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It began with Cinzano

A random gift of a bottle of vermouth in 1982 set Joan Tapias to amassing a collection that is now on display in his museum/restaruant in the city of Reus

Joan Tapias as­so­ci­ates ver­mouth with his child­hood, when it was far from fash­ion­able: “I re­mem­ber my grand­fa­ther and fa­ther hav­ing an aper­i­tif after mass,” he says. Yet in 1982, Joan was taken by sur­prise when his fa­ther made him a gift of a bot­tle of Cin­zano. It was the start of a col­lec­tion that cul­mi­nated last year in the in­au­gu­ra­tion of the Museu del Ver­mut in Reus, the only one of its kind ded­i­cated to the drink de­vel­oped by Ital­ian dis­tiller An­toni Carpano in the 18th cen­tury.

For 32 years, Tapias rum­maged through mar­ket stalls and at­tended auc­tions, keep­ing the tro­phies he found in a flat above his of­fice. Sud­denly, he had more than 5,000 ob­jects, in­clud­ing many posters and 1,400 bot­tles: “I showed it off so often, I began to think it would be a nice thing to open it to the pub­lic,” he says.

Yet, his idea had to wait until he found the ideal lo­ca­tion: an old fac­tory in Reus's old quar­ter. His mu­seum opened last Sep­tem­ber and it has been more suc­cess­ful than Tapias ever ex­pected: “The fac­tory was in an old mod­ernist build­ing by the Reus ar­chi­tect, Pere Caselles. When I bought it, it had been closed for 30 years,” he says.

A shrine to ver­mouth

In the ren­o­vated build­ing with its pre­served orig­i­nal fea­tures, ver­mouth is every­where. Cases of glass, ash­trays, la­bels, trays, minia­tures sit along­side posters. Among them is one mea­sur­ing two and a half me­tres by two me­tres, ad­ver­tis­ing the Carpano brand, in trib­ute to the fa­ther of ver­mouth.

In the mu­seum, which is also a restau­rant, every space is ded­i­cated to ver­mouth. Even the fa­mous quote at­trib­uted to Dorothy Parker: “I like to have a mar­tini, two at the very most. After three I'm under the table, after four I'm under my host,” dec­o­rates the bath­rooms. There are rooms ded­i­cated to the three brands of ver­mouth that still exist in Reus: Iza­guirre, Iris De Muller and Miró. There is also a space re­served for Mar­tini, the world's best known ver­mouth.

“When I started the col­lec­tion ver­mouth was not fash­ion­able, but it has ex­pe­ri­enced a sig­nif­i­cant boom, with the cre­ation of new brands that are also rep­re­sented in the mu­seum,” says Tapias, who leaves the every­day man­age­ment to his son.

Rep­re­sented in the mu­seum are 1,900 brands from 56 coun­tries, while vis­i­tors can try 60 brands, “though 90% of peo­ple ask for Reus ver­mouth,” says Tapias. The mu­seum serves ver­mouth in the tra­di­tional way, “with some crisps, olives and a lit­tle soda.” Tapias says ver­mouth is “ a drink to be sipped,” that is dif­fi­cult drink more than two of be­cause “the com­bi­na­tion of herbs gives you a headache.” Al­though ver­mouth is of Ital­ian ori­gin, Tapias says that at least in Reus, the local brands are the most pop­u­lar: “They are sweeter and smoother,” he says.

His fa­ther's gift that began the col­lec­tion has pride of place in a glass case. Joan loves to show it off, as it was that Cin­zano bot­tle that began a life­long pas­sion.

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