Ararat (stylized as ArArAt) is a brand of Armenian brandy produced 10 years before the
Yerevan Brandy Company was established (1877).[1][2] It is made from white grapes and
spring water, according to a traditional method. The brand's "ordinary brandies" are aged between 3 and 6 years. Its "aged brandies" are between 10 and 30 years old.
Ararat brandy is primarily sold in countries of the former
USSR, chief among them
Russia,
Georgia,
Ukraine and
Belarus. In the Russian-speaking countries of the former Soviet Union, the Armenian brandy is marketed as cognac (Russian: армянский коньяк,
tr.armjanskij konjak). In 1900, the brandy won the Grand-prix award in Paris that allowed Ararat to legally call their brandy "cognac" until it was revoked after WWII.[3][4] The term "brandy" has never really caught on in the region.[1]
In politics
An undocumented story claims that during the
Yalta Conference,
Winston Churchill was so impressed with the Armenian brandy Dvin given to him by
Joseph Stalin[5] that he asked for several cases of it to be sent to him each year.[6][7][8] Reportedly 400 bottles of Dvin were shipped to Churchill annually.[4][9] This brandy was named in honour of the ancient capital
Dvin, and was first produced in 1943.[9]
During a 2013 meeting at his personal villa in
Sochi, Russian president
Vladimir Putin gave British Prime Minister
David Cameron a bottle of Armenian brandy as a gift, recalling Stalin's offering to Churchill in 1945.[10]
Brands
Ararat Erebuni, collection 30, 50 and 70 years old.
Ararat Taste, collection Apricot, Cherry, Coffee and Honey.