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Just try it

By Mike Peters | China Daily | Updated: 2015-07-10 07:30

Just try it

[Photo provided to China Daily]

Where the girls are

One fan of Boyce's idea, Matt Trusch, is a native of Houston, Texas, who became a fan of baijiu during a long stay in China as a student and entrepreneur. Today, he says, he's the biggest maker of the white spirit in the United States. His product, Bye Joe, is sold in 15 states and sports a winking temptress on the label; it comes in two infused flavors (Dragon Fire and Tiger Eyes) as well as the meatier original Red, with a more robust sorghum flavor.

"You can see the future by looking at who's drinking baijiu in China and who's drinking it in America," says Trusch.

"In China, the demographic is 99-percent Chinese, 60 to 70 percent 40 or older, and about the same percentage male. Baijiu drinkers in the US, however, are 55 percent female, only 50 percent are ethnic Chinese, and 70 percent are under 35."

The young, usually female drinker is what Trusch calls the "pioneer drinker", eager to try something new. Besides offering them infused liquor store and clever cocktails, Trusch says the key is to cut the alcohol level.

"What works is matching the alcohol levels of other spirits," Trusch tells China Daily during a quick visit to Beijing and Shanghai recently. "Forty percent is our starting point, with our Red brand, and while our infused brands are 35 percent alcohol. The original Chinese formula of about 55 percent is just unpalatable in the Western market, and it doesn't work in cocktails - the proportion is just all wrong."

Into the mix

Can baijiu find a place on trendy bar shelves globally, alongside fine sakes and tequilas?

Boyce notes that several baijiu makers are operating in the West, with strategies like Trusch's. And Chinese makers, seeing their huge market share shrink at home, as the government cracks down on lavish parties and gift-giving, are looking at foreign drinkers with new interest. Some are even making their own versions of 40-percent baijiu for export.

"They will eventually market that way at home," Boyce predicts. Young people in China aren't drinking what their parents did, opting for the hipper, lighter and creative bar offerings abroad, he says.

"The baijiu makers here will respond to that," he says. "These guys didn't get rich by being dummies."

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