Description: This is
a VOA Special English General News Report.
See text below
Text:
Last year, about 12,000 people came to Hillsborough
Winery in Virginia to taste its wine products. Owner
Bora Baki says business is good.
BORA BAKI: "We have a saying in Turkish. I don't
know if you translate this properly: 'When you are
in sorrow, you drink. When you are happy, you
drink.' So even [if] the economy was bad, people
find a way of enjoying themselves at least with a
glass of wine."
Baki was preparing to retire from the import
business when he came to the United States from
Turkey in 1979. But his son Karem persuaded him to
consider winemaking.
KAREM BAKI: "I was graduating my college, my
undergraduate degree, and so we were both looking
for something to do."
Karem received a college degree in winemaking. He
not only makes wine for the family business, but for
other vineyards.
KAREM BAKI: "With the different regions in Virginia,
you almost have almost perfect conditions. We, of
course, have our own issues and complications. But
as far as the potential for a grape-growing region,
it's quite great."
Virginia is home to nearly 200 wineries. Half of
them are less than eight years old. Ann Heidig
opened Lake Anna Winery in 1990. She also is
president of the Virginia Wineries Association.
ANN HEIDIG: "I think the quality of Virginia wines
has attracted some larger investors to come in and
want to start growing grapes and making wine in
Virginia. Even from California, we have a couple of
people that have come in to start wineries here. So,
I think they see it as an opportunity because it's a
young industry and it's growing and also it's a
viable industry, I believe, in the state for
agriculture."
A few Virginia wineries produce as many as 40,000
cases of wine a year. However, most wineries are
small.
Pandit Patil and his wife Sudha opened Narmada
Winery in late 2009.
PANDIT PATIL: "In five years, I want everybody to
think this is a destination, and that is what we are
working towards."
Many Virginia vineyards sit in beautiful
countryside. Narmada provides music on weekends. It
also has something no other local winery does.
TED SEVIGNY: "You don't find Indian Virginia
wineries. Most of them are Italian or whatever, type
of thing, but this one is very unique."
SUDHA PATIL: "We have a unique thing being of Indian
background, that we do. Some of our wines can pair
very nicely with the Indian food that we serve here
just for snacks."
Sudha Patil has been making wine since 2008. She has
already won several awards for winemaking. The
awards may help Narmada if the state's wine industry
continues to expand. Annette Boyd heads the Virginia
Wine Board Marketing Office.
ANNETTE BOYD: "This can't go on indefinitely. But
for right now, with the trends in consumption going
up, the interest in local wines, and knowing what is
being produced in your own backyard is growing, we
have a long way to go, I think, before we reach that
point."
For now, Virginia winemakers will keep making the
best wines their vineyards can produce. I'm Jim
Tedder.
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