sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Anny Scoones: Book on Island distilleries brings back memories of Belarusian adventure

Some time ago, when I was young and brave, I ventured into the very secretive closed Communist country of Belarus, a green and boggy country wedged between Poland and Russia.
TC_217255_web_belarus.jpg
A country scene in Belarus, where Anny Scoones recalls a memorable picnic accompanied by moonshine. Via Flickr

Some time ago, when I was young and brave, I ventured into the very secretive closed Communist country of Belarus, a green and boggy country wedged between Poland and Russia.

I had a connection, a woman from Minsk who had visited 颅sa国际传媒 accompanying a group of children who had been exposed to radiation from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

The only other people on the German plane were several shady-looking KGB fellows and a plump perspiring man selling Bibles. On arrival at Minsk airport, I was escorted into a little dim plywood room, lit with one bare light bulb hanging from a wire, where a skinny, young, pale soldier with bad skin and wearing a short, thick, blue, 颅woollen coat, adorned with one red star on its breast pocket, asked to see my passport.

He read it carefully and then his face brightened, showing a few gold teeth, and he asked me one question: 鈥淵ou know famous hockey player Wayne Gretzky?鈥

I said I did and he let me go. I gave him a box of Purdys chocolates, a bottle of shampoo and some cash. I walked out into the thick June humid haze, and Nonna was waiting to pick me up.

Her husband drove a dirty little car in which the pavement could be seen through the passenger side鈥檚 floor as we whizzed into Minsk, a grey, dingy city that looked as if it needed a good bath (I put my legs on the dash).

Greasy, sooty, yellow-and-red trolley buses, the only slits of colour, rocked clumsily along the wide, gritty streets lined with lilacs just about to bloom as numerous concrete flats, like grey smudges, loomed in the murky air.

But the following day, the husband took me to the 颅beautiful green countryside, where we stopped in a country village and picked up his friend, a large, jovial man with a lot of curly hair and a wide-open face, who carried a bashed-up briefcase and a huge jar of pickled 颅tomatoes under one arm.

They chatted with great 颅animation as we drove farther and farther on damp and bumpy dirt lanes through lush 颅meadows and woodland. At last, we stopped in a little birch grove, where there was a table made from stumps and a slab of wood.

From the briefcase, with great enthusiasm, came black bread, sardines, an onion, and a large bottle containing a brown liquid. The husband produced a white tablecloth and the big, happy man poured the refreshment into little grubby glasses with his thick hands. 鈥淢oonshine from his still,鈥 whispered Nonna. 鈥淭hey want you to drink with them.鈥 And I did.

We drank to friendship, health and hockey. The next thing I聽remember is waking up from a wonderful sleep amongst the birches surrounded by lily of the valley and a nightingale singing in the distance.

Well, you, too, can sample moonshine from right here on Vancouver Island and I鈥檓 sure it would be possible to take a snooze amongst the cedars or daisies after a tasting. I highly recommend The Distilleries of Vancouver Island: A Guided Tour of West Coast Craft and Artisan Spirits by Marianne Scott (2021, Touchwood Editions) to help you embark on this venture.

Even if you are not a 颅drinking fan, the book is very 颅interesting, as are the 21 颅distillers who reveal an abundance of 颅intriguing information about the Island, the natural environment, their experiments in creating concoctions and the distillery business.

For example, trace amounts of gold in the water are 颅credited for the unique 鈥渟hocking smoothness鈥 of a Goldstream vodka. Wild yeast collected from the West Coast forest provides a 鈥渇loral favour鈥 to the Ukee 颅spirits. Krupnik is a Polish sweet liqueur made from local honey. A gin distiller on Hornby Island incorporates 14 ingredients, including cardamom seeds, and lists the health benefits of each. A product called Psychedelic Jellyfish Absinthe is made from wormwood in Tofino.

Cocktail recipes are included from these unique 颅entrepreneurs. If I have the courage, I may try 鈥淭ip Toe Through the Tulips,鈥 but I lack the nerve I once had in Belarus. There鈥檚 even a cocktail that includes instructions to 鈥渟pank a sprig of rosemary.鈥

The introduction is informative and provides all sorts of historical facts, from the Romans distilling pine oil to make 颅turpentine to the Arab nations concocting the first spirits.

The distillery process is explained 鈥 the copper stills and the various bases that can be used. (When I worked in China, I courageously drank a fire-burning beverage made from sorghum.)

The author wisely advises caution if you venture out on tastings, saying: 鈥渄rink only enough to taste the spirit, a tiny sip 鈥 enough to wet your tongue. 鈥︹

And of course, it would be wise to have a designated driver, who, unlike my dear Belarusian friend, has a car with a floor.