Leading food, wine matchmakers face off for China sommelier title
THE battle for the honor of being Chinese mainland's supreme sommelier has been fierce and eight contestants will meet in the final next week. Aubrey Buckingham checks the chances of three Shanghai finalists.
The country's top sommelier will be picked from a pool of eight next week in the China National Sommelier Competition with the winner going on to represent the Chinese mainland in the first Association de la Sommelelerie Internationale contest for the best in this craft in Asia and Oceania.
The finalists were selected after a grueling qualifying round held concurrently in Beijing and Shanghai last month. The 17 contestants were required to taste two wines blind and answer a number of multiple choice and short answer questions.
Competition was so fierce that the judges picked eight finalists instead of the intended six.
Leading Shanghai's charge in the finals, held at The Westin Bund Center Shanghai next Tuesday, are three promising young wine professionals - Pudong Shangri-La's Leon Jin, InterContinental Puxi's Diego Zhang, and Kee Club Shanghai's Vivian Tian, the country's first certified female sommelier.
The contest is not solely to pick the best wine waiter but also to raise the bar across the industry.
"I can see the competition will sort out a few good ones, which is what we're looking for," says organizer Tommy Lam, professor and director of the wine program at Tianjin University of Commerce.
"At the same time there will be a few with good potential but they will need more training and opportunity."
According to the Chaozhou (Guangdong Province) native, who currently resides in Singapore, being a good sommelier requires "maturity, a very dedicated thinking that service is part of the game and regular practice." As sommeliers progress in their careers, they are also responsible for directing the wine program at their hotel or restaurant.
Language is also very important, and the contest will be conducted in English.
When you come to the international platform, you need a foreign language like English, French or Spanish.
Those are the international standards. Vivian Tian
The wine industry may be male dominated, but that doesn't faze Gansu Province-born Vivian Tian.
With experience in Switzerland, Greece and Hong Kong and a Court of Master Sommelier Second Level Certificate, this elegant and well-spoken young woman is definitely one of the favorites to clinch the title.
Winning isn't everything, however, and even though Tian strives to get the best out of all her endeavors, she also sees the contest as the perfect opportunity for China's wine waiters to come together.
"I want to test my knowledge and also to meet the other sommeliers to see if we can do anything together," she says.
"In Hong Kong, there's a sommelier association which does a lot of wine tasting and wine training, but in China it's a new profession and not many people know about it and we don't know each other (personally)."
"I hope we can share experience and I can learn from the other sommeliers. Eventually, hopefully we can do something in Shanghai and Beijing."
The Kee Club at 796 Huaihai Road serves both Western and Chinese food and Tian is equally adept at pairing wines with both.
She has also been responsible for managing the cellar, which she says is tricky given that local customers still go for more widely available wines instead of unique offerings. Leon Jin
Fresh faced and smartly dressed, Leon Jin is confident of putting in a good showing.
Trained by Singaporean wine guru Kelvin Tay, the 27-year-old Jade on 36 assistant manager has gained invaluable hands-on experience during winery visits to Australia organized by suppliers and the hotel.