Farm Progress

California wines filling Chinese glasses

Today, thanks to an emerging, increasingly thirsty middle class, more Chinese are drinking California wines.

August 17, 2011

1 Min Read

From the Sacramento Bee:

About a dozen years ago, Chinese wine drinkers were mixing Chateau Lafite Bordeaux with Coca-Cola, Joan Kautz recalls.

"They didn't like the taste of wine yet, and they wanted some sweetness," said Kautz, vice president of international operations for her family's vineyards in Lodi, which has been shipping to China for almost 15 years.

Today, thanks to an emerging, increasingly thirsty middle class, more Chinese are drinking California wines without cutting it with cola, including labels like Lange Twins, Ironstone and Michael David, all from the Lodi region.

"Now the Chinese market isn't just about expensive French wines," Kautz said. "Their taste preferences have evolved. It's a population that's becoming more affluent, they're Internet-savvy, they're reading up and wanting to embrace Western culture."

California vintners are raising a glass to this news, and concerted efforts in Lodi, Napa, Sonoma and Paso Robles are dovetailing with statewide campaigns to crack the lucrative Chinese market. Scattered wineries throughout Sacramento and the foothills are also pursuing sales to China.

For more, see: Lodi labels fill glasses in China

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