By Sourish Bhattacharyya
AMAN DHALL is acknowledged, even by
his business rivals, as the emperor of the wine business in India. When the
Modernite with the right degrees from Boston University and now Stanford tentatively
launched Brindco International at the turn of the millennium, with a wine list
that would make him laugh today (I remember Aman trying to talk me into
believing that an American plonk named Franzia was the best in the world!), he
was taking on the might of Mumbai’s Sanjay
Menon, whose Sonarys Co Brands was the leading wine importer with all the
prestige brands in its portfolio.
It’s been 13 years since the day I
met a very respectful Aman at The Imperial’s coffee shop, only because the
French Embassy had organised a junket for columnist and former editor Malavika Sangghvi, pastry chef and BBC2
cookery show host Roopa Gulati and
me to visit vineyards across France. Today, Aman is the unchallenged leader of
a market that is crowded with small and big importers.
He has worked very hard to grow the
business, not only for himself, but also for the industry, and it has given him
his market leadership position. There was a time when Aman and I have been kept
waiting outside the offices of the top honchos of Bordeaux, despite calls made
in advance by our influential mutual friend Mark Walford, and then cursorily taken on a winery tour by their minions.
Today, the same honchos are falling over each other to stay on Aman’s prized
portfolio.
I have been waiting for Aman to find his
place in the wine sun. He has finally found it in the Wine Who’s Who published in
its latest edition by the influential French magazine, Paris Match. Aman is the
only Indian on the star-studded list and he stands out in the group picture,
which we will publish shortly, with his trademark white turban. He’s in fact in
the company of the guardian angels of many of the prestige wines he imports.
The wine world stars sharing the
spotlight with Aman are mostly from France, as would be expected from a who’s
who prepared by a proudly French magazine. Some of the others featured on the
list are: Marcel Guigal of the Rhone
Valley wine house that bears his family name; Corinne Mentzelopoulos of Chateau Margaux; Philippe Sereys de Rothschild of Chateau Mouton Rothschild; the
famous flying winemaker Michel Rolland
(who’s better known in India for his association with Grover Vineyards); Pierre Lurton of Cheval Blanc and
Chateau d’Yquem; Pierre-Henri Gagey (Louis
Jadot) and Olivier Bernard (Domaine
de Chevalier), presidents of the unions of wine producers of Burgundy and
Bordeaux respectively; Melanie Tesseron
of Chateau Pontet Canet; Christian Lopez
of Chile’s top-selling wine, Vina Concha y Toro; Jean-Michel Cazes, boss of Pauillac’s Chateau Lynch Bages; Patrice Noyelle of Winston Churchill’s
favourite bubbles, Pol Roger; and Pierre-Emmanuel
Taittinger of the champagne bearing his family’s name (and which Vijay
Mallya bid for, only to be rebuffed by the French government).
Finding a place on this privileged
list is not easy. Aman has got it because the wine world looks up to him as the
key to the Indian market.
he deserves to be there...he is the image of professionalism and hard work.I love his gentle sophistication and his subtle intent.Unlike many others who are so loud and full of hot air.Congratulations Aman.
ReplyDeleteUma, you are right. I have seen Aman single-handedly develop the culture of wine drinking in Delhi and educate hoteliers, who had absolutely no clue about wine, about how to differentiate good from bad.
DeleteYes, Aman is a great man-manager, always respectful (he probably still calls you Sourish-Ji) - the secret of his success. Retaining market leadership in a market as competitive as India is some achievement - way to go, Aman-Ji!
ReplyDeleteAlok, I thank God for the fact that Aman has stopped calling me Sourishji!!!
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