Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Cider Week Puts Spotlight On Province's Growing Cider Industry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2019 06:09 PM

    VANCOUVER — Rachel Bolongaro was sitting at her desk one day in 2013 when she asked herself, "Do I want to be an engineer for another 20 years?"


    The answer was "no," and she took a week off work to figure out what she wanted to do with her life. She happened to visit a cidery on Vancouver Island, where she fell in love with the idea of life on a farm lined with apple trees.


    "I thought, 'I'd really like to spend a lot of time in a place like this,' and the Lower Mainland didn't have a cidery at the time," she said. "The next year, I took a one-week cider making course and came back and said to my husband, 'We need to buy a farm.' "


    The couple bought a property in Langley, B.C., in 2014 and opened the Fraser Valley Cider Company in 2016. Bolongaro, originally from the United Kingdom, wasn't sure how sweet Canadians were on cider, but she sold out within months, two years in a row.


    Cider is booming in popularity and British Columbia, home to bountiful orchards, is starting to carve out a special place in the industry. The annual B.C. Cider Week will soon salute the boozy beverage with tastings and festivities across the province.


    The celebration is set to last a little longer than a week, with events from April 25 to May 5. Connoisseurs can attend a cider "masterclass" in Victoria, the Okanagan Cider Festival in Kelowna and the already sold-out B.C. Cider Festival in North Vancouver.


    Bolongaro's cider will be featured at the North Vancouver fest along with dozens of other local delights and a few foreign brews. The event inside North Vancouver's historic Pipe Shop boasts tastings, live music and the chance to meet cider makers.


    The Fraser Valley Cider Company has 1,800 heritage apple trees on site and also uses dessert apples from Kelowna to produce a variety of cider. Specialties include a honey cider made using the farm's own bee hives and a sparkling bone-dry cider.


    "A lot of people come in and they're surprised by the taste," said Bolongaro. "They're surprised that it's good and dry. A lot of people, I think, find cider over-sweet."


    Shawn Pisio, who co-founded the B.C. Cider Festival three years ago, said the event sold out within hours this year. Cider is growing in popularity as people discover craft varieties that easily beat the mass-produced sugary examples, he said.


    "We think of it as where craft beer was 10, 15 years ago, when you had the major macro producers and you had a couple small local producers and that was sort of it," said Pisio, who co-owns alcohol and food importing company Txotx Imports Inc.


    "With the craft beer explosion, new styles, new types, new breweries ... we're seeing cider having that renaissance as well. We thank the craft beer industry because it paved the way for people to be looking for products like this."


    The opportunity to grow more cider apples in B.C. is massive, but the province is already home to many excellent craft cideries, he said. Twin Island Cider on Pender Island, Nomad Cider in Summerland and The BX Press Cidery and Orchard in Vernon are some of the standouts featured at the festival, he said.


    Pisio recommended cider newbies who are interested in picking up a good bottle to speak with store staff, look for something that is locally produced and to generally avoid those with added sugar or water.


    For those who aren't able to snag tickets to the B.C. Cider Festival, Bolongaro urged people to come visit the Fraser Valley Cider Company — also known as her "happy place" — after it opens for the season in May.


    When she first opened the cidery, she continued to work her engineering job for a year. Now, she can't imagine ever going back.


    "I've devoted myself full-time to the cidery," she said. "It's all-consuming, which is great, because there's nowhere else I'd rather be."


    If you go:


    — The B.C. Cider Festival is sold out, but check social media in case tickets become available: https://www.facebook.com/BCCiderFest/


    — More information about events during B.C. Cider Week is also available on social media: https://www.facebook.com/bcciderweek/


    — The Fraser Valley Cider Company opens for visitors in May: https://www.fraservalleycider.ca/

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Baby Travelling To See Grandfather Among Canadian Victims In Ethiopian Crash

    A nine-month-old baby girl is believed to be the youngest Canadian victim in the devastating Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed everyone on board.

    Baby Travelling To See Grandfather Among Canadian Victims In Ethiopian Crash

    Youth Arrested In Kingston Terrorism Case Due For Bail Hearing

    OTTAWA — A youth facing terrorism charges in Kingston, Ont., is due in court for a bail hearing today.

    Youth Arrested In Kingston Terrorism Case Due For Bail Hearing

    Trudeau Offers Condolences To Kenyan Victims Of Ethiopian Airlines Crash

    OTTAWA — The Prime Minister's Office says Justin Trudeau spoke today with his Kenyan counterpart about the Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed everyone on board, including 18 Canadians.

    Trudeau Offers Condolences To Kenyan Victims Of Ethiopian Airlines Crash

    'All Options On The Table', But No Plans To Ground 737 Max 8 In Canada: Garneau

    'All Options On The Table', But No Plans To Ground 737 Max 8 In Canada: Garneau
    "We will continue to evaluate the situation," Garneau told reporters Tuesday in French.

    'All Options On The Table', But No Plans To Ground 737 Max 8 In Canada: Garneau

    Statistics Show Illegal US-Canada Border Crossings Climbing

    Statistics Show Illegal US-Canada Border Crossings Climbing
    New statistics from U.S. Customs and Border Protection show the number of people apprehended along the U.S. border with Canada is continuing to climb.

    Statistics Show Illegal US-Canada Border Crossings Climbing

    Tina Fontaine Asked For Help Before She Died, Was Told No Beds: Advocate

    Daphne Penrose says in her report into the death of Tina Fontaine that social workers and others ignored multiple signs that the girl was spiralling downward and in danger.

    Tina Fontaine Asked For Help Before She Died, Was Told No Beds: Advocate