of opportunity for a South African distillery.
"The only difference between what we make and what they make
is that they process the Agave tequilana in Mexico and we process
the Agave americana that grows here in the Karoo," he said,
wandering through a jungle of copper pipes and towering stainless
steel tanks at the distillery. "Tequila can only be made
in Mexico for the same reasons as port, sherry and champagne,"
he added. "Other than that ... the components are the same."
To carry any of these names, the drink in question must come from
a specific region or country.Trade agreements mean similar drinks
made elsewhere cannot carry the name, even if they are made in
exactly the same way. McLachlan says the Karoo plant can produce
1,200 liters a day, but that the company had raised capital to
fund an expansion to 4,000 litters a day by the third quarter
of 2003. Additional plans were afoot to get production up to 10,000
litters daily, but even that would still only quench two percent
of the world's tequila demand. After rebranding its labeled product,
Agava, to sell on the South African market, Agave Distillers is
now shifting between 12,000 and 15,000 cases of the spirit a month.
In addition, McLachlan said he hoped to be sending more than 60,000
liters of concentrate a month to importers. Local farmers win
too, as they can now sell the otherwise useless hearts of the
agave plants, not really cacti, but spiky dull-green succulents.
The 13 million-rand ($1.75 million) project has not always been
plain sailing. The plant's first operators went into liquidation
without producing a drop after health inspectors condemned a set
of expensive agave cookers. The distillers are confident their
brand matches anything produced in Mexico, because they have tweaked
their manufacturing process to end up with a taste modeled on
drinks giant Diageo's market-leading Jose Cuervo brand.
The Mexicans are certainly not happy about the intrusion on their
turf. Efforts there to up agave production have led scientists
to clone the plant, which is so valuable that police have been
assigned to guard plantations from thieves. Pride in the national
drink has even taken Mexican tequila police to the United States
to complain about drinks that are not made with 100 percent of
the home-grown liquor. McLachlan says the company's business is
running to plan, but that as time goes on, agave plantations laid
out in Mexico years ago to make up for the anticipated shortfall
are developing. "We are four years down the line with the
window of opportunity, so we are anticipating that we will have
our foot in the door with a product that is well established by
the time that the Mexicans come back to full production."
He has not yet been to Mexico to learn local manufacturers' distilling
techniques. "They don't allow us in," he said. "They
are very, very secretive, they don't want us to know at all."
Reprinted with permission of MSNBC <http://www.msnbc.com/>.
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