bamboo is mainly used,
at Kew Gardens,
but in the East it has a myriad of uses, and here is another one, alcohol production! Villagers
and liquor producers in several Chinese provinces have come up with a way of
using living bamboo trunks to produce alcoholic drinks that are proving very
popular with tourists. By using high-pressure injection techniques, they
fill up sections of living bamboo trunks with rice wine or sorghum and leave it
to mature for several months, up to a year and a half, during which time the
liquor is infused with flavone (the liquid naturally released by the
trunk) and the sap of bamboo. This apparently gives the liquor a pure, pleasant
aroma and detoxifying properties. It also lowers alcohol content, as the plant
absorbs part of it,
but it’s not just the liquor itself that has got people
interested, but the way it is retrieved from the plant after maturing.
Customers are often invited to see workers knocking on various sections of
bamboo trunks to check if they contain the valuable concoction, and then
drilling a small hole to allow it to pour out into a glass container. It is
ready to drink on the spot, but if someone wishes to gift the liquor and make
an impression, they can opt to have a section of the bamboo cut out as a
bottle,
this liquor maturation technique was originally developed in Fujian province, but has since been adopted by villagers and spirit producers from other parts of China, like Guangxi and Sichuan. Production is still fairly limited to a few tens of thousands of liters per year, but as demand keeps growing, businesses are increasing production,
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