WSJ Newswire – In Hong Kong, Stirrings of a Serious Wine Scene
Sunday, October 18th, 2009
Img: Business Week
For all the toothsome crabs and delicate siu mai that make Hong Kong one of the world’s best places to eat, until recently wine was largely enjoyed more as a marker of status than as a complement to a meal. Wine programs and shops in the city’s main district catered to local tycoons and expatriates with a taste for Bordeaux and expense accounts to match.
But venues for wine—shops, tasting bars and even a winery—now flourish in the city, thanks to a happy convergence of factors that includes reduced taxes and a government mandate declaring 2009 “Food & Wine Year”. Auction houses are clamoring to sell fine Bordeaux, Burgundies and Barolos and ever more restaurants are hosting dinners with wine makers flown in for the occasion. Tasting events, trade shows and oenology courses abound. A recent Sotheby’s auction of two American-owned wine collections raised $7.9 million, almost 30% more than estimated.
Still, many of the best and most interesting sites are tucked away, often a short taxi ride out of central Hong Kong.
Click here to access the complete article from the WSJ
[Source] – The Wall Street Journal, by Jake Lee