Stolichnaya
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Stolichnaya | |
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Type | Vodka |
Proof | 40-100 |
Manufacturer | FKP Soiuzplodimport |
Country of origin | Russia |
Introduced | 1901 |
Variants | Variants |
Related products | List of vodkas |
Stolichnaya (Russian: Столичная, also abbreviated as Stoli) is a Russian vodka produced from wheat and rye grains in Russia.
Contents |
[edit] Description
This vodka starts with wheat and rye grains. Artesial well water is added to these grains to begin the fermentation which takes about 60 hours. Once fermentation is complete the resulting liquid is distilled four times to a strength of 96.4% ABV. This spirit is then diluted to bottling strength with more artesial well water which ultimately gives the vodka its smoothness. It is then filtered through quartz sand, activated charcoal, and finally through woven cloth.[citation needed]
The brand's logo features the words "Stolichnaya vodka" in gold cursive script, over a drawing of a former Moscow landmark, the Hotel Moskva, where Stalin once stayed and the site of one of the first Metro stations in the capital.
[edit] History
Stolichnaya has its origins in the Moscow State Wine Warehouse No. 1 which was opened in 1901 by the authorities to ensure higher quality vodka production.[citation needed] Since 2001, Stolichnaya trademark has been an object of a dispute between the SPI Group and the government of Russia.
In 1972, the Pepsico company struck a barter agreement with the then government of the Soviet Union, in which Pepsico was granted exportation and Western marketing rights to Stolichnaya vodka in exchange for importation and Soviet marketing of Pepsi-Cola.[1] This exchange led to Pepsi-Cola being the first foreign product sanctioned for sale in the U.S.S.R.[2]
After the breakup of the Soviet Union Stolichnaya vodka continued to be produced for export in several of the ex-Soviet republics, including Kazakhstan and Ukraine.[citation needed] The bottles retained their Soviet-era labels.
In August 1991, the Soviet patent office revoked the Soviet agency's right to use the Stolichnaya name in Russia.[citation needed] This led to numerous lawsuits, including what companies could market vodka under this name in the United States. On November 20, 1992, a federal judge ruled that PepsiCo would maintain the exclusive right to the name in the United States, as allowing others to market under the name would bring a "risk of irreparable harm" to the trademark.[3]
In 2002, A Moscow court ruled that Russia would get back the rights to the Stolichnaya brand name from Soyuzplodimport (SPI).[4]
[edit] Varieties distributed in the United States
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- Stolichnaya 75 proof (red label)
- Stolichnaya 80 proof (cristall or gold)
- Stolichnaya 100 proof (blue label)
- Stolichnaya Elit ("ultra-luxury" i.e. ultra-filtered)
- Stoli Cranberi (Cranberry)
- Stoli Ohranj (Orange)
- Stoli Peachik (Peach; formerly named Stoli Persik)
- Stoli Razberi (Raspberry)
- Stoli Strasberi (Strawberry)
- Stoli Vanil (Vanilla)
- Stoli Citros (Citrus)
- Stoli Blueberi (Blueberry)
[edit] References
- ^ Robert Laing (2006-03-28). Pepsi's comeback, Part II. Mail & Guardian online. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- ^ PepsiCo Company History (1972). PepsiCo, Inc. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- ^ Company News; Judge Rejects Stolichnaya Trademark Suit. The New York Times (1992-11-20). Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- ^ Russia toasts Stolichnaya victory. BBC (2002-02-01). Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
[edit] External links
- STOLI.COM - The official site for Stolichnaya Vodka