Nigeria鈥檚 favorite cocktail packs a punch
LAGOS, NIGERIA 鈥 Nigerians may be fond of a glass of champagne but it鈥檚 another fizzy drink 鈥 and one that鈥檚 unashamedly nonalcoholic 鈥 that鈥檚 dearest to their hearts.
Garnet red and tooth-achingly sweet with a surprisingly tart kick, the Chapman is served with a slice of orange and cucumber in a pint glass with a plastic straw.
鈥淭his is our drink, not champagne,鈥 said Toyedayo Osilaja, a patron of the Ikoyi Club, one of the oldest private clubs in Lagos, Nigeria鈥檚 thriving commercial capital. 鈥淭he (champagne) fever is dying. You鈥檝e had enough hiccups and heartburn,鈥 he told AFP. 鈥淐hapman is just a popular drink we all love.鈥
Chapman鈥檚 universal appeal is undeniable in a religiously conservative country where temperance is widely seen as a virtue.
It鈥檚 a staple on restaurant menus and a favorite at weddings; President Muhammadu Buhari serves it at meetings; best-selling novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is on the record as a fan.
Enjoyed by both children and adults and eyed by beverage companies as a next big mass-produced hit, the Chapman is sometimes referred to as a 鈥淣igerian sangria.鈥
But that鈥檚 a misnomer, as unlike in Spain and Portugal, it鈥檚 not made with wine but soft drinks, while the orange and cucumber is a garnish.
Other than getting the approximate color right, there鈥檚 no standard way to make a Chapman.
That鈥檚 partly because despite the drink鈥檚 ubiquity, its origins are shrouded in mystery.
Rumor has it there once was an expat by the name of Chapman who worked at a club in Lagos and made the drink. Others maintain it was a Nigerian.
No one knows for sure, though everyone agrees it was conceived in the country and is a made-in-Nigeria drink.
MYSTERIOUS ORIGINS
鈥淚t鈥檚 been (served) here for the longest,鈥 said Osilaja, staking a claim on the Chapman for the Ikoyi Club, as a barman in a black waistcoat pours a Chapman from a drink dispenser on the bar.
In a sign of the drink鈥檚 importance, the first thing Osilaja did when he accepted a volunteer post as bar advisor was to standardize the drink鈥檚 recipe across the expansive club鈥檚 15 bars.
He considered it was being 鈥渂adly mixed鈥 and for months he allowed only his most trusted bartender to prepare the drink. Members are thrilled with the result, he reports happily.
鈥淭here鈥檚 some story about a Chapman making it but we have no records,鈥 said Osilaja, adding that he鈥檚 enjoyed Chapmans for all his 46 years at the club his parents first brought him to as a child to enjoy the pool, tennis courts, and other facilities.
A splash of Angostura bitters is considered the hallmark of a perfectly executed Chapman, giving it echoes of the cocktails enjoyed during the British colonial era.
鈥淚t looks like the earlier versions had ingredients that were a little more British than the current one 鈥 bitter lemon or lemonade and tonic water 鈥 instead of Sprite,鈥 said David Wondrich, a cocktail historian based in New York.
鈥淲ith those ingredients, its origins in a British club are more likely, although most British colonialists would have put alcohol in it.鈥
Like other colonial-era drinks, including the Singapore Sling, the Chapman is probably an African cousin of punch, said Wondrich.
鈥淧unch, the great ancestor of all modern mixed drinks, is a British invention, as is the Pink Gin (gin and bitters) and the Collins,鈥 he said.
MASS MARKET DREAMS
Beverage companies are hoping to cash in on the Chapman鈥檚 popularity, to sell it as a ready-to-go drink.
With Nigeria鈥檚 booming young population, analysts say there鈥檚 more than enough room for a Chapman to carve out a niche like Dr Pepper in the United States.
鈥淭here鈥檚 room for new innovations,鈥 said Maurice Abuah, analyst at Euromonitor, a market research firm.
There are already two Chapman drinks in stores today but invariably are different from their freshly made counterparts.
The color isn鈥檛 a deep sunset red while there鈥檚 a lingering distinct aftertaste, which is especially noticeable when the drink begins to warm in the tropical heat.
鈥淚t鈥檚 significantly different from a drink that you can get at a bar,鈥 admitted Nelson Nsitem, research analyst at Asoko Insight, a Lagos-based business intelligence firm.
鈥淭he thing about the Chapman drink is that it鈥檚 the way it鈥檚 prepared and consumers know it鈥檚 different,鈥 he added.
鈥淭here鈥檚 something about it, especially when it鈥檚 made well,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a bit of, I don鈥檛 know what. It feels totally different.鈥 鈥 AFP


