A toast with the traditional grape or plum homemade brandy, also known as rakia, is a must on each Bulgarian table during various festivities and holidays. This alcoholic beverage is always part of the local weddings and christenings. People drink rakia on all occasions, even when they commemorate their deceased relatives. On Christmas and New Year’s Eve all Bulgarians make sure they have a good stock of their favorite drink, in order to stay in good mood throughout the winter holidays. The homemade rakia brandy goes well with the traditional local appetizers. Usually, rakia is made in the rural areas in some of the small stills. The local people know these places well and brew their fruit or grape brandy there.
The fruit yield in 2015 was good and Bulgarians flooded the local distilleries, in order to make their own alcoholic beverage. Brewing is not a simple job. You must be patient and skillful to make high-quality rakia, coppersmith Blagoy Popov from the city of Plovdiv told Radio Bulgaria. He has been making stills for over thirty years now. He makes these brewing installations to order and says that people mainly buy stills with a total storage capacity of 250 liters. Some Bulgarians even order stills with a capacity of 1 ton and others buy very small facilities which can produce several shots of the homemade elixir. Few Bulgarian craftsmen make rakia stills and Blagoy is one of them. Nobody and nothing can stop Bulgarians from drinking their favorite beverage, and no other alcoholic drink can replace successfully the rakia, because it has long ago become part of our everyday lives, says Blagoy. The tradition of making rakia stills is very old says.
In his words, there is a very slight difference between homemade and factory made rakia, if people avoid making simple mistakes when they distill their homemade beverage. Those who have been distilling rakia for years make tasty and high-quality drinks, Blagoy Popov says and adds an anecdote:
“Drinking is not a simple job. That is why there are a series of anecdotes about alcohol consumption in Bulgaria’s folklore. Once, during the Great Lent, several young Bulgarians went to the village priest to ask him whether they would commit a sin if they drank rakia on these days. The priest opened the Holy Bible, but couldn’t find anything about rakia there. Finally, in order to give them a good advice and earn their respect, the priest told the young men that rakia was a smart thing and should be consumed responsibly. Otherwise, it takes peoples’ minds for one whole day. It is not good if rakia makes people dizzy on a daily basis”, Blagoy Popov said.
Here is what Mr. Popov told Radio Bulgaria about the law related to rakia and the stills which distill that alcoholic beverage:
“The excise duty law in Bulgaria is quite good. However, the authorities must control better its observance. Some MPs had an idea to increase excise duty on homemade rakia. However, such a measure would not help the state treasury collect more revenues. After all, the village still does not produce alcohol for commercial purposes, but it rather does favor to the local people. If the authorities’ efforts are focused on a better control on the quantities of produced alcohol more money would be collected by the state treasury. The legislation regarding rakia production that was valid until 1944 was a good example of how the state can collect higher revenues. According to that law, every Bulgarian citizen was obliged to declare the quantities of fruit used for alcohol production. A municipal officer used to visit peoples’ homes and set the excise duty before alcohol was even distilled. Thus, people paid their duties in advance and later they had to distill a high-quality rakia, in order to sell it at a reasonable price and return the money paid on excise duties”, Blagoy Popov explains.
English version: Kostadin Atanasov
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