Favorite Things | Getting into the spirit
A distiller talks about drinking for work.
Interview 听JOHANNA POBLETE听 |听 Photography 听KAI HUANG

Is it possible for a drink to transport you to its place of origin? Olivia Limpe-Aw, fifth-generation distiller and the first female executive at the helm of 164-year-old Destileria Limtuaco & Co., Inc., says yes. Limpe-Aw created her first craft drink, the Paradise Mango Rum, in 2002, and unabashedly marketed it as 鈥渢he best of the Philippines in a bottle.鈥 Since then, she has used natural ingredients鈥攕uch as local coffee from Amadeo, Cavite, and garlic, onions, and salt from Ilocos鈥攖o add to their roster of drinks, and is fast becoming as prolific as her father Julius Limpe, who trained her in the science and art of distilling alcohol. What keeps Ms. Limpe-Aw tirelessly working is a desire to please the palate, and to demonstrate the distinctive tastes that the Philippines has to offer.
Why is Manille Liqueur de Calamansi your favorite thing of the moment?
Although we started in craft spirits in 2002, when it was not in fashion, it was not really until Manille that it became a big thing. It really opened the doors for Destileria Limtuaco to introduce more Filipino-inspired drinks using tropical flavors, fruits, and produce endemic to the Philippines. So it鈥檚 kind of special to me because we were able to introduce more exciting drinks, and to make Filipino spirits known to not just the Philippines, but also to other countries.
You wanted to export and were asked 鈥榃hat do you have that鈥檚 truly Filipino?鈥 Did you want Filipinos out there to remember their roots?
Well, definitely. I鈥檓 from UP the University of the Philippines, and all UP students are nationalistic. It鈥檚 part of your DNA. You really want to promote the Philippines. And yes, we want to bring a piece of home to our kababayans abroad, right? More than that, we want mainstream markets to appreciate what is Filipino鈥 That鈥檚 something that they don鈥檛 have. So it may be ordinary for Filipinos here, because we do have all these calamansi and dalandan [from which the second variant, Manille Liqueur de Dalandan, is made], but when you bring it elsewhere, it is exotic, it is sought after, because it鈥檚 different鈥攕o it brings pride, you know?
You don鈥檛 like waste; you鈥檝e created all-natural beauty products from the byproducts.
That鈥檚 why Manille is my favorite, because we鈥檙e able to do that. After we extract the essential oils from the skin to make into Manille, basically the whole fruit is our byproduct, so you don鈥檛 want to waste that. So the skin, the juice, and the seeds, we make it into this calamansi mud鈥 These are the things that I like to do鈥攊t鈥檚 like play, but actually it鈥檚 business.
How does a master blender develop taste?
It takes years and years. I was really born into this business. You have early exposure, and you develop the taste, you develop your sense of smell, and you鈥檙e able to detect minute differences鈥攚hereas when you鈥檙e not exposed to it, you can鈥檛 really detect [these subtle differences], especially in the Philippines, we鈥檙e used to intense flavors, so delicate flavors aren鈥檛 really in our palate.
What was it like for you, growing up, and working with your dad?
We were encouraged to taste. [My dad and I] would do it in the laboratory together, and we would taste it together. I became a workaholic, because he was a workaholic.
When he was training me, I would tag along with him everywhere. And he was really more of a nocturnal animal; he was awake until late at night. But I would still have to come to work early, and so I learned to develop long working hours. It was difficult, and fun at the same time.
If you didn鈥檛 find something fun and interesting, I don鈥檛 think you would last. In anything that you do, if you didn鈥檛 really like it, you would find it a chore and you would drop out.听 So [it has to be] fun and difficult, interesting, challenging, everything.
If you weren鈥檛 born in this family, do you think you would have still gravitated to the business, to this industry?
I think, if I weren鈥檛 born into this family, I would be in the beauty business.听 This听 soap from Manille is the closest thing I would get for now.
What鈥檚 the most fun thing about creating alcohol?
I think the most fun part is when people appreciate it. After all the trials that you鈥檝e made and you came out with the final blend that you like, the final formulation, and you launch it, and people like it, it鈥檚 the best feeling ever. It鈥檚 that sense of self-satisfaction that it is appreciated鈥攂y people you don鈥檛 know. That鈥檚 the best part, when people you don鈥檛 know come up to you and say, 鈥淗ey, I like your product. It鈥檚 great.鈥 Whatever hard work you put in, it鈥檚 all worth it.听
How much would it take to get you drunk?
I don鈥檛 get drunk. If you get drunk, then you鈥檙e wasted, you can鈥檛 do your work. And I鈥檓 a workaholic. [Laughs]
You鈥檝e never ended up in the bathroom or something like that?
Once鈥攊n my 20s.
Your tolerance has to be way up there.
No, no, no. I don鈥檛 have high tolerance because I really just taste. They always ask me if I drink; I just drink for work.
How do you personally drink Manille?
Because I鈥檓 not really a heavy drinker, I still like it on the rocks. Although my friends put it in the freezer, and after dinner, take it as ice-cold shots鈥攁lso good.
It鈥檚 alchemy鈥攖rying to control how people experience something.
Yes, definitely. We want it to come in smooth, and have a nice finish that keeps the aroma and the flavor and the zest linger in your mouth right, and so that鈥檚 why you want to drink it again. Distilling and blending is both a science and art.听


