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Food

A whole lot of bottle

The Dalton family has made a success story of turning around a loss-making Israeli winery - upping production 30-fold

April 8, 2015 15:39
Dalton vineyard manager Nahum Naveh

ByAnthea Gerrie, Anthea Gerrie

3 min read

It may have been an unknown, struggling winery 30 years ago, but all that mattered to London philanthropist Mat Haruni is that Dalton was in the Galilee. "He was only interested in finding and promoting a business in this area, and in particular close to Israel's northern borders," says Haruni's son, Alex.

Now CEO, Haruni junior, who made aliyah with the rest of his family in 1995, has propelled Dalton, with the help of his father's funds, from a 30,000-bottle boutique winery to a million-bottle operation that is the very future of Israel's wine industry. For like competitors Tabor, Dalton has reached the crucial point where top quality meets the affordability which comes from large-scale production, an equation which has taken the country's young premium wine industry some 30 years to achieve.

Yet the Harunis, who were in the diamond business, are not wine-makers, and could easily have invested in a hotel. "My father's vision was very much to create an enterprise anchored to tourism in this region," explains Alex from Merom Hagalil, north of Safed and only a mile south of Lebanon. "Even when he was still in London fundraising, he made a point of bringing people over to the Galilee because he felt it was of such strategic importance."

Dalton became the family focus when they were introduced to the then-owners. "It was a small winery losing money," adds Haruni, who has spent the past 20 years nurturing the growth of the business, which is now one of Israel's 10 largest wine producers.