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One of Australia's Top Winemakers Is Blending In a Fiery Chinese Liquor

Shiraz With a Hint of Soy Sauce: Penfolds Bets on Potent China Brew

(Bloomberg) -- Nothing is sacred at Treasury Wine Estates Ltd. in the pursuit of profit.

The Australian maker of Penfolds is now lacing some of its most famous wine with baijiu, the popular fiery liquor from China that can smell like soy sauce. The result, Penfolds Special Bottlings Lot. 518, goes on sale in September. The added liquor will increase the alcohol level to 21.5 percent, similar to the strength of port, from about 14 percent.

Few people outside China ever drink baijiu, which is made from sorghum, rice, wheat or corn and can contain as much as 53 percent alcohol. Treasury is betting that the combo of China’s liquor of choice with Shiraz can help recruit more drinkers in Australia’s biggest wine-export market.

“This will broaden our base and help future-proof Penfolds,” Penfolds Chief Winemaker Peter Gago said in a statement. Other new Penfolds products aimed toward that goal include brandy and Champagne.

One of Australia's Top Winemakers Is Blending In a Fiery Chinese Liquor

To contact the reporter on this story: Angus Whitley in Sydney at awhitley1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Anand Krishnamoorthy at anandk@bloomberg.net, Jeff Sutherland, Edward Johnson

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