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Four Days in Uzbekistan


Last month I spent four days in Uzbekistan. I went there to attend a conference on Sustainable Regional Development in Central Asia. Our host was the Samarkand Branch of Tashkent State University of Economics, located in the city of Samarkand.

I must admit that when I received the invitation to be one of the keynote speakers at the conference, my knowledge of Uzbekistan was close to non-existent. I knew that it had once been part of the USSR, and had become an independent country in 1991 following the political break up of the Soviet Union. Apart from that, I did not know much.

When your knowledge is sparse, the internet is your friend. A quick Google search revealed that Uzbekistan is a country of 35 million people in Central Asia. It shares a border with five countries – Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Afghanistan. It is also one of only two countries in the world that is double landlocked (the other is Liechtenstein -which I visited in 2018) A landlocked country is one that does not have direct access to an ocean or has a waterway that directly connects it to an ocean. A double landlocked country is one that is surrounded by countries that are themselves landlocked.

Uzbekistan is one of two countries in the world that is double landlocked

Occupied as early as the 8th century BC, the region that comprises modern-day Uzbekistan came under Russian control during the 18th century. The country’s name translates as ‘land of the Uzbeks’. Indeed, Uzbeks (a Turkic ethnic group native to Central Asia) comprise 84% of Uzbekistan’s population. With such an interesting history, and the fact that I had never been to Central Asia, meant that I was really looking forward to visiting this fascinating country.

My journey to Uzbekistan was quite a long one. I flew with Jet Blue from Detroit, MI to Boston, MA, where I connected with a Turkish Airlines flight to Istanbul. In Istanbul, I met up with my colleagues, Tomaz from Portugal, Ana from Spain, and Eduardo and Fernando from Brazil. We were on the same flight from Istanbul to Samarkand. I had left Detroit at 3:28pm on May 2 and, thanks to the combination of long flights and lengthy layovers, did not arrive in Samarkand until 4:10am on May 4 – a total travel time in excess of 27 hours. This was the first time in my life I had taken two back-to-back overnight flights (Boston to Istanbul and Istanbul to Samarkand). Arriving in Samarkand was not the end of my journey, however. The five of us, along with another colleague, Hans from Sweden (who had arrived the previous day) drove to city of Bukhara, a four-hour drive west of Samarkand.

Bukhara is the fifth largest city in Uzbekistan, with a population of just under 250,000. The historic center of Bukhara is a UNESCO World Heritage site. The city is located on the historic Silk Road, a network of Eurasian trade routes which operated from the 2nd century BC thru the mid-15th century. Over two thousand years old, Bukhara is described by UNESCO as “the most complete example of a medieval city in Central Asia, with an urban fabric that has remained largely intact.”

The ancient city of Bukhara
Bukhara at night

After an overnight stay in Bukhara we headed back to Samarkand. With a population of ~320,000, Samarkand is Uzbekistan’s third largest city. Like Bukhara, Samarkand has a rich history. Founded around 700 BC, it is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities anywhere in the world. Invaded and destroyed by Genghis Khan and his Mongol army in 1200, it was one of the most important stops on 4,000-mile-long Silk Road.

Taking in the sights in Samarkand
Beautiful Samarkand

Although a predominantly Muslim country, alcohol is legal in Uzbekistan. Spirits (particularly vodka) accounts for ~57% of alcohol consumed by Uzbeks, reflecting the recent Russian influence on the country’s culture. Indeed, every evening at dinner, our host made sure that there was a bottle of Uzbek vodka, along with a bottle of Uzbek Cognac, on the table. Both were consumed straight – no mixers required. I usually do not drink vodka or cognac. Indeed, the last time I had consumed so much vodka was on a 2017 trip to Poland.

We had Uzbek vodka every evening with dinner
Uzbek Cognac
The conference dinners were one of the highlights of my visit to Uzbekistan

Beer accounts for approximately 34% of the alcohol consumed by Uzbeks, with wine accounting for the remaining 9%. In 2021, beer consumption per capita was a modest 7.8 liters. This compares with US per capita consumption levels that hovers around 70 liters.

The most common beer I encountered while in Uzbekistan was one called Sabrast. A European-style Pilsner, it is produced in a brewery owned by the Danish brewing giant Carlsberg in Uzbekistan’s capital city Tashkent. I also had the opportunity to try a Russian beer. At lunch, on the drive back from Bukhara to Samarkand, one of my hosts ordered a Baltika 7 for me, a Russian Pilsner-style beer, brewed under license by Carlsberg in Tashhent.

Sabrast – the most common beer I encountered in Uzbekistan
Enjoying a Sabrast beer with my friend and colleague Tomaz at a rooftop bar we discovered in Bukhara
Baltika 7, a Russian beer, with traditional Uzbek bread

While the Uzbek beer market is evolving, and craft beer is gaining in popularity among younger and more affluent beer drinkers, I never saw any while I was there. But perhaps I will on a future visit. I have had the good fortune to visit over 40 countries across 6 continents. Uzbekistan is right up there as one of the most fascinating that I have ever visited. I would love to return one day.

Purchasing Authenticity

Back in May, the Wall Street Journal ran an article about Grimbergen Abbey in Belgium. Like many European abbeys, Grimbergen, located in Brussels’ northern outskirts, has a long and storied history of brewing beer. It is not an unbroken history, however. The abbey’s first beer was brewed by Grimbergen’s Norbentine monks in 1128. Periods of unrest meant that brewing ceased three times during the abbey’s history, with the most recent occurring during the French Revolution (1789-1799). After the Revolution, brewing never returned to the abbey. and, in the middle of the twentieth century, the monks licensed the brand to a local Belgian brewery, Brouwerij Maes . In 2008, such was Grimbergen’s success, the brand name was purchased by the Danish brewing giant Carlsberg. And it was Carlsberg who made the decision that Grimbergen should once again be brewed at the abbey. With Carlsberg money, a new 10,000 square foot state-of-the art brewery has been constructed to bring brewing back to Grimbergen.

As I read the Wall Street Journal article, one sentence stood out and hit me squarely in the eye – “The resurrection has furnished its sponsor, Carlsberg, with its own kind of holy grail: unique and authentic brews.” In particular, it was the adjective authentic that struck me as an interesting choice. Earlier this year, I published a book chapter which I titled “Craft Beer Tourism: The Search for Authenticity, Diversity, and Great Beer“. In researching material for that chapter I read quite a bit about the concepts of authentic/authenticity.

To better understand the meaning of any word, a good place to start is a dictionary. Perusing online dictionaries reveals the following definitions of authentic – “not false or imitation“, “being what it is claimed to be“, and “not false or copied“.

But what about consumers? How do they perceive and define authenticity? In a paper published in the journal Organization Science in 2014, Balazs Kovacs, Glenn Carroll, and David Lehman, explored how the ownership structure of restaurants impacted consumer views of authenticity. Interestingly, the first step in their study was to survey consumers and identify both synonyms and antonyms that consumers associated with the adjective authentic. Consumer-identified synonyms for authentic included genuine, real, and legitimate, while antonyms included false, phony, and scam.

For a growing number of consumers, authenticity appears to be increasingly valued. Indeed, according to B. Joseph Pine and James H. Gilmore, in their 2007 book Authenticity: What Consumers Really Want, “in industry after industry, in customer after customer, authenticity has overtaken quality as the prevailing purchasing criterion.” When it comes to authenticity it seems that ownership of the company producing the product or providing the service matters. Analyzing the language used by restaurant patrons in 1.2 million reviews of over 18,000 restaurants on the Yelp platform in three cities – Los Angeles, New York, and Dallas – Balazs and his colleagues found that consumers perceived independent, family-owned restaurants as being more authentic than chain, non-family-owned restaurants. In other words, when it comes to authenticity, ownership matters.

The relationship between ownership and authenticity has been something of a thorny issue for several decades within the world of brewing. Those of you who are craft beer enthusiasts have probably sampled one of the wonderful beers brewed by Trappist monks in one of their fourteen abbeys in Europe and the United States. Trappist beers are considered among the best in the world. For example, Westvleteren 12 XII, a Belgian Quad brewed at the Sint-Sixtus Abbey in Westvleteren in Belgium was recently rated the third best beer in the world by reviewers at RateBeer.com. Such has been the popularity and high quality of Trappist beers over the decades, other breweries started to brand and market some of their beers as “Abbey Ales”. One example of such an “Abbey Ale” is Leffe, which is brewed by the global behemoth AB InBev. While once brewed by monks at the Abbey of Leffe, today the beer is brewed at the Stella Artois Brewery in Leuven, Belgium. Mass produced “Abbey” Ales attempted to cash in on the popularity of Trappist beers. They did so by utilizing images that suggested a monastic connection, such as an image of an abbey or a monk drinking beer.

The Leffe label includes an image of an abbey

As noted by Michael Beverland and his colleagues in a 2008 paper published in the Journal of Advertising, the breweries who marketed these beers “successfully positioned their products as Trappist-styled products through subtle marketing and use of imagery, color cues, and font styles to suggest authenticity.”

Not surprisingly, the Trappists felt threatened by the growing number of “Abbey Ales” that seemed to be causing confusion among beer drinkers. As a result, they took steps to mitigate the confusion. In 1998, to protect the authenticity of their product, the Trappists established the International Trappist Association (ITA) and trademarked “Trappist”. According to the ITA website, the Association was established to “inform consumers of the origin and authenticity of Trappist products with no ambiguity.” In addition, the intent of the Association is to protect ” the fundamental values associated with every Trappist product” and to ensure that “the Trappist name is not used improperly” and “does not mislead anyone”. Only beers made within the walls of a member abbey may carry the “Authentic Trappist Product” label.

The “Authentic Trappist Product” seal on the label of a bottle of Trappist Ale brewed at Saint Joseph’s Abbey in Spencer, MA

In some respects, the “Authentic Trappist Product” label is similar to the “Independent Craft” seal” that was launched by the Brewers Association in 2017. This label can only be used by authentic craft breweries. The creation of the Independent Craft seal was driven by similar developments that had necessitated the creation of the Authentic Trappist Product label. As a result of the emergence of “crafty” beers (think Blue Moon) and the purchase of craft breweries by mega-breweries (think AB InBev’s purchase of Goose Island Beer Co.), there was increasing confusion in the marketplace as to which beers were brewed by an authentic craft brewery and which were made by a brewery owned by AB InBev, Heineken, etc. Between, 2011 and 2017, AB InBev purchased ten craft breweries in the United States, including Goose Island Beer Co. in Chicago, Il (purchased 2011), Four Peaks Brewing Co. of Tempe, AZ (2015), and Wicked Weed Brewing of Asheville, NC (2017). Other former craft breweries purchased by large multinational brewing companies include Lagunitas Brewing Company of Petaluma, CA which was purchased by Heineken in 2015 and Atwater Brewery of Detroit, MI which was purchased by Molson Coors in 2020.

The Independent Craft seal on display at Sun King Brewing in Indianapolis, IN

Multinational giants such as AB InBev purchase craft breweries because it is the most straightforward route to gain a foothold in the lucrative craft beer market. They are, in effect trying, to purchase the authenticity that is associated with craft breweries. This was made quite apparent by Andy Goeler who worked for AB InBev and was assigned to Goose Island after its acquisition. According to Mr. Goeler, “we bought Goose Island for what Goose Island was: authentic, very credible”.

Why do companies value being able to promote their products as authentic. According to Kovacs and his colleagues in the aforementioned article “many modern organization go to great lengths to project an image of authenticity, believing that it will create value” for them. In other words, authenticity, or the appearance of authenticity, sells. With respect to beer, a 2018 study by Jarret Hart in the Journal of Wine Economics found that consumers were willing to pay between $0.72 and $1.04 more for a pint of beer produced by an independently-owned craft brewery than one produced by a “craft brewery” that was owned by corporate breweries such as AB InBev.

Ownership, and transparency regarding ownership, matters. Unfortunately, large multinational brewers are not always transparent when it comes to ownership. This is why labels such as “Authentic Trappist Product” and “Independent Craft” are necessary. They help consumers distinguish the authentic from the inauthentic. As stated by Michael Beverland and his colleagues in the aforementioned 2008 study, “identifying a product as authentic” helps “consumers gain control over their consumption decisions”.

Further Reading:

Beverland, Michael B., Adam Lindgreen, and Michiel W. Vink. 2008. Projecting authenticity through advertising: Consumer judgments of advertisers’ claims. Journal of Advertising, Volume 37, Issue 1, pp. 5–15.

Hart, Jarret. 2018. Drink beer for science: An experiment on consumer preferences for local craft beer. Journal of Wine Economics, Colume13, Issue 4, pp. 429–441.

Kovacs, Balazs, Glenn R. Carroll, and David W. Lehman. 2014. Authenticity and Consumer Value Ratings: Empirical Tests from the Restaurant Domain. Organization Science, Volume 25, Issue 2, pp. 458-478.

2017 – The Year in Review

This is the time of year when many people reflect about the year that is coming to an end. So as I was thinking about a topic for my final blog entry of 2017, I thought I’d compile an inventory of the
breweries I visited during the last twelve months.

Continue reading 2017 – The Year in Review

Wonderful, Wonderful Copenhagen

This is my third entry about my recent trip to Copenhagen, Denmark. You can read my other two entries here and here. I was there to attend, Beeronomics 2017, the biennial conference of the
Beeronomics Society. Continue reading Wonderful, Wonderful Copenhagen

Beeronomics 2017

One of the benefits of attending Beeronomics 2017 was I got to interact with people like Martin Stack.

Last week I was in Copenhagen, Denmark. I was there to attend the fifth biennial conference of the Beeronomics Society. Yes, you read that correctly, Beeronomics – a conference that brings together scholars from around the world who are doing research on some aspect of the beer industry. The first conference of the Society was held in Leuven, Belgium in 2009. This was followed by conferences in Freising, Germany (2011), York, England (2013), and Seattle, USA (2015). I attended the conferences that were held in York and Seattle. As a beer researcher I have found the conferences to be Continue reading Beeronomics 2017

A Beer for Women?

Back in May I came across a story in the USA Today. A new brewing company was up and running in Lakeland, FL. Nothing particularly newsworthy about that. Craft breweries are opening up at a rate of more than one a day. In 2015 alone 617 new craft breweries opened Continue reading A Beer for Women?

Nya Carnegie Bryggeriet

I was in Stockholm, Sweden a few weeks ago. I wrote about my visit in my last entry. It was a great trip that allowed me to sample some fine Swedish craft beers. The Swedish craft beer industry is growing steadily. New breweries are opening up every year and one in particular had peaked my interest – Nya Carnegie Bryggeriet (New Carnegie Brewery). The brewery is a joint venture between New York’s Brooklyn Brewery and Danish brewing giant Carlsberg. Continue reading Nya Carnegie Bryggeriet