H Metro

IF IT’S WINE, IT’S FINE

Zimboz put country on the map in the world of wine

- The Guardian.

WHEN Tinashe Nyamudoka arrived to work in South Africa, in 2008, he had never tasted wine.

Now, he ranks among Southern Africa’s top sommeliers and has his own wine label with internatio­nal sales.

“We have a lot going against us as Zimbabwean­s, and you might think there is nothing good coming out of the country,” says the 36-year-old.

“So, for me to be recognised as the (top) sommeliers in the world, being African and Zimbabwean, instils a sense of hope and pride.”

Nyamudoka started off as a waiter in a Cape Town restaurant where he learned about the different varieties and tastes of wines his customers drank. He moved on to become a hotel wine waiter, working alongside some of the city’s leading sommeliers. After studying his trade, he won the best wine steward award in a competitio­n for luxury hotels in the Western Cape in 2013.

His talents received internatio­nal attention when, in 2017, he and three other Zimbabwean sommeliers were selected to take part in the World Blind Tasting Championsh­ip, in France.

The team was the first from Zimbabwe to take part in the contest, in which competitor­s have to use just their palate to identify the variety of grape, country of origin, appellatio­n, vintage and producer of the wines.

The Zimbabwean­s did not win – coming 23rd out of 24 teams – but their story became the subject of a documentar­y released last year, ‘‘Blind Ambition,’’ which Nyamudoka says brought him “a sense of pride.”

The team returned to the competitio­n the next year and came 14th – beating the UK and the US teams.

His wine label, Kumusha – “home” or “roots” in Zimbabwe’s Shona language – has benefited from his celebrity, producing 200 000 bottles a year, up from 1 200 when it was launched four years ago.

“People started embracing it,” he says. I conceptual­ised it (the label) around 2014,” he adds. “Xenophobia was hitting home (in South Africa) and we were all missing kumusha.”

The eight Kumusha wines – three reds, four whites and a rosé – are all produced in South Africa.

They are sold in the US, the Netherland­s, Kenya and Zimbabwe – “my exciting market”, he says.

This month, he is starting to export his wines to the UK.

“I started this brand from scratch with no aid or financial handouts. It has been pure grit, passion and dedication,” he says.

“I want people to understand that you can make it without prejudice.”

But, Nyamudoka says he has encountere­d racism on his way to the top of a white-dominated industry.

“There are instances where you get to a tasting, and it is all white (people), you kind of feel out of place.

“At work, you cannot get the position you want because you are black. It comes in different forms.

“It is not obvious, it is much more subtle. When I was in my last days on the floor (in a restaurant), people would recognise your talent, but they would not give you your flowers (recognitio­n) because you are not like them.

“It is like you must work twice as hard to prove yourself. It is always going to be there, I suppose.”

Nyamudoka, who sits on the board of the recently establishe­d Sommeliers Associatio­n of Zimbabwe, hopes his achievemen­ts will encourage other Zimbabwean­s to enter the wine industry.

“There’s been an emergence of black sommeliers in the world as the industry becomes more diverse.

“We see the hospitalit­y offering in Zimbabwe improving and there will be a need for sommeliers.”

A fellow sommelier, Takura Makadzange, agrees.

Also from Harare, Makadzange, 38, trained in Australia, working his way up from hotel porter to restaurant owner.

Now, he is back in Zimbabwe. “I came back home because there are plenty of opportunit­ies. There is plenty of space in hospitalit­y.

“Recently, there has been more of an explosion in the food and drink sector in Zimbabwe, especially speciality wines that are being made now.

“The industry has grown, the fish industry has grown and we can have access to wildlife and game meat.

“Promoting the local food and beverage industry is a no-brainer. We have something that no one else does.

“National pride is important but also we have beautiful products,” he says.

Makadzange qualified for last month’s Ubuntu Sommelier Trophy in South Africa, but had to withdraw when he caught Covid-19.

“There are instances where a less-qualified white person is trusted with looking after the wine list over any person of colour, but you have to keep moving,” he says.

“It is very unusual for a Zimbabwean to do well in this field. We want to continue that trajectory.

“I think it’s time we have more women sommeliers from Zimbabwe so, hopefully, I will train someone to get to the standard of competing.” –

 ?? ?? TINASHE Nyamudoka
TINASHE Nyamudoka

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe