For India-born vigneron, the grapes are sweet! (With Images)  (With Images)
By Neena Bhandari

Mornington Peninsula (Australia), Aug 15 (IANS) Come December, and
award winning Delhi-born winemaker Paramdeep Ghumman will be in India
with his selection of fine wines, as Australian Red and White become
the toast of the festive season.

He has already carved a niche with his Nazaaray boutique wines in the
southernmost shire of Flinders located on the Mornington Peninsula in
Victoria.

Ghumman, a computer software engineer turned professional wine grower
and wine maker, migrated to Australia in 1981 from Kolkata, with his
doctor wife, Nirmal. Having grown up on agricultural farms back home,
the couple soon invested in a farm along the eastern curve of Port
Phillip Bay, a 90-minute drive south of Melbourne, to provide their
son and daughter "the typical Aussie lifestyle".

"We had the option of moving to Canada, but Australia seemed more
attractive with its vast beaches, sunshine and passion for hockey,
cricket and wines", says the 57-year-old, while pruning the grape
vines in his sprawling eight-acre vineyard, overlooking the undulating
hills dotted with kangaroos and wallabies.

Aptly named Nazaaray Estate Winery, Ghumman has won many accolades for
his boutique wines since 1999 and just last week his Pinot Gris 2007
was awarded the silver medal at the Victoria regional showcase in
Melbourne.

But turning the paddocks used for grazing cattle into a vineyard has
been a labour of love. Ghumman grew up in a teetotaller family and
hadn't sipped any alcohol until the age of 22.

"I acquired the taste for wine after coming to Australia and was
fascinated by the wine industry. How the soil and climate influenced
the wine was intriguing. So I began reading books on the subject and
attending wine making and viticulture (science of growing grape vines)
courses," Ghumman told IANS.

In 1996, he planted his first vines on a patch named "Param's Folly"
by his wife, and three years later made his first wine in a converted
cattle shed on the property and soon received his licence as a
vigneron. From a modest beginning, today he has 5,400 vines and makes
the sought after brands of Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris, Sauvignon Blanc and
a small amount of Shiraz.

Nazaaray's cellar door is unique too, housed inside a 1930s railway
carriage. The couple invites wine lovers on the first Saturday of
every month for Table d'hote (Table of the Host) to join the family
and workers for a traditional Indian lunch ranging from tandoori
paranthas and tandoori chicken to the good old Indian street chaat
experience.

This year, Ghumman is hoping to bottle 500-600 cases (each case has 12
bottles) of Pinot Noir and around 250 cases of Pinot Gris.

Wine exports from Australia to India have gone up four times to 1.4
million litres from 360,000 litres just a year ago. Australian wine
exports to India total A$800,000 (Rs.28 million), mainly through
tie-ups. Australian companies such as Jacob's Creek and South Corp
have also entered into distribution tie-ups for their wines.

"Our focus is consistent quality and depth of flavour rather than
quantity. The strategy is to use traditional Burgundian wine-making
methods (for example, low yields per vine, open vat fermentation) to
produce wine that best represents the meso-climate of green hills on
the western side of the vineyard and the ocean to the south," says
Ghumman, who feels "women are more discerning and appreciative of wine
flavours".

The Mornington Peninsula in Victoria, Australia's garden state,
extends south into the treacherous waters of the Bass Strait, dividing
the water into the protected Port Philip Bay and Oceanic Westernport
Bay, providing the valley with a cool climate and red volcanic soil
that gives the wines from this region a distinctive flavour. The
relatively high rainfall accentuates the intense fruit flavours in
these wines.

Being in a competitive industry, surrounded by 60-odd nationally and
internationally renowned wineries, the Ghummans have been a mentor for
Indian overseas students looking for work experience in the industry.

An engineer, who has represented Delhi state in the National Hockey
Championships and played for the East Bengal Hockey Club, Ghumman now
devotes his spare time to the vineyard or to one of the 18-hole Golf
courses on the peninsula, some with breathtaking vistas of the Tasman
Sea.

True to the logo - a lady with the falcon from a Rajasthani miniature
- Nazaaray represents the owners' Indian heritage and the refined
taste of their premium wines.

Indo-Asian News Service

Reply via email to