Smirnoff Vodka

Smirnoff Vodka

 

 

 

 

 

Smirnoff

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   This article is about the vodka brand. .

Smirnoff
Smirnoff.svg
Type Vodka
Manufacturer Diageo
Country of origin Russia
Introduced ca. 1860s
Alcohol by volume 37.5% - 50%
Proof 80 - 100
Related products List of vodkas

Smirnoff is a brand of vodka now owned and produced by the British

company Diageo. The Smirnoff brand began with a vodka distillery

founded in Moscow by Pyotr Arsenievich Smirnov (1831-1898), the

son of illiterate Russian peasants. It is now distributed in 130

countries.

 

Smirnoff products include vodka, flavored vodka, and malt beverages.

In March 2006, Diageo North America claimed that Smirnoff vodka was

the best-selling distilled spirit brand in the world.[1]

Smirnoff numbers

Smirnoff Black No. 55.

Most Smirnoff products have a unique identifying number that is

displayed on the label. Some of these numbers are:

  • 21: Smirnoff North (previously Smirnoff Norsk). This is the
  • classic Smirnoff Red Label vodka flavored with Nordic Berries.
  • In the United Kingdom and some other markets, it is called
  • Smirnoff Nordic Berries.
  • 21: Smirnoff Classic Mix. Smirnoff No. 21 vodka premixed with
  • either lime soda or cola in a 70-cl bottle.
  • 21: Smirnoff Vodka and Cranberry Juice. Smirnoff No. 21
  • vodka premixed with Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice in a 250-ml
  • can.
  • 21: Smirnoff Mule. Smirnoff No. 21 vodka premixed with ginger
  • beer and lime. 4.8% ABV
  • 27: Smirnoff Silver Label Vodka, 45.2% ABV
  • 55: Smirnoff Black, 40% ABV. A small-batch vodka that is
  • produced in copper stills.
  • 57: Smirnoff Blue Label Vodka, 50% ABV
  • 60: Smirnoff Vladimir, 40%. Available only in Poland
  • 63: Smirnoff Twisted V Green Apple
  • 64: Smirnoff Ice Pomegranate malt beverage, 5.5% ABV
  • 66: Smirnoff Ice Raspberry Burst malt beverage, 5.0% ABV
  • 66: Smirnoff Twisted V Raspberry malt beverage
  • 67: Smirnoff Twisted V Mandarin Orange malt beverage
  • 68: Smirnoff Twisted V Black Cherry malt beverage
  • 69: Smirnoff Twisted V Watermelon malt beverage
  • 70: Smirnoff Ice Watermelon malt beverage

 

Smirnoff's number and other information is shown at the bottom of the label.

Depicted here is No. 63 - Smirnoff Twisted V Green Apple.

  • 71: Smirnoff Ice Triple Filtered malt beverage, 5.6% ABV
  • 72: Smirnoff Ice, 5% ABV. In the United States, it is a malt
  • beverage; elsewhere it is vodka-based. Labeled as "Spin" in
  • South Africa.
  • 73: Smirnoff Black Ice, 7% ABV. In the United States it is a
  • malt beverage; elsewhere it is vodka-based. Labeled as
  • "Storm" in South Africa.
  • 74: Smirnoff Ice Triple Black. A lime-flavored malt beverage
  • sold in the United States, 4.5% alcohol.
  • 75: Smirnoff Ice Double Black. Sold in Australia and New
  • Zealand. 6.5% ABV
  • 76: Smirnoff Ice. Sold in Canada. 7% ABV
  • 83: Smirnoff Ice Wild Grape malt beverage, 5% ABV
  • 84: Smirnoff Twist Arctic Berry
  • 85: Smirnoff Twisted Raspberry. Sold in Canada.
  • 92: Smirnoff Twisted Green Apple. Canada 7%
  • 97: Smirnoff Ice Triple Filtered. Sold in Germany. 3% ABV
  • 103: Smirnoff Twisted V Arctic Berry
  • 110: Smirnoff Ice Double Black & Cola
  • 111: Smirnoff Ice Double Black. Sold in Australia.

The ba

sic Smirnoff vodka - number 21 - has performed well at spirit ratings

competitions. It was awarded a double gold medal (the highest

award) at the 2009 San Francisco World Spirits Competition.[2]

 

History

 

Pyotr Smirnov founded his vodka distillery in Moscow in the 1860s

under the trading name of PA Smirnoff, pioneering charcoal filtration

in the 1870s, and becoming the first to utilize newspaper ads along

with charitable contributions to the clergy to stifle anti-vodka sermons,

capturing two-thirds of the Moscow market by 1886. His brand was

reportedly the tsar's favorite. When he died, he was succeeded by his

third son Vladimir Smirnov (? - 1939). The company flourished and

produced more than 4 million cases of vodka per year. In 1904 the

Tsar nationalised the Russian vodka industry and Vladimir Smirnoff

was forced to sell his factory and brand. During the October

Revolution, of 1917 the Smirnoff family had to flee. Vladimir Smirnov

re-established the factory in 1920 in Istanbul. Four years later he

moved to Lwów (formerly Poland, now Lviv, Ukraine) and started to

sell the vodka under the contemporary French spelling of the name,

"Smirnoff". The new product was a success and by the end of 1930 it

was exported to most European countries. An additional distillery was

founded in Paris in 1925.

 

In the 1930s Vladimir met Rudolph Kunett, a Russian who had

emigrated to America in 1920. The Kunett family had been a supplier

of spirits to Smirnoff in Moscow before the Revolution. In 1933

Vladimir sold Kunett the right to begin producing Smirnoff vodka in

North America. However, the business in America was not as

successful as Kunett had hoped. In 1938 Kunett couldn't afford to pay

for the necessary sales licenses, and contacted John Martin, president

of Heublein, who agreed to buy the rights to Smirnoff for the value of

the distilling equipment. His Board thought he was mad. Sales were

very slow until one day they ran out of corks and had to use whiskey

corks instead. In Kentucky sales rocketed as the distributor started

marketing Smirnoff as 'white whiskey, no taste, no smell'. After the

war, John Martin was sitting in a bar with a friend and a girlfriend. The

girlfriend owned a ginger beer brand which wasn't selling and the

friend had a stock of copper mugs which he also couldn't sell. They

mixed Smirnoff with the ginger beer in a copper mug, added lime and

the Moscow Mule was born.

 

In 1982, the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company acquired Heublein Inc.

for $1.4 billion dollars. RJR Nabisco sold the division to Grand

Metropolitan in 1987.[3] Grand Metropolitan merged with Guinness to

form Diageo in 1997.

 

Since the 1990s

A bottle of Smirnoff Red Label vodka, No. 21.

In 1990, the Berlin Wall came down and Helmut Kohl did a deal with

Gorbachev allowing the reunification of Germany provided the Soviet

army could remain in East Germany and be paid by West Germany for

three years. Suddenly 500,000 Soviet soldiers were paid in hard

currency and had almost nothing to do except drink. They then

proceeded to spend their currency on Marlboro cigarettes, Levi jeans

and Smirnoff vodka. The US-made variety of Smirnoff vodka was

especially popular. The London office of Heublein was inundated with

orders and the Vice President, Jeremy Collis, set about exploiting this

'gusher' to the fullest extent possible. Huge in store Smirnoff displays

were set up in the Russian army stores and the officers' messes were

renamed Smirnoff Clubs. Individual messes started serving in excess

of 200 litres a night of Smirnoff. The Soviet forces became the

biggest market in Europe for Smirnoff outside the UK. Smirnoff was

shipped to Germany at the rate of 20,000 bottles a day.

Moskowskaya and Stolichnaya's market share in Germany dropped

from 100% to almost nothing.

 

During the 1990s one of Piotr Smirnov's descendants started

producing Smirnov (Смирновъ in Ukraine) vodka in Russia, claiming

to be "The Only Real Smirnov".[4] After a number of lawsuits, Smirnoff

successfully reclaimed its trademark, while in 2006 Diageo concluded

a joint venture deal with the Smirnov company.[5]

 

The Smirnoff company had the naming rights to the Smirnoff Music

Centre, a concert amphitheater in Dallas, Texas from 2000-2008 [1].

They also sponsored the Smirnoff Underbelly, a major venue at the

Edinburgh Fringe.

 

In the late 1990s, Smirnoff introduced a series of new products onto

the UK and later the European and North American market, which

quickly became popular among young people, especially within the

club scene (See "Alcopops").

 

There are two different products by the name of Smirnoff Ice. One,

sold in France and the United States, is a citrus-flavored malt

beverage (5.5% ABV) with variants in 'Original,' and 'Triple Black.' The

other, sold in Europe (excluding France), Latin America, Australia and

Canada, is a premixed vodka drink. It also has variants in 'Original'

and 'Black Ice' (or in some markets, 'Triple Black' or 'Double Black'),

ranging from 4.5% in the UK, to 7% ABV in different markets.

 

The Smirnoff Ice marketed in the USA does not actually contain vodka

according to the official Smirnoff website [6]. It is more similar to beer

than to vodka, primarily because it is brewed. However outside of the

USA and countries who receive US manufactured vodka it does contain

Smirnoff Vodka No. 21.

 

Smirnoff Ice Twisted was a spin-off of the American Smirnoff Ice that

featured flavors such as Mandarin Orange and Green Apple.

Confusion in branding between Smirnoff Twist Vodka and Smirnoff

Twisted Malt Beverage resulted in the decision to drop the "Twisted"

from the flavored line of Smirnoff Ice. Current Smirnoff Ice flavors

include Watermelon, Wild Grape, Passionfruit, Mango, Triple Black,

Pomegranate Fusion, Arctic Berry (Blueberry), Green Apple Bite,

Strawberry Acai, Pineapple and Raspberry Burst.

 

The next line of Smirnoff's malt beverages to be produced was "Raw

Teas" in flavors such as Peach and Raspberry. This product line has

been marketed most notably with the "Tea Partay" music video and

website. It is similar to the brand Twisted Tea.

 

Smirnoff Source, a beer-alternative made with alcohol and spring water,

was released in May 2007. It is citrus-flavored and lightly carbonated

with 3.5% ABV.

 

A line of 17 flavored vodkas with the "Twist" moniker appended on

the end of the name have also been introduced. Flavors include

Green Apple, Orange, Cranberry, Raspberry, Citrus (Lemon), Vanilla,

Strawberry, Black Cherry, Watermelon, Lime, Blueberry, White Grape,

Melon (Honeydew/Cantaloupe), Pomegranate, Passion Fruit, Pear,

and most recently, Pineapple.

 

Smirnoff trialed in the UK and Canada during 2004 a new blend of

vodka entitled Smirnoff Penka. Marketing and distribution was

handled by The Reserve Brands of Diageo plc. As of 2007[update]

Penka continues to be available in the UK.[7]

 

In a 2005 New York Times blind tasting of 21 world-class vodkas,

Smirnoff won as the "hands-down favorite".[8]

 

The newest addition to the Smirnoff family are the Cocktail Range,

introduced in 2010. Pomegranate Martini with Meyer Lemon flavoured

Liquer and pomegranate juice, Mojito with a dash of mint and kafir

lime and Grand Cosmopilitan wth cranberry juice. [9]

 

Smirnov vodka

Smirnov (Russian: Смирнов) can be seen as the Russian version of

Smirnoff vodka. It is made by the Smirnov Trading House, a company

that is part of a joint venture by Russia's Alfa Group and Diageo, the

owner of the Smirnoff brand. The full title of the Smirnov Trading

House is The Trading House of the Heirs of P.A. Smirnov.

 

Smirnov vodka was launched in 1991 by Boris Smirnov, a scion of

Pyotr Smirnov, the original producer of the spirit. After many lawsuits,

which resulted in Diageo's brand being banned in the Commonwealth

of Independent States, the Russian brand became a "sister product"

of Smirnoff vodka.

 

See also