HomeNewsBusinessTippling Point I How Batavia arrack, one of the world’s oldest drinks, became a cult spirit

Tippling Point I How Batavia arrack, one of the world’s oldest drinks, became a cult spirit

The still funky spirit that originated on the island of Java is among the oldest distilled spirits in the world.

March 06, 2021 / 14:07 IST
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You have heard enough of whisky. You have drunk a lot of brandy. And what more you need to hear about rum, gin, vodka, tequila, and all! But tell me, what about Batavia Arrack? Heard about it? Beaten? Well take it if you can, this Indonesian drink was the granddad of most of the drinks you have ever tasted in your life.

Batavia arrack—this still funky spirit that originated on the island of Java is among the oldest distilled spirits in the world. (The word 'arrack' is probably Arabian which means condensation or distillation and 'Batavia' represents the Indonesian port from where the arrack was shipped to Europe).

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When the Dutch trading expedition reached the Indonesian archipelago in the 16th century, they explored placed including Java, an island recently fallen to the Muslim conquest. Arrack, distilled from rice or palm leaves, was one of the most interesting things they found in the land.

The Javans were well-versed in the craft of distilling. Though it was the Arabs who taught the Javan people the art and science of distilling, it was the Chinese sugar growers who gave them the secret recipe of adding rice cakes to coconut sap in the process of distillation to make the drink we see today. That was a huge leap from mere distilling, the Javans learned.