Honoring Indian heritage and family ties
Patil credits the supportive Virginia wine community as well as a distinctive Indian influence for the winery's success. On weekends, guests can pair their wines with samosas, chana masala (chickpea curry), spinach and butter chicken.
"A lot of people don't know you can pair Indian food with wine,” Patil says. “People are surprised to try Indian food with wine. Nobody is offering that."
Viognier, petit verdot, cabernet franc and chardonel (a seyval blanc and chardonnay hybrid) are among their top varietals. The wines and the winery's name honor the family's Indian heritage. “Narmada” is the name of both a river in India and Sudha Patil's mother-in-law, who sacrificed for the family's education. “My mother-in-law actually sold some of her gold jewelry in order to buy the plane fare” so her son could study in the U.S., Patil says. “They didn't have much money, but she made sure everybody was educated."
Indian influences seep into the wine in other ways, too. Made with vidal blanc and chardonel grapes, Narmada's 2018 Legacy vintage honors family and heritage with its lush notes of mango, a popular fruit in India.
"My husband used to ask me all the time, ‘Can you make something with mango?’ “ says Patil. “I never had a chance to make the wine with mango, but after he passed away, I said, ‘I've got to make something with mango for him.’ And that's why we call it Legacy.”
The winery also invites guests to celebrate Diwali, the Indian festival of lights, and the spring festival Holi. This year, Narmada hosted a socially distant Holi celebration by offering flower petals at each table so customers could throw them on their companions.
Pre-pandemic, for the Diwali celebration, the winery put on a fireworks display and played Bollywood tunes while guests danced. One year, Patil's professionally trained daughter-in-law offered dance lessons.
Patil says she is now ready to sell the winery, though she could remain as a winemaker. She hopes the next owner will continue to honor the winery's South Asian heritage in an industry that has historically lacked much diversity.
Many first-generation immigrants, Black Americans and other minorities often lack the inheritance or the generational knowledge that would make it easier to enter the wine business, says Phil Long, owner of California's Longevity Wines and president of the Association of African American Vintners. The association sponsors scholarships and mentors winemakers of color.
"Thanks to people like the Patils who follow their hearts and overcome obstacles in their way, we are beginning to make progress in creating a more diverse wine industry,” Long says. “People from every culture need to understand that wine can be a career path for them. This only happens if they see people who look like them having success in the wine world."
May 15, 2021 at 04:46AM
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Indian Family Taps Heritage to Enrich Winery - AARP
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