Abhay Kewadkar, a pioneer of winemaking in India, talks about the evolution of the industry and why wine should not be a snobbish drink
Abhay Kewadkar, 58, started working in the wine industry in India when there wasn’t much of an ‘industry’ to begin with. Fresh out of engineering college, not only did he have to learn and master the process of winemaking at his first job at Champagne India Ltd in 1984, he also had to pick up French to work with industry experts in France. Over the decades, he has worked with Indian winemakers such as Chateau Indage, Grover Vineyards, and United Spirits, where he was instrumental in setting up Four Seasons Wines.
Kewadkar has now launched his own label of wines, Early Dark, under his venture, Tetrad Global Beverages, and is making the first batch of handmade wines in collaboration with Vignobles Arbeau, award-winning winemakers from France. The Arbeau family has been making quality wines for five generations and distributing them to over 30 countries. Early Dark’s portfolio of wines—which includes a Reserve Range of three varietals and blends, and a special Regional Range of another three varietals—has been produced in the vineyards of Sud Quest in France. Edited excerpts from an interview:
Q Your career in the wine industry started in 1984 in a 100 percent export-oriented enterprise, and now you have launched an import-only venture. What brought about this change in focus?
When I started work at Champagne India, there were no vineyards in the country, no technology available for winemaking, and no market. Importing the technology into India was an expensive proposition, but if the product was 100 percent export-oriented, there were no duties on related imports. So, making wine only for export was almost entirely because of economic factors.
After having worked in multiple enterprises in various capacities over the next 35 years, I found myself at a stage when there was nothing new for me to do. The only thing left was to import wines. But here, too, I wanted to do something different from other importers, who simply bring in wines made and bottled by someone else; they don’t have their own labels. So that’s what I decided to do.
It helps that we have some excellent friends and collaborators in France. I have known Anne Arbeau [the owner and fourth generation of Vignobles Arbeau] for 20 to 25 years, and she has always wanted to sell wine in India; a label that keeps the French heritage. So, we are not selling table wine; we are bringing in wines that are IGP [Indication Géographique Protégée, a quality category of French wine] and above.
Q How has global wine production and consumption changed with the growth of new wine regions such as Argentina, Chile, South Africa and California (US)?
Traditionally, wine production was dominated by the ‘Old World’ countries, mostly European. These include France, Spain, Italy and Germany. ‘New World’ wines come from the countries like the ones you mentioned.