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Miniature cognac bottle collector

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Man's Chan with his miniature bottles. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Man's Chan seems to like collecting titles as much as he likes collecting cognac. He has about 14,000 miniature bottles - about 90 per cent of which are cognac, with the rest armagnac and single malt whisky - and 1,020 larger ones he's accumulated since 1985. He's also the founder and chairman of the Hong Kong Miniature Liquor Club and a consultant to auctioneer Bonham's. He has been called the "king of cognac" by a hobbyist magazine and, as an exporter of glass (juvenile) eels, "the golden bridge of friendship" by the late North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il.

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"But that's a different story," says Chan, who added the apostrophe and "s" at the end of his first name at the request of a former girlfriend.

Recently he was awarded a gold certificate as an educator in cognac by Le Bureau National Interprofessionnel du Cognac, the first Chinese person to achieve the distinction. As there is one other lower-ranked certified Chinese cognac educator, that leaves Chinese people somewhat under-represented - especially considering that Chan believes some 85 per cent of the drink ends up on the mainland.

The cognac association invited Chan to take an exam to demonstrate his knowledge of the spirit and all aspects of its production. After passing that, he spent four days in Cognac, France, for intensive instruction and then had to take a further test and give a presentation.

Chan says that in the past the cognac producers were "stupid" because, during cognac's heyday from the 1960s to the '80s, they were making so much money out of Asia that they didn't bother to nurture a culture that appreciated the spirit properly. Chinese people liked it, both to give as a gift and because of its high alcohol content. When the style of cognac ageing changed in the '80s, interest waned and it lost market share to whisky.

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The cognac association has asked Chan to spend the next two years creating a culture to help people understand how the drink is made and how it should be consumed. He also wants to change cognac's image as "an old-school drink, something only old people drink".

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