The Prague Post - Locals toil as experts toast Turkish wine renaissance

EUR -
AED 4.312416
AFN 80.18699
ALL 96.982523
AMD 448.597282
ANG 2.101645
AOA 1076.783684
ARS 1671.001866
AUD 1.776711
AWG 2.113643
AZN 1.998932
BAM 1.954029
BBD 2.365257
BDT 142.920479
BGN 1.952407
BHD 0.4427
BIF 3504.209416
BMD 1.174246
BND 1.503937
BOB 8.114508
BRL 6.365001
BSD 1.174336
BTN 103.457243
BWP 15.663538
BYN 3.9729
BYR 23015.218632
BZD 2.361809
CAD 1.621898
CDF 3375.956688
CHF 0.932936
CLF 0.029031
CLP 1138.830262
CNY 8.372197
CNH 8.356656
COP 4626.528643
CRC 592.962632
CUC 1.174246
CUP 31.117515
CVE 110.165164
CZK 24.327678
DJF 209.113369
DKK 7.466556
DOP 74.632365
DZD 152.304377
EGP 56.386232
ERN 17.613688
ETB 168.136048
FJD 2.63354
FKP 0.866958
GBP 0.866317
GEL 3.168041
GGP 0.866958
GHS 14.326772
GIP 0.866958
GMD 85.130296
GNF 10182.77194
GTQ 8.999844
GYD 245.56909
HKD 9.144533
HNL 30.760124
HRK 7.53584
HTG 153.660092
HUF 393.307768
IDR 19284.756996
ILS 3.920918
IMP 0.866958
INR 103.542826
IQD 1538.405831
IRR 49377.037536
ISK 143.410547
JEP 0.866958
JMD 187.909708
JOD 0.832512
JPY 172.341124
KES 151.688851
KGS 102.68834
KHR 4707.733652
KMF 492.5866
KPW 1056.842043
KRW 1628.36212
KWD 0.358486
KYD 0.978596
KZT 630.138941
LAK 25474.371687
LBP 105159.561069
LKR 354.588657
LRD 233.689216
LSL 20.51311
LTL 3.467243
LVL 0.71029
LYD 6.337284
MAD 10.561928
MDL 19.464029
MGA 5195.1813
MKD 61.48428
MMK 2465.324645
MNT 4224.093689
MOP 9.418844
MRU 46.656718
MUR 53.803617
MVR 18.075441
MWK 2036.371895
MXN 21.873066
MYR 4.938877
MZN 75.093569
NAD 20.51311
NGN 1770.01093
NIO 43.210841
NOK 11.709497
NPR 165.531988
NZD 1.973801
OMR 0.451494
PAB 1.174311
PEN 4.122164
PGK 4.978488
PHP 66.81227
PKR 333.341112
PLN 4.255757
PYG 8411.377253
QAR 4.280421
RON 5.073932
RSD 117.148613
RUB 98.202162
RWF 1701.628929
SAR 4.405015
SBD 9.664739
SCR 17.403238
SDG 705.129071
SEK 11.002097
SGD 1.504655
SHP 0.922773
SLE 27.407176
SLL 24623.345938
SOS 671.094683
SRD 45.93121
STD 24304.518273
STN 24.477817
SVC 10.275688
SYP 15267.705426
SZL 20.50533
THB 37.207738
TJS 11.050251
TMT 4.10986
TND 3.415804
TOP 2.750199
TRY 48.461246
TTD 7.968778
TWD 35.571198
TZS 2919.283205
UAH 48.361479
UGX 4113.272378
USD 1.174246
UYU 46.927472
UZS 14607.761826
VES 180.289821
VND 30985.41233
VUV 141.096607
WST 3.269116
XAF 655.363082
XAG 0.028468
XAU 0.000321
XCD 3.173458
XCG 2.116482
XDR 0.814386
XOF 655.36587
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.408063
ZAR 20.52981
ZMK 10569.621434
ZMW 28.153886
ZWL 378.106684
  • RBGPF

    1.8400

    77.27

    +2.38%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    24.17

    -0.25%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    17.22

    +0.46%

  • RIO

    -0.2500

    63.72

    -0.39%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    33.91

    -0.06%

  • BCC

    -1.0000

    89.02

    -1.12%

  • NGG

    0.3200

    70.42

    +0.45%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.73

    +0.8%

  • GSK

    -0.4500

    40.05

    -1.12%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    47.31

    +0.55%

  • BTI

    0.1700

    56.19

    +0.3%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    14.69

    +0.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.39

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    -0.3300

    24.39

    -1.35%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.8

    -0.08%

  • AZN

    -0.1400

    81.56

    -0.17%

Locals toil as experts toast Turkish wine renaissance
Locals toil as experts toast Turkish wine renaissance / Photo: Ozan KOSE - AFP

Locals toil as experts toast Turkish wine renaissance

As the evening light falls on her vineyards in northwestern Turkey, Zeynep Arca Salliel pinches the grapes and tastes the skin. It is harvest time.

Text size:

Aided by an Italian wine expert, the 50-year-old took up winemaking professionally in the 2000s, aged 30, after the lifting of a state monopoly on alcohol sales that favoured large producers.

Today, her Arcadia estate, two-and-a-half hours from Istanbul in the Thrace region, produces between 120,000 and 150,000 bottles per year, using both international and local grape varieties.

Yet she considers herself "an endangered species".

"The changing climate, the economic crisis, inflation" and a "lack of visibility" have contributed to her troubles.

"We produce quality wines but have had difficulty selling them domestically and exporting them," she said.

Above all, winegrowers say taxes, bureaucracy and sometimes farcical laws are killing their production.

A whole generation of newcomers to the profession, including many women, often trained abroad, has sparked a wine renaissance in Turkey, said Goknur Gundogan, a sommelier and consultant.

Turkey boasts some 250 estates, half of which are focused on quality wines.

Curious winemakers cultivate international grape varieties such as Cabernet, Sauvignon and Merlot for the domestic market.

But they also experiment with local varieties, from white grapes Narince, Kolorko and Papaskarasi to Karasakiz reds.

- Anatolian heritage -

Of the thousand native Turkish grape varieties identified by renowned French grapevine classifier Pierre Galet, around 15 are grown for wine -- and enjoy real success, according to Gundogan.

When international critics came to Turkey in 2009, they tasted about 50 wines, but only about six of them were local varieties, said Umay Ceviker, founder of Yaban Kolektif, which is dedicated to preserving Anatolia's viticulture heritage.

This year there were 85 wines, "all coming from local varieties", he added.

Turkish wine-making enjoyed a boom period between 2002 and 2013, but authorities then banned all advertising and organising of viticultural festivals.

Although wine has been made here for millennia, Turkey is predominantly Muslim and its conservative president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, "does not want Turks to consume it", said Gundogan.

"We can't do any promotions. We're even afraid to post a photo on Instagram," admitted Metin Harbalioglu, who, at 50, is nonetheless launching a new winery, Prius, in Thrace.

The price of wine is being pushed up by inflation -- running at some 50 percent -- and VAT at 20 percent.

Wine accounts for just six percent of overall alcohol consumption -- well behind beer or local anise-flavoured tipple raki.

A recent law requires producers and importers to maintain a level of financial bank collateral to cover future taxes or fines for possible infractions.

Adding to their woes are monthly checks to ensure legal compliance.

"Over the past 10 years, dozens of new producers launched. These regulations have put a stop to that," sighed Salliel.

Fines can range from 500,000 to 15 million Turkish lira ($14,700 to $440,000), sums that exceed the entire turnover of some smaller domains.

- Well-kept secret -

Seyit Karagozoglu, 58, the founder of the Pasaeli winery, was a pioneer investor in several grape varieties.

He exports to the United States, Britain and the United Arab Emirates, where his bottles are VAT exempt.

But he bemoaned the Turkish authorities' attitude.

"There's a very specific lack of promotion. I think it can be really challenging for the new generation or someone who wants to start," he said.

For Ceviker, authorities "are very good at controlling the business, the tax side, and the regulations (but) they are not interested in promoting wine as a very Turkish speciality".

Turkey was once among the world's top 10 wine exporters but now only exports around three percent of its production.

Yet the quality is there, insisted Arcadia's Italian expert Andrea Paoletti, who has two decades of experience in Turkey with Pasaeli.

In his view, "the future of Turkish wine is on the international market. They must make themselves known."

"Alas, we remain a well-kept secret," says Salliel.

Of some 78 million litres produced in 2021, only 1.8 million was exported, according to official data.

Today, Turkey is globally the fifth-biggest producer of grapes but ranks 51st for wine exports.

Yet Gundogan is confident.

"Even under the Ottomans, despite prohibition, Turkey never turned its back on wine," she said.

"You can change the system, not the mentality."

Z.Pavlik--TPP