Beijing Hongxing Co. Ltd (Chinese: 北京红星股份有限公司), commonly known as "Hongxing" (Chinese: 红星; lit. 'Red Star') is a baijiu distillery in Beijing, China. The distillery is best known for producing an iconic, low-cost erguotou baijiu, a variety of qingxiang (清香; "light aroma") baijiu which is the most popular baijiu sold in the Chinese capital city.[1]

Beijing Hongxing
北京红星
Company typeState-Owned Enterprise
IndustryAlcoholic Beverages
Founded1949; 75 years ago (1949)
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Ji Ning
(Committee Secretary)
ProductsBaijiu
Websiteredstarwine.com
Beijing Hongxing
Simplified Chinese北京红星
Traditional Chinese北京紅星
Literal meaningBeijing Red Star
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinběi jīng hóng xīng
Wade–Gilesbei3 ching1 hung2 hsing1

History

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The origin of erguotou dates back to 1680 when the three Zhou brothers, as the heads of the Yuanshenghao distillery, developed the technique after noticing that as the condenser of the still needed cooling, it was the product resulting from the second of three pots of cooling water that produced the finest product. It was after this process that the style was named "Er-Guo-Tou"(二锅头; "Second-Pot-Head").[2]

 
A bottle of "Xiao Er"

During the Chinese Civil War the seeds of Beijing Hongxing were sewn when the People's Republic banned the private production and sale of liquor and implemented a state monopoly on production. In May of that year, the "North China Liquor Company" (later renamed Beijing Distillery) was founded, merging 12 distilleries in the region, become the first state owned distillery in the newly founded People's Republic, and becoming the sole legal producer of erguotou baijiu. The first batch of erguotou was produced in September and named Hong Xing (红星;"Red Star") in honor of the founding of the republic. The soon to be iconic label was designed by a Japanese Red Army enlistee named Sakurai.[3] Hongxing became one of the first trademarks registered in the nation in 1951 and demand for the drink only grew. In 1965, in an attempt to keep up with demand, and to keep prices low and accessible in accordance with the directions of then premier, Zhou Enlai Beijing Honxing took over management of 19 distilleries in the surrounding region where production of erguotou baijiu could be expanded into. Eventually, Beijing Hongxing relinquished the trademark for the exclusive use of the term "erguotou" in 1981. Throughout these years however, Beijing Hongxing retains the legacy of the Zhou brothers that had originally developed erguotou as Ai Jinzhong, the 9th generation descendent of the Zhou brothers serves as director of production.[4] [5] [6] [7]

Today Beijing Hongxing continues to hold an iconic place in Chinese drinking culture and due to its low cost is seen as a popular working class spirit.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b "'Little Er' a time-honored Beijing spirit". China Daily. 30 December 2009.
  2. ^ Sandhaus, Derek (2014). Baijiu: The Essential Guide to Chinese Spirits. Penguin. p. 118. ISBN 9780143800132.
  3. ^ Sandhaus, Derek (2014). Baijiu: The Essential Guide to Chinese Spirits. Penguin. p. 119. ISBN 9780143800132.
  4. ^ "Beijing Hongxing Company Profile" (in Simplified Chinese).
  5. ^ "The creation of the Erguotou category in Beijing". Beijing Erguoutou Liquor Museum (in Simplified Chinese).
  6. ^ "The pride of Beijing, Red Star, ranks first in Erguotou brand valuehexun.com,11 October 2011" (in Simplified Chinese). Archived from the original on 4 January 2017. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  7. ^ "Hongxing Erguotou: "Everyone has a red star in their heart"" (in Simplified Chinese). Beiwan New Vision. 7 January 2016. Archived from the original on 4 January 2017.