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kentavewine · 25 minutes
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Online Wine Delivery in Williamsburg at Kent Wines and Liquors
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Experience the convenience of online wine delivery in Williamsburg with Kent Wines and Liquors. Browse our diverse selection of premium wines, place your order online, and enjoy swift delivery to your doorstep. Elevate your wine collection effortlessly with top-quality choices from Kent Wines and Liquors. Cheers to easy indulgence!
For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
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guapo-t-w · 5 years
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Local Tidewater VA Beer Festivals
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UPCOMING BEER FESTS AND FESTIVAL FORECAST: Fri-Sun, Jun 28-30 - 2019 Bayou Boogaloo Music & Cajun Food Festival, Town Point Park, Downtown Norfolk Waterfront. The Bayou Boogaloo Music & Cajun Food Festival is Norfolk’s annual love-fest with New Orleans’ vibrant spirit and captures the melting pot of Bayou culture. From New Orleans to the Downtown Norfolk Waterfront, two stages featuring national recording artists providing diverse cultural musical entertainment. The Arts Market of New Orleans returns and brings with it talent, unique artistry and the culture of Louisiana! The Arts Council of New Orleans and Norfolk Festevents hand-pick the most unique and one-of-a-kind artists from Louisiana to share their stories, culture and craft. This year, numerous artists in various mediums including art, jewelry and sculpture will be on site displaying their works. No Bayou celebration would be complete without the mouthwatering Cajun delicacies prepared by authentic Louisiana inspired chefs. Festival guests are in for a real treat as they feast on fresh crawfish straight from Louisiana, jambalaya, gumbo, etouffee, alligator, muffuletta, andouille, and beignets. Guests will also find festival favorites like sno balls (discovered in New Orleans, by the way!), root beer floats, smoothies, Italian water ice, glazed nuts, kettle korn and funnel cake. Wash it all down with a variety of cold beverages including a fine selection of beers straight from New Orleans' own Abita Brewing Company as well as New Orleans Jack Daniel's Hurricanes.  https://festevents.org/events/2019-season-events/bayouboogaloo/ Sat, Jun 29 - Coastal Virginia Brewery Alliance Local Brew Fest, 2 – 7:00 pm, Hermitage Museum and Gardens, 7637 North Shore Road, Norfolk. The Coastal Virginia Brewery Alliance (CVBA) presents -1st annual Local Brew Fest. The CVBA is a group of 29 local Hampton Roads Breweries. Come on out to the Coastal Virginia Brewery Alliance (CVBA) 1st annual Local Brew Fest to try some amazing local Craft Brews! Food Trucks and live music will be on site. Event is rain or shine. The CVBA is a non-profit organization of 29 local breweries committed to promoting and support craft beer in the Coastal Virginia/Hampton Roads area.  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/coastal-virginia-brewery-alliance-local-brew-fest-tickets Sun, Jul 7 - Barks & Brews 2019, 12 – 6:00 pm, sponsored by O’Connor’s Brewery, Norfolk Botanical Garden, 6700 Azalea Garden Road, Norfolk. Bring your dog to the Garden and have a beer for a fun day with live music! Guests are welcome to explore the Garden with their furry canine companion. Explore 175 spectacular acres with your dog and enjoy a cold beer with food and music. Regular garden admission applies. Not-Yet-Members: Dogs: $5 (human admission applies) – become a member today and save! Your dog must remain on a leash at all times. Stop by our Visitor Center for extra doggie waste bags. Other Barks & Brew dates: Sundays – Aug 4, Sep 8, Oct 13.  https://norfolkbotanicalgarden.org/events/barks-and-brews-2019-1/ Sat, Jul 13 - Red, White and Brew Lagerfest, 4 - 8:00 pm, Hosted by Back Bay Brewing, 614 Norfolk Ave, Virginia Beach. Your favorite Virginia Beach beer festival is back! Get ready for our 4th annual Red, White and Brew Lagerfest. This year we will be offering early bird ticket pricing from now until June 13th (details below) so be sure to get your tickets before prices increases! DETAILS: Over 15 brewery participants, Live music, Food trucks, Specialty Back Bay Brewing merchandise for sale, Best lager will be voted on by YOU, and Back Bay Brewing will donate $500 to the winning brewery's pre-selected charity of choice! TICKET INCLUDES: Entry into the event, Special Lagerfest tasting/sampling glass, Unlimited tastings of all craft lagers, 1 full size beer ticket (good for a full size beer from our back bay beer truck!). TICKETS: $20 - Early Bird Special (now until June 13th); $30 - General Admission (June 14th until July 12th); $40 - Door Ticket (day of purchase). VISIT HERE FOR TICKETS: backbaybrewingco.com/lagerfest Fri, Jul 19 - Taste of VA on the Bay, 6 - 9:30 pm, Ocean View Beach Park, 100 W. Ocean View Ave., Norfolk. Taste of VA on the Bay will be taking the place of previous year's Brews on the Bay Beer Festival. Live music by Jesse Chong.There will be craft beers, wine, spirits with plenty of food vendors.  Craft Beer sampling tickets:  Sampling Package - $15 for wristband, 4 oz sampling cup and 5 tickets redeemable for samples; 16 oz Pint - $8 for wristband and 4 tickets redeemable for a pint cup;  Additional tickets - $2 (must have a cup and wristband to sample);  Tickets will be sold until 9:15 pm,  Sampling tickets can be redeemed until 9:30 pm;  No refunds.You must be at least 21 years old to purchase or consume alcoholic beverages.  Breweries have the right to limit samples.  Breweries will appear only until supplies last.  www.oceanviewbeachpark.org Sat, Aug 3 - Whistle Belly 2019: A Virginia Beer & More Festival, 7 - 11:00 pm, Merchants Square, 401 W Duke of Gloucester St., Williamsburg. Whistle Belly is back and bigger, bolder and better than ever! Mark your calendars for Saturday August 3rd for the ultimate beer party on Duke of Gloucester Street. Crafted by the DoG Street Pub & presented by the Junior Woman's Club of Williamsburg. Over 40 breweries, and more than 70 beers and delicious eats! Live Music to be Announced! Drinks & all you can eat for only $55! Save up to $10 by purchasing in advance. General Admission Tickets get access to the festival from 7 to 11 pm. Get Early Access tickets to enjoy exclusive beers. With an Early Access ticket your festival begins at 6pm with access to food & beer including 10 beers only available to Early Access guests!  http://www.whistlebelly.com/ Sat, Aug 10 - Beer, Bourbon, & BBQ Festival,  2 - 6:00 pm, Hunt Club Farm, 2388 London Bridge Road, Virginia Beach. Hampton Road’s Favorite Smoked Meat Onslaught is back – with TEETH! Come and see what over 225,000 people nationwide have enjoyed! This is our 4th Annual PORK-OUT in Virginia Beach. COME AND JOIN US! For a down-home, Southern-fried, good time... to support your inner Redneck! Get ready to enjoy all those pleasures that true Southerners live by - Beer, Bourbon, Barbeque, Boots, Bacon, Biscuits, Bluegrass and Smoked Beasts! It's two great days of beer sippin', bourbon tastin', music listenin', cigar smokin', and barbeque eatin'. Your admission buys you a sampling glass so you can enjoy an ALL-YOU-CARE –TO-TASTE sampling of beer and bourbon.  http://www.beerandbourbon.com/virginia-beach-va/show Sat, Aug 17 - Tap! Tap! Beer Festival 2019, 5 - 9:00 pm, Greenbrier Farms, 225 Sign Pine Rd., Chesapeake. Chesapeake Virginia’s First Beer Festival, Now 5 Years Old! Unlimited samples of beers and food from your popular regional food trucks. More details to come! Brought to you by Boys and Girls Club of Southeast Virginia and Kwasans Foundation. Sat, Aug 24 - 5th Annual Neptune's Coastal Craft Beer Festival, 1 - 6:00 pm, Hosted by the Neptune Festival, Neptune's Park, 31st Street and Atlantic Avenue, Virginia Beach Oceanfront. Neptune’s Park will be transformed into a craft beer lover’s haven on Saturday, August 24th, featuring local Virginia beers and cask ales, as well national and regional craft beers. Enjoy over 65 beers from 30 breweries, live music, food trucks, and more! Tickets will go on sale May 1, 2019. Each ticket includes a commemorative beer-tasting glass and tastings throughout the day. Early Bird Tickets: $30 Until July 1 or until allotment has been reached; Advance Tickets: $35 Through August 18; Week of Event Tickets: $40. https://www.neptunefestival.com/events/neptunes-coastal-craft-beer-festival Sat, Sep 7 - 4th Annual VA Cork & Craft Festival, 12 - 5:00 pm, Chincoteague Island KOA, 6742 Maddox Blvd., Chincoteague Island. Join us and the Special Olympics of Virginia for the 4th Annual Cork & Craft beer and wine festival. Sip on a variety of beer & wine while listening to the Island Boy Band and enjoying the breathtaking views of Chincoteague Bay and the lighthouse on Assateague Island. Shop for local artisan wares & crafts and indulge in great food provided by local food trucks. Buy your tickets online now for $30 (includes unlimited tastings and a commemorative tasting glass). Price goes up to $40 at the gate the day of the event. Designated Driver option available beginning January 2019 for $10, which includes soda/water. Children 15 years old or younger enter free. Need a place to stay? Check out our recommended accommodations and special packages available at Chincoteague Island KOA and Fairfield Inn & Suites. For all the details, visit www.VACorkCraft.com Fri, Sep 13 - Barrels, Brew & BBQ, 6 - 10:00 pm, Hunt Club Farm, 2388 London Bridge Rd., Virginia Beach. Come out on September 13th and help support Ronald McDonald House Charities of Norfolk!  All you can eat BBQ, drink Craft Beer, Wine and Champagne. Silent Auction, Raffles, Games, Music and much more!  https://barrelsbrewbbqfest18.thundertix.com/ Sat, Sep 21 - Virginia Beach Oktoberfest 2019, 12 - 6:00 pm, Hunt Club Farm, Virginia Beach. Wasserhund Brewery and the Nobleman are presenting the Annual Oktoberfest Event for all of Coastal Virginia and beyond on September 21st from noon till 6 pm at Hunt Club Farm in Virginia Beach. This event will serve as the quintessential Oktoberfest for our area featuring over 30 breweries, traditional German food and fair, festival atmosphere, and so much more: The opportunity to enjoy multiple styles of beers including, of course, a wide variety of German beers; live music; petting zoo and bounce houses for family friendly kid fun. Portion of proceeds will be donated to The Noblemen to support local charities. Sat, Sep 28 - Craft Beer Festival, 12 - 5:00 pm, Hosted by Cape Charles / Chesapeake Bay KOA, 32246 Lankford Highway, Cape Charles. Calling all Craft Beer Lovers! We have more than 30 brews just waiting for you to sample. Once you've quenched your thirst check out the live entertainment or do some shopping with the vendors onsite. *This is a ticketed event  https://koa.com/campgrounds/chesapeake-bay/ Sat, Oct 12 - 7th Annual 757 Battle of the Beers 2019, Hosted by Beach Ambassadors, 1 = 6:30 pm, Camp Pendleton, Birdneck Road, Virginia Beach. This is the only festival in Hampton Roads that exclusively features local 757 Craft Breweries as they battle it out to win in different beer categories – with 100% of the proceeds go to local Hampton Roads charities including St. Mary's Home and Hope House Foundation! This award-winning and unique event pits Hampton Roads-based breweries against each other to determine who has the best beer in Hampton Roads. Each year, local breweries put their best brews on tap and are rated by an official brewer tasting panel and by attendees of the event to see which beer is the best in the 7-5-7. Drink Happy - Be Safe Follow the blogs at: www.brew-n-rock-tidewater.blogspot.com or www.guapo-t-w.tumblr.com and follow the latest listings of local brew events on Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/hamptonroadsbeerforum/
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brewyork · 4 years
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Every New York City brewery offering home delivery
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Last updated: May 29, 2020
One of the best ways to support breweries during the COVID-19 Crisis is to purchase beer from them. Thanks to laws that were temporarily relaxed by New York’s State Liquor Authority, breweries in New York are permitted to deliver beer direct to your door or ship anywhere within New York State. Below is a rundown of every brewery in the city that’s delivering, where they’re delivering, and how to order from them.
We’re trying to keep this updated as much as possible, but please note that these methods and delivery zones are all subject to change, so consult directly with the brewery. And remember: delivery minimums and fees may apply.
Alewife Brewing Company is delivering cans and crowlers to New York City Monday through Saturday, and Western Westchester and Long Island on Friday and Saturday, and will ship beer anywhere in New York State. You can order directly from their online shop.
Big Alice Brewing Co. in Long Island City is delivering cans and bottles of their beers, plus ciders from Descendant Cider Company, direct from their taproom via Caviar.
Bridge and Tunnel Brewery in Ridgewood is delivering cans and filled growlers to select neighborhoods in Queens, Brooklyn, and Manhattan every Friday. You can order through their website.
Bronx Brewery has launched BXB Go, their new service offering delivering 4-packs, 6-packs, and variety packs of their beers free anywhere in New York City, with $5 shipping anywhere in New York State. They’ve also started a monthly subscription service that will send up to 24 cans a month to your door.
Circa Brewing Co. in downtown Brooklyn is doing delivery within a 2-mile radius from 4-9pm daily through their website. Crowlers of their house-brewed beers can be delivered with a food item in the same order.
Evil Twin Brewing NYC is delivering cans, bottles, seltzer, and bottled cocktails, direct from their Ridgewood, Queens brewery and taproom via Caviar. They’re also shipping cans of beer within New York state through their web store.
Fifth Hammer Brewing Co. in Long Island City will ship to addresses across New York State. Place orders by 8pm on Tuesdays for shipping on Wednesdays on their website. Maximum order of six four-packs.
Finback Brewery in Queens is delivering four-packs of cans to select neighborhoods in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens on rotating days of the week (Monday through Friday). You can order delivery directly from the brewery. In addition, they’ll ship anywhere in New York State -- follow this link for shipping. 
Five Boroughs Brewing Co. is now shipping beer anywhere in New York State. Beer shipments go out every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, and orders can be placed and additional info on shipping can be found on their Square site.
Flagship Brewery on Staten Island is delivering to the borough every day, and to Brooklyn every Tuesday (get your order in before 2pm on Monday). They’re also shipping everywhere else in New York State. You can order through their website.
Folksbier Brewery will deliver cans and crowlers daily from their brewery in Carroll Gardens to nearby neighborhoods in Brooklyn. You can order through their website. They will also ship beer anywhere in New York State -- follow this link for those orders.
Grimm Artisanal Ales is delivering four packs of cans, 500 mL bottles, and filled 32-ounce growlers direct from their brewery in Williamsburg via Caviar. They’re also shipping anywhere in New York State via their beer retail site.
Gun Hill Brewing Company in the Bronx is delivering anywhere in the borough four days a week (Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday). Just fill out this form and someone from the brewery will reach out to you.
Interboro Spirits and Ales in Williamsburg is delivering cans and bottles of their beers, plus canned cocktails and bottles of their spirits, and hand sanitizer direct from their brewery through their new Interboro Rapid Transit delivery program starting April 22nd, delivering on a rotating basis to parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Manhattan. Their products are also available for delivery local on a daily basis via Caviar. 
Keg & Lantern Brewing Company in Greenpoint is delivering both food and house-made beer in 32-ounce crowlers and 25-ounce bottles via Grubhub.
Kills Boro Brewing Co. on Staten Island is offering delivery anywhere on the island Wednesdays through Sundays, plus delivery to Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Long Island City, Queens on Saturdays. You can order directly from the shop on their website.
Kings County Brewers Collective in Bushwick will deliver cans of their beers, plus cans of Bridge Lane wine and bottles of Brooklyn Cider House cider locally via Caviar. They’ll deliver orders over $40 directly to your door in parts of Queens, Manhattan, and Brooklyn on select days, and will ship anywhere in New York State in their online store.
LIC Beer Project in Queens will deliver to their home borough, plus Brooklyn, and Manhattan, and they’ll ship their beers anywhere in New York State. Your can order direct from their online store.
Mikkeller NYC in Queens is shipping beer to drinkers across New York State. Orders for cases and half-cases must be placed by noon on Mondays and Thursdays to be shipped that day. You can order through their website.
Non Sequitur Beer Project, a relative NYC newcomer, will deliver four-packs and growlers of their IPAs daily across the city for your drinking enjoyment. You can order from their website.
Other Half Brewing delivers on a rotating basis from their Brooklyn brewery to most of New York City and Westchester. They’re also delivering locally within 1 1/2 miles of the brewery daily. They’re also shipping select beers direct to consumers in New York State. Check their website for where they’re headed on their next delivery date and what you can order.
Randolph Beer DUMBO in Brooklyn is delivering their house-brewed beers in crowlers, along with bottles of wine, via Caviar every day between 3 and 8pm, with food and liquor deliveries expected soon.
Rockaway Brewing Company is delivering cans, bottles, and growlers to neighborhoods in Western Queens and North Brooklyn seven days a week, with free delivery for orders of $40 or more. You can order through their website. They’re also offering delivery from their Rockaway location to First Responders, Service Workers and for Bulk and Case Orders in Arverne, Edgemere, Rockaway Park, Broad Channel -- here are the details on that.
Singlecut Beersmiths is delivering cans, merch, and coffee beans from Mighty Oak Roasters daily to Astoria, Sunnyside, Woodside, and LIC, plus to Manhattan, Eastern Queens and the Rockaways, and Brooklyn on select days of the week. You can order direct from their website.
Strong Rope Brewery in Gowanus will deliver cans of their farm beers across Brooklyn on Tuesdays, Fridays, and Sundays if you order by 1pm that day. Order directly from their website.
Svendale Brewing Co. in the Hudson Valley is offering delivery from their Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn tasting room. Their cans and crowlers are available to deliver in Brooklyn and Manhattan below Houston Street. You can place your order from their online store.
Threes Brewing in Gowanus offers daily free same-day delivery of their cans, bottles, and crowlers of beer to New York City for orders over $50, plus shipping anywhere else in New York State. Simply order through their online shop.
Torch and Crown Brewing Company is delivering to Manhattan, plus parts of Brooklyn and Queens daily from 3-7pm. Orders before 2:30pm will be processed the same day. Order through their website.
Transmitter Brewing in the Brooklyn Navy Yard will deliver cans and bottles of their beers via Caviar if you’re local, and will also ship them anywhere in New York State if you’re not local. You can also order select beers for delivery in Manhattan, parts of Brooklyn, and Long Island City, Queens if you throw in a bottle of wine through Rooftop Reds.
Wild East Brewing in Gowanus would’ve had their grand opening celebration this month, but you can celebrate at home with delivery of their 32-ounce crowlers through 2nd Kitchen.
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easyfoodnetwork · 4 years
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Now Is a Time of Boom and Bust for the Liquor Industry
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Photo by: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
While grocery and liquor store sales are up during the pandemic, small breweries are on much shakier footing
The dining room at chef Albert Di Meglio’s Brooklyn restaurant Barano might be empty, but business at Spirit Animal, his natural wine store next door, has never been better. “People have been buying cases,” says Di Meglio, who’s careful to let in just a few customers at a time to ensure social distancing. “The typical [mentality] used to be ‘let me get wine for a couple days.’ Now it’s ‘let me stock up for the week, or two weeks.”
The dichotomy Di Meglio observes on his block in Williamsburg extends across the country. Beer, wine, and liquor sales have collapsed at bars and restaurants, whose on-site business has been largely shut down in an effort to limit the spread of the new coronavirus (though some states have recently permitted bars and restaurants to serve alcohol to go). But people haven’t stopped drinking — if anything, they may be doing so more heavily than before. Customers are raiding the shelves at liquor stores and wine shops, businesses deemed “essential” by many state governments and permitted to remain open, as if stocking up for a very wet apocalypse.
“It’s more to calm the nerves,” Di Meglio says. “This is a catastrophe, what we’re living through… wine is delicious, and it takes the edge off.”
According to Nielsen data for the week ending March 14, off-premise (i.e., grocery and liquor store) sales were up 27.6 percent for wine, 26.4 for spirits, and 14 percent for beer, cider, and malt beverages (compared to last year’s sales for the same week). Order sizes are bigger, too: Three-liter boxed wine is up 53 percent, and 24 packs of beer are up 24 percent. Some specific retailers point to even higher numbers. Gary’s Wine & Marketplace, which operates four locations in New Jersey and one in Napa, California, has seen a 62 percent increase in overall sales, a 20 percent increase in overall in-store foot traffic, and a 300 percent increase in local delivery. At Liquor Barn, the leading alcohol retailer in Kentucky, purchase sizes are up 48 percent, and delivery sales, a recent point of focus, are up 600 percent. “We always thought delivery was the future, and we spent a ton of capital investing infrastructure to do it,” says Jonathan Blue, whose equity firm owns Liquor Barn.
Off-premise sales were up 27.6 percent for wine, 26.4 for spirits, and 14 percent for beer, cider, and malt beverages
For online alcohol delivery startups, the future has arrived, and it’s waiting downstairs with your order. On Friday, March 13, wine rating app and ordering platform Vivino saw its biggest sales ever, with 300 percent growth internationally in terms of value of merchandise sold. Last week, the ordering app Drizly saw sales shoot up 300 percent from earlier this year. New Drizly orders are also larger than usual: Consumers are spending 25 to 50 percent more per purchase.
Drizly doesn’t sell alcohol itself, but works with more than 180 U.S. retailers in 30 states that use their own delivery couriers. Almost all of those stores, which run the gamut from small neighborhood shops to liquor superstores like Bevmo, are still up and running, Drizly’s team says. Contact-less delivery — leaving a package on a doorstep, as is suddenly the norm for many food-delivery companies — isn’t legal for alcohol delivery. But Drizly is encouraging couriers to practice new social-distancing precautions, like not passing IDs back and forth and skipping in-person signatures.
Liz Paquet, Drizly’s head of consumer insights, won’t say for sure that the current boom represents a new normal. ”All bets are off at this point,” Paquet says. Yes, “people are buying more — but that could be attributed to the fact that on-premise isn’t an option anymore in most markets.” Alcohol sales are up in aggregate, that is, but it’s possible that the uptick in off-premise sales (at retail stores) does little more than make up for losses at on-premise (or bar and restaurant) locations for most manufacturers and distributors.
Lester Jones, chief economist at the National Beer Wholesalers Association, which represents almost 3,000 independent beer distributors, notes that the beer industry is split between about 80 percent off-premise sales and 20 percent on-premise sales. Wine and alcohol sales are split similarly, experts say. In past weeks, “we watched the on-premise channel whittle down to a slow trickle, but to balance that out, you see an increase in off-premise,” Jones says.
“Our new reality is pretty fucking grim”
The disruption isn’t ideal for distributors or big breweries, but it’s not disastrous for them, either. Small breweries, on the other hand, rely on taproom sales and self-distribution of kegs to local bars and restaurants, instead of expensive canning, bottling, and distribution contracts. That puts them on much shakier footing. “The reason there are so many small breweries now is because of taprooms,” says Sam Gilbert, owner of four-year-old Oakland brewery Temescal Brewing Co. “We can sell product across our own bars, and that makes the numbers work at a smaller scale. So having those taprooms no longer safe for the moment is going to have an outsized effect on breweries for whom taprooms are a primary source of income.” To survive, Gilbert has been forced to lay off staff, and Temescal has turned to new options like curbside beer pickup and online sales.
The burgeoning craft-spirits industry faces the same plight. “Our new reality is pretty fucking grim,” says Lance Winters, founder of the 38-year-old craft distillery St. George Spirits in Alameda, California. “I think this is stopping dead in its tracks a really positive trajectory we’ve all been enjoying,”
As a small distillery, the bulk of St. George’s sales go through bars and restaurants — roughly 75 to 80 percent. Winters relies on bartenders and restaurants to champion St. George products. “There are a lot of retailers who don’t know who we are, and there are a lot of customers shopping at retailers who don’t know who we are.”
His concern, beyond the future of his own business and the bars and restaurants he works with, is that big companies will weather this storm, while small ones won’t. “Catastrophes like this tend to favor the institutional brands,” Winters says.
Industry experts like Brian Rosen of Bevstrat, a marketing and strategy firm for small brands, agree. During and perhaps after this crisis, Rosen suspects people will gravitate toward “comfort brands” with familiar names — Tito’s, Franzia, Mondavi — and they’ll get all the help from distributors.
“What’s going to happen is these big brands, Bacardi and all of them, have an open-door policy with big distributors — they have entire Bacardi divisions,” says Rosen. “So for everyone to come close to hitting any 2020 financial numbers they had forecasted, they’ll have to say, forgot [the little brands], I need to focus on Jim Beam right now... because the big commodity suppliers are saying, ‘Sell my brand, or I’ll leave.’”
What customers can do to push back, Gilbert of Temescal Brewing suggests, is pretty straightforward: Buy small and local brands as directly from producers as possible — while maintaining a healthy, six-foot distance, of course. After all, people haven’t stopped drinking, as the numbers show.
from Eater - All https://ift.tt/2JjFCaf https://ift.tt/2UkYOL4
Tumblr media
Photo by: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
While grocery and liquor store sales are up during the pandemic, small breweries are on much shakier footing
The dining room at chef Albert Di Meglio’s Brooklyn restaurant Barano might be empty, but business at Spirit Animal, his natural wine store next door, has never been better. “People have been buying cases,” says Di Meglio, who’s careful to let in just a few customers at a time to ensure social distancing. “The typical [mentality] used to be ‘let me get wine for a couple days.’ Now it’s ‘let me stock up for the week, or two weeks.”
The dichotomy Di Meglio observes on his block in Williamsburg extends across the country. Beer, wine, and liquor sales have collapsed at bars and restaurants, whose on-site business has been largely shut down in an effort to limit the spread of the new coronavirus (though some states have recently permitted bars and restaurants to serve alcohol to go). But people haven’t stopped drinking — if anything, they may be doing so more heavily than before. Customers are raiding the shelves at liquor stores and wine shops, businesses deemed “essential” by many state governments and permitted to remain open, as if stocking up for a very wet apocalypse.
“It’s more to calm the nerves,” Di Meglio says. “This is a catastrophe, what we’re living through… wine is delicious, and it takes the edge off.”
According to Nielsen data for the week ending March 14, off-premise (i.e., grocery and liquor store) sales were up 27.6 percent for wine, 26.4 for spirits, and 14 percent for beer, cider, and malt beverages (compared to last year’s sales for the same week). Order sizes are bigger, too: Three-liter boxed wine is up 53 percent, and 24 packs of beer are up 24 percent. Some specific retailers point to even higher numbers. Gary’s Wine & Marketplace, which operates four locations in New Jersey and one in Napa, California, has seen a 62 percent increase in overall sales, a 20 percent increase in overall in-store foot traffic, and a 300 percent increase in local delivery. At Liquor Barn, the leading alcohol retailer in Kentucky, purchase sizes are up 48 percent, and delivery sales, a recent point of focus, are up 600 percent. “We always thought delivery was the future, and we spent a ton of capital investing infrastructure to do it,” says Jonathan Blue, whose equity firm owns Liquor Barn.
Off-premise sales were up 27.6 percent for wine, 26.4 for spirits, and 14 percent for beer, cider, and malt beverages
For online alcohol delivery startups, the future has arrived, and it’s waiting downstairs with your order. On Friday, March 13, wine rating app and ordering platform Vivino saw its biggest sales ever, with 300 percent growth internationally in terms of value of merchandise sold. Last week, the ordering app Drizly saw sales shoot up 300 percent from earlier this year. New Drizly orders are also larger than usual: Consumers are spending 25 to 50 percent more per purchase.
Drizly doesn’t sell alcohol itself, but works with more than 180 U.S. retailers in 30 states that use their own delivery couriers. Almost all of those stores, which run the gamut from small neighborhood shops to liquor superstores like Bevmo, are still up and running, Drizly’s team says. Contact-less delivery — leaving a package on a doorstep, as is suddenly the norm for many food-delivery companies — isn’t legal for alcohol delivery. But Drizly is encouraging couriers to practice new social-distancing precautions, like not passing IDs back and forth and skipping in-person signatures.
Liz Paquet, Drizly’s head of consumer insights, won’t say for sure that the current boom represents a new normal. ”All bets are off at this point,” Paquet says. Yes, “people are buying more — but that could be attributed to the fact that on-premise isn’t an option anymore in most markets.” Alcohol sales are up in aggregate, that is, but it’s possible that the uptick in off-premise sales (at retail stores) does little more than make up for losses at on-premise (or bar and restaurant) locations for most manufacturers and distributors.
Lester Jones, chief economist at the National Beer Wholesalers Association, which represents almost 3,000 independent beer distributors, notes that the beer industry is split between about 80 percent off-premise sales and 20 percent on-premise sales. Wine and alcohol sales are split similarly, experts say. In past weeks, “we watched the on-premise channel whittle down to a slow trickle, but to balance that out, you see an increase in off-premise,” Jones says.
“Our new reality is pretty fucking grim”
The disruption isn’t ideal for distributors or big breweries, but it’s not disastrous for them, either. Small breweries, on the other hand, rely on taproom sales and self-distribution of kegs to local bars and restaurants, instead of expensive canning, bottling, and distribution contracts. That puts them on much shakier footing. “The reason there are so many small breweries now is because of taprooms,” says Sam Gilbert, owner of four-year-old Oakland brewery Temescal Brewing Co. “We can sell product across our own bars, and that makes the numbers work at a smaller scale. So having those taprooms no longer safe for the moment is going to have an outsized effect on breweries for whom taprooms are a primary source of income.” To survive, Gilbert has been forced to lay off staff, and Temescal has turned to new options like curbside beer pickup and online sales.
The burgeoning craft-spirits industry faces the same plight. “Our new reality is pretty fucking grim,” says Lance Winters, founder of the 38-year-old craft distillery St. George Spirits in Alameda, California. “I think this is stopping dead in its tracks a really positive trajectory we’ve all been enjoying,”
As a small distillery, the bulk of St. George’s sales go through bars and restaurants — roughly 75 to 80 percent. Winters relies on bartenders and restaurants to champion St. George products. “There are a lot of retailers who don’t know who we are, and there are a lot of customers shopping at retailers who don’t know who we are.”
His concern, beyond the future of his own business and the bars and restaurants he works with, is that big companies will weather this storm, while small ones won’t. “Catastrophes like this tend to favor the institutional brands,” Winters says.
Industry experts like Brian Rosen of Bevstrat, a marketing and strategy firm for small brands, agree. During and perhaps after this crisis, Rosen suspects people will gravitate toward “comfort brands” with familiar names — Tito’s, Franzia, Mondavi — and they’ll get all the help from distributors.
“What’s going to happen is these big brands, Bacardi and all of them, have an open-door policy with big distributors — they have entire Bacardi divisions,” says Rosen. “So for everyone to come close to hitting any 2020 financial numbers they had forecasted, they’ll have to say, forgot [the little brands], I need to focus on Jim Beam right now... because the big commodity suppliers are saying, ‘Sell my brand, or I’ll leave.’”
What customers can do to push back, Gilbert of Temescal Brewing suggests, is pretty straightforward: Buy small and local brands as directly from producers as possible — while maintaining a healthy, six-foot distance, of course. After all, people haven’t stopped drinking, as the numbers show.
from Eater - All https://ift.tt/2JjFCaf via Blogger https://ift.tt/39oKxkX
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isaiahrippinus · 4 years
Text
Hop Take: Beer Industry Faces Taproom Closures, Layoffs, and Uncertain Future
In the last several weeks, the coronavirus and Covid-19 have left businesses reeling. Breweries, beer bars, and shops are stuck in a holding pattern as each navigates the pandemic’s arrival, and indeed, their own survival.
Already, the effects of Covid-19 on the beer industry have been staggering.
Annual beer industry events, including the Brewers Association’s Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America and World Beer Cup, combined comprising the largest industry gathering in the country, have been cancelled. The National Beer Wholesalers Association (NBWA), representing beer distributors, called off its annual conference. And the American Homebrew Association’s National Homebrewers Competition, which draws hopeful amateur brewers each year, has been postponed.
Additional consumer-facing festivals with with national, and even international, appeal — Cigar City’s Hunahpu’s Day, Firestone Walker’s Firestone Walker Invitational Beer Fest (FWIBF), Pike Brewing’s Women in Beer, a tasting event and Planned Parenthood benefit — are likewise off the books.
Adding to Covid-19’s financial, social, and spiritual blows are the bottom-line challenges, as craft beer production slows, and taprooms close with no new beginning in sight.
“These are incredibly challenging times, easily the hardest week in our company history,” Jack Hendler, founder of Jacks Abby and Springdale breweries in Framingham, Mass. tells VinePair. “State officials have made the decision to close all bars and restaurants for on-premise consumption in the interest of public health and it’s the right thing to do, but closing our taprooms are a huge hit on our business.”
Hendler continues, “We have had to adapt our business model to takeout, curbside pickup and delivery overnight. […] It isn’t easy, but we are all doing everything we can to fight through this.”
Across the state and country, many small breweries have announced similar plans. In Massachusetts, Boston’s Samuel Adams and Tree House Brewing Co. announced indefinite closures of their taprooms. In California, Sierra Nevada has cancelled all guest services. Russian River, whose Santa Rosa and Windsor locations draw tourism to their respective cities year-round, furloughed about 175 staff members — 90 percent of its workforce.
Sadly eclipsing this figure, Portland, Ore.’s McMenamins brewery and hotel chain laid off nearly 3,000 employees across 55 of its 56 locations in Oregon and Washington state, leaving only its Portland bottle shop open.
“These are the hardest decisions and conversations we have ever had to make,” Natalie Cilurzo, co-founder of Russian River, told Brewbound on Tuesday. “The situation changes every day, and each day we have to add to the list of furloughed employees.”
For many small businesses, the hardest part is not knowing what’s ahead. “We are in uncharted territories,” Hendler says. “It feels like we’re making two business plans a day as the situation is ever evolving.”
With NYC restaurants and bars closing down by exec order tomorrow, we will be working furiously to realign our staffing and production to the new reality while trying to minimize impact to our people. It’s not pretty
— Laura Dierks (@LLDierks) March 16, 2020
In New York City, Brooklyn Brewery announced cashless sales, cleaning procedures, and compostable plastic cups. Interboro Spirits & Ales, in nearby East Williamsburg, Brooklyn, prepared for changes to staffing, production, and taproom service. Throughout the borough, Threes Brewing, Kings County Brewers Collective (KCBC), and Grimm Artisanal Ales shifted to digital delivery services such as Caviar; while Finback Brewery and Big Alice Brewing, both operating locations in Brooklyn and Queens, remained open for to-go sales, growler fills, and gift cards.
The Silver (Aluminum) Lining: Beer Retail
Indeed, an unprecedented uptick in beer sales online and at local retailers has served as somewhat of a silver lining for some beer industry members.
Across what feels like an apocalyptic landscape, beer sales have surged on sites like Drizly, which, on Monday, reported its gross merchandise volume was up 500 percent year-over-year that day alone. “Drizly is also seeing that consumers are placing larger orders, now spending on average 50 percent more than normal on Drizly, which indicates a ‘stock up’ mentality,” the company told Beer Business Daily.
One Craft Beer Cellar franchisee told me the business was “Extremely busy in Belmont [Long Island], with schools closed and parents working from home. Online orders and deliveries are up, as people take advantage of not having to come to the store.”
Brewer Survey Says: Results ‘Aren’t Pretty’
But it would be negligent, if not impossible, to ignore the immense setbacks that lay ahead. On Wednesday, Brewers Association Chief Economist Bart Watson shared insights from a survey that gauges initial impacts of Covid-19 on small breweries across the country. At press time, more than 600 breweries responded, painting a limited but striking picture of what small breweries are experiencing nationwide.
Among brewery respondents, 90 percent said Covid-19 has impacted onsite sales. About 59 percent said the virus has affected distributor orders. And, come April, 95 percent expect to see year-over-year sales losses.
Currently at the brewery – we have one customer pic.twitter.com/7DrQAonxlJ
— Em Sauter (@PintsandPanels) March 14, 2020
Big Beer, Big Losses
Small breweries and businesses will without question suffer the most. But global brewing companies, while better-equipped to weather the storm, are already seeing stocks plummet — even to recession levels.
On Wednesday morning, VinePair charted publicly-traded beer, wine, and spirits producers to determine how their stocks are faring year-to-date compared to the S&P 500. Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) took the steepest hit.
“AB InBev, which just drew down a massive credit line, has clearly suffered the most,” Joshua Malin, VinePair president and co-founder, told me. “This makes sense given how much effort they have put into pivoting the future of their business toward Asia in recent years.”
And while Boston Beer actually outperformed the S&P 500, this is likely due to its Truly Hard Seltzer brand, which is the second-best-selling brand in the explosive hard seltzer category ,behind White Claw. (White Claw parent, Mark Anthony Group, is a private company, Malin added.)
International Impact
Of course, the effects of the coronavirus and Covid-19 reach far beyond U.S. borders.
Guinness closed both its Dublin and Baltimore, Md. locations last week. “But it’s bars, pubs [and] restaurants I’m most concerned for. They’re not cash-rich,” Jon Urch, Sales Director, PNW, Diageo Beer Company USA, told me on Twitter.
In that thread, several beer industry members shared their struggles. “[The] biggest issue for us is we have had to cancel a very important, six-figure contract, hop selection trip to NZ. Truly gutted about that,” Paul Jones, founder of the U.K.’s Cloudwater Brewing, recently voted one of the 10 best breweries in the world by RateBeer users, said. “It’s near impossible to make contingency plans, but we are trying to prepare for draft sales to plummet.”
Beyond the taproom — which, Jones said, reduced its capacity by 50 percent as of March 14 — is the mental and emotional strain among staff and business associates. “The anxiety and stress in the team, despite us taking early, clear, thought through steps, is palpable. Our worries about customers (we wholesale ~85% of our beer) and the issues they’ll face just compound the pressures we feel right now.”
Miranda Hudson, co-founder of Duration Brewing, a new farmhouse brewery opened in rural Norfolk, England in October 2019, said, “We sell the vast majority of our beer via wholesale while we build a local direct and national online customer base. We have yet to see an adverse impact but we are very much tied to a supply chain.”
How to Help Small Beer Businesses
On Wednesday, Ireland’s White Hag Irish Brewing Co. announced a virtual event via its Facebook page, “possibly the worlds’ first ever online beer launch,” for its Phantom Hazy IPA. It may sound frivolous, but it’s exactly these types of light-hearted efforts that can ensure craft beer culture can sustain. And we, as consumers, are responsible for doing our part to help them survive.
While you’re stocking up on canned soup and toilet paper, consider picking up a four-pack from a local brewery. I did.
If you’re scrolling through social media feeds whilst sheltering in place, see if the breweries you’d usually visit are offering contactless deliveries of their beer — and if they are, order it. I did.
And if you’re on lockdown and, for whatever reason, are not feeling up to imbibing, crack open that homebrew kit that’s sat dusty and daunting in the corner since December. By the time it’s finished in four weeks’ time, you might muster up the courage to share it with a roommate — or, better yet, at your first homebrew club meeting after the coronavirus curve subsides.
Covid-19 and its whiplash of effects on the beer businesses are only beginning to be felt, but what’s happening now will absolutely affect the future of these businesses and ultimately, yours and my consumption of beers and other products from these purveyors. But the beer industry and its community are nothing if not resilient.
Don’t underestimate the power of positive drinking. Stay connected to beer acquaintances through virtual tastings. Start an Instagram story chronicling your socially-distanced beer journey. Or, after you make it through another weary, work-from-home Wednesday, share what you’re drinking with friends and ask them to send what they’re drinking, too.
Last but not least, let brewers, bartenders, and service industry members know you’re thinking of them. Offer to buy their next round —especially if they’re one of the thousands that have lost their jobs. It might not pay their rent, but every little beer helps.
We could all use a little beer, and a little “cheers,” right now.
Infographic courtesy of Jacks Abby Brewing Co.
The article Hop Take: Beer Industry Faces Taproom Closures, Layoffs, and Uncertain Future appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/hop-take-beer-industry-faces-taproom-closures-layoffs-and-uncertain-future/ source https://vinology1.tumblr.com/post/613052349464838144
0 notes
johnboothus · 4 years
Text
Hop Take: Beer Industry Faces Taproom Closures Layoffs and Uncertain Future
In the last several weeks, the coronavirus and Covid-19 have left businesses reeling. Breweries, beer bars, and shops are stuck in a holding pattern as each navigates the pandemic’s arrival, and indeed, their own survival.
Already, the effects of Covid-19 on the beer industry have been staggering.
Annual beer industry events, including the Brewers Association’s Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America and World Beer Cup, combined comprising the largest industry gathering in the country, have been cancelled. The National Beer Wholesalers Association (NBWA), representing beer distributors, called off its annual conference. And the American Homebrew Association’s National Homebrewers Competition, which draws hopeful amateur brewers each year, has been postponed.
Additional consumer-facing festivals with with national, and even international, appeal — Cigar City’s Hunahpu’s Day, Firestone Walker’s Firestone Walker Invitational Beer Fest (FWIBF), Pike Brewing’s Women in Beer, a tasting event and Planned Parenthood benefit — are likewise off the books.
Adding to Covid-19’s financial, social, and spiritual blows are the bottom-line challenges, as craft beer production slows, and taprooms close with no new beginning in sight.
“These are incredibly challenging times, easily the hardest week in our company history,” Jack Hendler, founder of Jacks Abby and Springdale breweries in Framingham, Mass. tells VinePair. “State officials have made the decision to close all bars and restaurants for on-premise consumption in the interest of public health and it’s the right thing to do, but closing our taprooms are a huge hit on our business.”
Hendler continues, “We have had to adapt our business model to takeout, curbside pickup and delivery overnight. […] It isn’t easy, but we are all doing everything we can to fight through this.”
Across the state and country, many small breweries have announced similar plans. In Massachusetts, Boston’s Samuel Adams and Tree House Brewing Co. announced indefinite closures of their taprooms. In California, Sierra Nevada has cancelled all guest services. Russian River, whose Santa Rosa and Windsor locations draw tourism to their respective cities year-round, furloughed about 175 staff members — 90 percent of its workforce.
Sadly eclipsing this figure, Portland, Ore.’s McMenamins brewery and hotel chain laid off nearly 3,000 employees across 55 of its 56 locations in Oregon and Washington state, leaving only its Portland bottle shop open.
“These are the hardest decisions and conversations we have ever had to make,” Natalie Cilurzo, co-founder of Russian River, told Brewbound on Tuesday. “The situation changes every day, and each day we have to add to the list of furloughed employees.”
For many small businesses, the hardest part is not knowing what’s ahead. “We are in uncharted territories,” Hendler says. “It feels like we’re making two business plans a day as the situation is ever evolving.”
With NYC restaurants and bars closing down by exec order tomorrow, we will be working furiously to realign our staffing and production to the new reality while trying to minimize impact to our people. It's not pretty
— Laura Dierks (@LLDierks) March 16, 2020
In New York City, Brooklyn Brewery announced cashless sales, cleaning procedures, and compostable plastic cups. Interboro Spirits & Ales, in nearby East Williamsburg, Brooklyn, prepared for changes to staffing, production, and taproom service. Throughout the borough, Threes Brewing, Kings County Brewers Collective (KCBC), and Grimm Artisanal Ales shifted to digital delivery services such as Caviar; while Finback Brewery and Big Alice Brewing, both operating locations in Brooklyn and Queens, remained open for to-go sales, growler fills, and gift cards.
The Silver (Aluminum) Lining: Beer Retail
Indeed, an unprecedented uptick in beer sales online and at local retailers has served as somewhat of a silver lining for some beer industry members.
Across what feels like an apocalyptic landscape, beer sales have surged on sites like Drizly, which, on Monday, reported its gross merchandise volume was up 500 percent year-over-year that day alone. “Drizly is also seeing that consumers are placing larger orders, now spending on average 50 percent more than normal on Drizly, which indicates a ‘stock up’ mentality,” the company told Beer Business Daily.
One Craft Beer Cellar franchisee told me the business was “Extremely busy in Belmont [Long Island], with schools closed and parents working from home. Online orders and deliveries are up, as people take advantage of not having to come to the store.”
Brewer Survey Says: Results ‘Aren’t Pretty’
But it would be negligent, if not impossible, to ignore the immense setbacks that lay ahead. On Wednesday, Brewers Association Chief Economist Bart Watson shared insights from a survey that gauges initial impacts of Covid-19 on small breweries across the country. At press time, more than 600 breweries responded, painting a limited but striking picture of what small breweries are experiencing nationwide.
Among brewery respondents, 90 percent said Covid-19 has impacted onsite sales. About 59 percent said the virus has affected distributor orders. And, come April, 95 percent expect to see year-over-year sales losses.
Currently at the brewery – we have one customer pic.twitter.com/7DrQAonxlJ
— Em Sauter (@PintsandPanels) March 14, 2020
Big Beer, Big Losses
Small breweries and businesses will without question suffer the most. But global brewing companies, while better-equipped to weather the storm, are already seeing stocks plummet — even to recession levels.
On Wednesday morning, VinePair charted publicly-traded beer, wine, and spirits producers to determine how their stocks are faring year-to-date compared to the S&P 500. Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) took the steepest hit.
“AB InBev, which just drew down a massive credit line, has clearly suffered the most,” Joshua Malin, VinePair president and co-founder, told me. “This makes sense given how much effort they have put into pivoting the future of their business toward Asia in recent years.”
And while Boston Beer actually outperformed the S&P 500, this is likely due to its Truly Hard Seltzer brand, which is the second-best-selling brand in the explosive hard seltzer category ,behind White Claw. (White Claw parent, Mark Anthony Group, is a private company, Malin added.)
International Impact
Of course, the effects of the coronavirus and Covid-19 reach far beyond U.S. borders.
Guinness closed both its Dublin and Baltimore, Md. locations last week. “But it’s bars, pubs [and] restaurants I’m most concerned for. They’re not cash-rich,” Jon Urch, Sales Director, PNW, Diageo Beer Company USA, told me on Twitter.
In that thread, several beer industry members shared their struggles. “[The] biggest issue for us is we have had to cancel a very important, six-figure contract, hop selection trip to NZ. Truly gutted about that,” Paul Jones, founder of the U.K.’s Cloudwater Brewing, recently voted one of the 10 best breweries in the world by RateBeer users, said. “It’s near impossible to make contingency plans, but we are trying to prepare for draft sales to plummet.”
Beyond the taproom — which, Jones said, reduced its capacity by 50 percent as of March 14 — is the mental and emotional strain among staff and business associates. “The anxiety and stress in the team, despite us taking early, clear, thought through steps, is palpable. Our worries about customers (we wholesale ~85% of our beer) and the issues they’ll face just compound the pressures we feel right now.”
Miranda Hudson, co-founder of Duration Brewing, a new farmhouse brewery opened in rural Norfolk, England in October 2019, said, “We sell the vast majority of our beer via wholesale while we build a local direct and national online customer base. We have yet to see an adverse impact but we are very much tied to a supply chain.”
How to Help Small Beer Businesses
On Wednesday, Ireland’s White Hag Irish Brewing Co. announced a virtual event via its Facebook page, “possibly the worlds’ first ever online beer launch,” for its Phantom Hazy IPA. It may sound frivolous, but it’s exactly these types of light-hearted efforts that can ensure craft beer culture can sustain. And we, as consumers, are responsible for doing our part to help them survive.
While you’re stocking up on canned soup and toilet paper, consider picking up a four-pack from a local brewery. I did.
If you’re scrolling through social media feeds whilst sheltering in place, see if the breweries you’d usually visit are offering contactless deliveries of their beer — and if they are, order it. I did.
And if you’re on lockdown and, for whatever reason, are not feeling up to imbibing, crack open that homebrew kit that’s sat dusty and daunting in the corner since December. By the time it’s finished in four weeks’ time, you might muster up the courage to share it with a roommate — or, better yet, at your first homebrew club meeting after the coronavirus curve subsides.
Covid-19 and its whiplash of effects on the beer businesses are only beginning to be felt, but what’s happening now will absolutely affect the future of these businesses and ultimately, yours and my consumption of beers and other products from these purveyors. But the beer industry and its community are nothing if not resilient.
Don’t underestimate the power of positive drinking. Stay connected to beer acquaintances through virtual tastings. Start an Instagram story chronicling your socially-distanced beer journey. Or, after you make it through another weary, work-from-home Wednesday, share what you’re drinking with friends and ask them to send what they’re drinking, too.
Last but not least, let brewers, bartenders, and service industry members know you’re thinking of them. Offer to buy their next round —especially if they’re one of the thousands that have lost their jobs. It might not pay their rent, but every little beer helps.
We could all use a little beer, and a little “cheers,” right now.
Infographic courtesy of Jacks Abby Brewing Co.
The article Hop Take: Beer Industry Faces Taproom Closures, Layoffs, and Uncertain Future appeared first on VinePair.
Via https://vinepair.com/articles/hop-take-beer-industry-faces-taproom-closures-layoffs-and-uncertain-future/
source https://vinology1.weebly.com/blog/hop-take-beer-industry-faces-taproom-closures-layoffs-and-uncertain-future
0 notes
kentavewine · 1 hour
Text
Williamsburg's Evolving Palate: Explore Wines Online at Kent Wines and Liquors
Williamsburg, Brooklyn – a vibrant tapestry woven with art, music, and a discerning taste for the finer things in life. When it comes to beverages, residents deserve exceptional choices that elevate everyday moments and special occasions. Kent Wines and Liquors, your online wine store Williamsburg Brooklyn, caters to this discerning palate, offering a curated selection of premium wines delivered straight to your doorstep.
Beyond the Corner Bodega: A World of Wines Awaits
Forget the limited selection at your local convenience store. Kent Wines and Liquor goes beyond the basics, providing a diverse range of wines to satisfy the adventurous spirit of Williamsburg residents. Embark on a flavor odyssey that transcends borders:
Iconic Classics: Explore renowned wines from esteemed regions like Bordeaux and Napa Valley. Discover the legendary Cabernet Sauvignons, powerful Pinot Noirs, and crisp Chardonnays that have shaped the world of wine.
Hidden Gems: We champion the dedication of small, family-owned wineries around the globe. Unearth unique varietals and lesser-known regions, experiencing the distinct terroir and sustainable practices of passionate winemakers.
Expertly Curated Selection: Our knowledgeable staff meticulously selects each bottle, ensuring exceptional quality and a diverse range of flavors to please every palate. From bold reds to crisp whites, sparkling wines, and everything in between, we have the perfect bottle for any gathering or quiet evening in.
Effortless Online Exploration:
Gone are the days of aimlessly wandering supermarket aisles. Our user-friendly website allows you to navigate our offerings at your leisure. Browse by varietal, region, price point, or even food pairings. Whether you're a seasoned wine connoisseur or a curious newcomer, finding your next favorite bottle is a breeze.
Tumblr media
Beyond the Grape: Explore Spirits Online Too!
Your beverage needs to extend beyond wine. Kent Wines and Liquors offers a comprehensive selection of spirits to keep your home bar well-stocked:
Classic Liquors: Stock your bar with all the essentials, from premium vodkas and whiskeys to smooth gins and tequilas.
Craft Cocktail Essentials: Explore our selection of artisanal liqueurs, bitters, and mixers, perfect for creating unique and delicious craft cocktails at home.
Local Gems: Discover the spirit of innovation with our selection of small-batch, handcrafted spirits brimming with personality and regional flair. Support local distilleries and experience the unique flavors they bring to the table.
Expert Recommendations: Feeling overwhelmed by the choices? Our knowledgeable staff is here to recommend the perfect spirit to match your desired drink or create the ideal cocktail for your next gathering.
Kent Wines and Liquors: Your Williamsburg Delivery Partner
We take the hassle out of getting exceptional wines and spirits in Williamsburg:
Convenient Online Ordering: Browse our extensive selection from the comfort of your couch, and place your order with a few clicks. No need to battle crowded stores or lug heavy bottles home.
Speedy Delivery: Relax and unwind – your wines and spirits will be delivered straight to your doorstep, ensuring they arrive perfectly chilled or ready to enjoy.
Personalized Recommendations: Not sure what to choose? Our knowledgeable staff is here to recommend the perfect bottle based on your preferences and food pairings.
Stay Informed: Sign up for our newsletter to discover new arrivals, special offers, and informative wine and spirit pairing tips to elevate your home entertaining.
Elevate Every Moment with Kent Wines and Liquors
At Kent Wines and Liquors, we believe that exceptional wines and spirits can elevate everyday moments and create lasting memories. With our curated online selection, convenient delivery, and expert guidance, we're here to be your Williamsburg partner in all things drinkable. You can visit our website today, explore our diverse collection, and place your order. We'd like to help you uncork the perfect bottle for your next gathering, special occasion, or quiet evening. Your journey to a world of flavor starts with Kent Wines and Liquors, your Online wine delivery in Williamsburg.
For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
0 notes
wineanddinosaur · 4 years
Text
Hop Take: Beer Industry Faces Taproom Closures, Layoffs, and Uncertain Future
In the last several weeks, the coronavirus and Covid-19 have left businesses reeling. Breweries, beer bars, and shops are stuck in a holding pattern as each navigates the pandemic’s arrival, and indeed, their own survival.
Already, the effects of Covid-19 on the beer industry have been staggering.
Annual beer industry events, including the Brewers Association’s Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America and World Beer Cup, combined comprising the largest industry gathering in the country, have been cancelled. The National Beer Wholesalers Association (NBWA), representing beer distributors, called off its annual conference. And the American Homebrew Association’s National Homebrewers Competition, which draws hopeful amateur brewers each year, has been postponed.
Additional consumer-facing festivals with with national, and even international, appeal — Cigar City’s Hunahpu’s Day, Firestone Walker’s Firestone Walker Invitational Beer Fest (FWIBF), Pike Brewing’s Women in Beer, a tasting event and Planned Parenthood benefit — are likewise off the books.
Adding to Covid-19’s financial, social, and spiritual blows are the bottom-line challenges, as craft beer production slows, and taprooms close with no new beginning in sight.
“These are incredibly challenging times, easily the hardest week in our company history,” Jack Hendler, founder of Jacks Abby and Springdale breweries in Framingham, Mass. tells VinePair. “State officials have made the decision to close all bars and restaurants for on-premise consumption in the interest of public health and it’s the right thing to do, but closing our taprooms are a huge hit on our business.”
Hendler continues, “We have had to adapt our business model to takeout, curbside pickup and delivery overnight. […] It isn’t easy, but we are all doing everything we can to fight through this.”
Across the state and country, many small breweries have announced similar plans. In Massachusetts, Boston’s Samuel Adams and Tree House Brewing Co. announced indefinite closures of their taprooms. In California, Sierra Nevada has cancelled all guest services. Russian River, whose Santa Rosa and Windsor locations draw tourism to their respective cities year-round, furloughed about 175 staff members — 90 percent of its workforce.
Sadly eclipsing this figure, Portland, Ore.’s McMenamins brewery and hotel chain laid off nearly 3,000 employees across 55 of its 56 locations in Oregon and Washington state, leaving only its Portland bottle shop open.
“These are the hardest decisions and conversations we have ever had to make,” Natalie Cilurzo, co-founder of Russian River, told Brewbound on Tuesday. “The situation changes every day, and each day we have to add to the list of furloughed employees.”
For many small businesses, the hardest part is not knowing what’s ahead. “We are in uncharted territories,” Hendler says. “It feels like we’re making two business plans a day as the situation is ever evolving.”
With NYC restaurants and bars closing down by exec order tomorrow, we will be working furiously to realign our staffing and production to the new reality while trying to minimize impact to our people. It's not pretty
— Laura Dierks (@LLDierks) March 16, 2020
In New York City, Brooklyn Brewery announced cashless sales, cleaning procedures, and compostable plastic cups. Interboro Spirits & Ales, in nearby East Williamsburg, Brooklyn, prepared for changes to staffing, production, and taproom service. Throughout the borough, Threes Brewing, Kings County Brewers Collective (KCBC), and Grimm Artisanal Ales shifted to digital delivery services such as Caviar; while Finback Brewery and Big Alice Brewing, both operating locations in Brooklyn and Queens, remained open for to-go sales, growler fills, and gift cards.
The Silver (Aluminum) Lining: Beer Retail
Indeed, an unprecedented uptick in beer sales online and at local retailers has served as somewhat of a silver lining for some beer industry members.
Across what feels like an apocalyptic landscape, beer sales have surged on sites like Drizly, which, on Monday, reported its gross merchandise volume was up 500 percent year-over-year that day alone. “Drizly is also seeing that consumers are placing larger orders, now spending on average 50 percent more than normal on Drizly, which indicates a ‘stock up’ mentality,” the company told Beer Business Daily.
One Craft Beer Cellar franchisee told me the business was “Extremely busy in Belmont [Long Island], with schools closed and parents working from home. Online orders and deliveries are up, as people take advantage of not having to come to the store.”
Brewer Survey Says: Results ‘Aren’t Pretty’
But it would be negligent, if not impossible, to ignore the immense setbacks that lay ahead. On Wednesday, Brewers Association Chief Economist Bart Watson shared insights from a survey that gauges initial impacts of Covid-19 on small breweries across the country. At press time, more than 600 breweries responded, painting a limited but striking picture of what small breweries are experiencing nationwide.
Among brewery respondents, 90 percent said Covid-19 has impacted onsite sales. About 59 percent said the virus has affected distributor orders. And, come April, 95 percent expect to see year-over-year sales losses.
Currently at the brewery – we have one customer pic.twitter.com/7DrQAonxlJ
— Em Sauter (@PintsandPanels) March 14, 2020
Big Beer, Big Losses
Small breweries and businesses will without question suffer the most. But global brewing companies, while better-equipped to weather the storm, are already seeing stocks plummet — even to recession levels.
On Wednesday morning, VinePair charted publicly-traded beer, wine, and spirits producers to determine how their stocks are faring year-to-date compared to the S&P 500. Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) took the steepest hit.
“AB InBev, which just drew down a massive credit line, has clearly suffered the most,” Joshua Malin, VinePair president and co-founder, told me. “This makes sense given how much effort they have put into pivoting the future of their business toward Asia in recent years.”
And while Boston Beer actually outperformed the S&P 500, this is likely due to its Truly Hard Seltzer brand, which is the second-best-selling brand in the explosive hard seltzer category ,behind White Claw. (White Claw parent, Mark Anthony Group, is a private company, Malin added.)
International Impact
Of course, the effects of the coronavirus and Covid-19 reach far beyond U.S. borders.
Guinness closed both its Dublin and Baltimore, Md. locations last week. “But it’s bars, pubs [and] restaurants I’m most concerned for. They’re not cash-rich,” Jon Urch, Sales Director, PNW, Diageo Beer Company USA, told me on Twitter.
In that thread, several beer industry members shared their struggles. “[The] biggest issue for us is we have had to cancel a very important, six-figure contract, hop selection trip to NZ. Truly gutted about that,” Paul Jones, founder of the U.K.’s Cloudwater Brewing, recently voted one of the 10 best breweries in the world by RateBeer users, said. “It’s near impossible to make contingency plans, but we are trying to prepare for draft sales to plummet.”
Beyond the taproom — which, Jones said, reduced its capacity by 50 percent as of March 14 — is the mental and emotional strain among staff and business associates. “The anxiety and stress in the team, despite us taking early, clear, thought through steps, is palpable. Our worries about customers (we wholesale ~85% of our beer) and the issues they’ll face just compound the pressures we feel right now.”
Miranda Hudson, co-founder of Duration Brewing, a new farmhouse brewery opened in rural Norfolk, England in October 2019, said, “We sell the vast majority of our beer via wholesale while we build a local direct and national online customer base. We have yet to see an adverse impact but we are very much tied to a supply chain.”
How to Help Small Beer Businesses
On Wednesday, Ireland’s White Hag Irish Brewing Co. announced a virtual event via its Facebook page, “possibly the worlds’ first ever online beer launch,” for its Phantom Hazy IPA. It may sound frivolous, but it’s exactly these types of light-hearted efforts that can ensure craft beer culture can sustain. And we, as consumers, are responsible for doing our part to help them survive.
While you’re stocking up on canned soup and toilet paper, consider picking up a four-pack from a local brewery. I did.
If you’re scrolling through social media feeds whilst sheltering in place, see if the breweries you’d usually visit are offering contactless deliveries of their beer — and if they are, order it. I did.
And if you’re on lockdown and, for whatever reason, are not feeling up to imbibing, crack open that homebrew kit that’s sat dusty and daunting in the corner since December. By the time it’s finished in four weeks’ time, you might muster up the courage to share it with a roommate — or, better yet, at your first homebrew club meeting after the coronavirus curve subsides.
Covid-19 and its whiplash of effects on the beer businesses are only beginning to be felt, but what’s happening now will absolutely affect the future of these businesses and ultimately, yours and my consumption of beers and other products from these purveyors. But the beer industry and its community are nothing if not resilient.
Don’t underestimate the power of positive drinking. Stay connected to beer acquaintances through virtual tastings. Start an Instagram story chronicling your socially-distanced beer journey. Or, after you make it through another weary, work-from-home Wednesday, share what you’re drinking with friends and ask them to send what they’re drinking, too.
Last but not least, let brewers, bartenders, and service industry members know you’re thinking of them. Offer to buy their next round —especially if they’re one of the thousands that have lost their jobs. It might not pay their rent, but every little beer helps.
We could all use a little beer, and a little “cheers,” right now.
Infographic courtesy of Jacks Abby Brewing Co.
The article Hop Take: Beer Industry Faces Taproom Closures, Layoffs, and Uncertain Future appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/hop-take-beer-industry-faces-taproom-closures-layoffs-and-uncertain-future/
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guapo-t-w · 5 years
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Local Tidewater VA Beer Festivals
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UPCOMING BEER FESTS AND FESTIVAL FORECAST: Fri, Jul 19 - Taste of VA on the Bay, 6 - 9:30 pm, Ocean View Beach Park, 100 W. Ocean View Ave., Norfolk. Taste of VA on the Bay will be taking the place of previous year's Brews on the Bay Beer Festival. Live music by Jesse Chong.There will be craft beers, wine, spirits with plenty of food vendors.  Craft Beer sampling tickets:  Sampling Package - $15 for wristband, 4 oz sampling cup and 5 tickets redeemable for samples; 16 oz Pint - $8 for wristband and 4 tickets redeemable for a pint cup;  Additional tickets - $2 (must have a cup and wristband to sample);  Tickets will be sold until 9:15 pm,  Sampling tickets can be redeemed until 9:30 pm;  No refunds.You must be at least 21 years old to purchase or consume alcoholic beverages.  Breweries have the right to limit samples.  Breweries will appear only until supplies last.  www.oceanviewbeachpark.org Sat, Aug 3 - Whistle Belly 2019: A Virginia Beer & More Festival, 7 - 11:00 pm, Merchants Square, 401 W Duke of Gloucester St., Williamsburg. Whistle Belly is back and bigger, bolder and better than ever! Mark your calendars for Saturday August 3rd for the ultimate beer party on Duke of Gloucester Street. Crafted by the DoG Street Pub & presented by the Junior Woman's Club of Williamsburg. Over 40 breweries, and more than 70 beers and delicious eats! Live Music to be Announced! Drinks & all you can eat for only $55! Save up to $10 by purchasing in advance. General Admission Tickets get access to the festival from 7 to 11 pm. Get Early Access tickets to enjoy exclusive beers. With an Early Access ticket your festival begins at 6pm with access to food & beer including 10 beers only available to Early Access guests!  http://www.whistlebelly.com/ Sun, Aug 4 - Barks & Brews 2019, 12 – 6:00 pm, sponsored by O’Connor’s Brewery, Norfolk Botanical Garden, 6700 Azalea Garden Road, Norfolk. Bring your dog to the Garden and have a beer for a fun day with live music! Guests are welcome to explore the Garden with their furry canine companion. Explore 175 spectacular acres with your dog and enjoy a cold beer with food and music. Regular garden admission applies. Not-Yet-Members: Dogs: $5 (human admission applies) – become a member today and save! Your dog must remain on a leash at all times. Stop by our Visitor Center for extra doggie waste bags. Other Barks & Brew dates: Sundays – Aug 4, Sep 8, Oct 13.  https://norfolkbotanicalgarden.org/events/barks-and-brews-2019-1/ Sat, Aug 10 - Beer, Bourbon, & BBQ Festival,  2 - 6:00 pm, Hunt Club Farm, 2388 London Bridge Road, Virginia Beach. Hampton Road’s Favorite Smoked Meat Onslaught is back – with TEETH! Come and see what over 225,000 people nationwide have enjoyed! This is our 4th Annual PORK-OUT in Virginia Beach. COME AND JOIN US! For a down-home, Southern-fried, good time... to support your inner Redneck! Get ready to enjoy all those pleasures that true Southerners live by - Beer, Bourbon, Barbeque, Boots, Bacon, Biscuits, Bluegrass and Smoked Beasts! It's two great days of beer sippin', bourbon tastin', music listenin', cigar smokin', and barbeque eatin'. Your admission buys you a sampling glass so you can enjoy an ALL-YOU-CARE –TO-TASTE sampling of beer and bourbon.  http://www.beerandbourbon.com/virginia-beach-va/show Sat, Aug 17 - Tap! Tap! Beer Festival 2019, 5 - 9:00 pm, Greenbrier Farms, 225 Sign Pine Rd., Chesapeake. Chesapeake Virginia’s First Beer Festival, Now 5 Years Old! Unlimited samples of beers and food from your popular regional food trucks. More details to come! Brought to you by Boys and Girls Club of Southeast Virginia and Kwasans Foundation. Sat, Aug 24 - 5th Annual Neptune's Coastal Craft Beer Festival, 1 - 6:00 pm, Hosted by the Neptune Festival, Neptune's Park, 31st Street and Atlantic Avenue, Virginia Beach Oceanfront. Neptune’s Park will be transformed into a craft beer lover’s haven on Saturday, August 24th, featuring local Virginia beers and cask ales, as well national and regional craft beers. Enjoy over 65 beers from 30 breweries, live music, food trucks, and more! Tickets will go on sale May 1, 2019. Each ticket includes a commemorative beer-tasting glass and tastings throughout the day. Early Bird Tickets: $30 Until July 1 or until allotment has been reached; Advance Tickets: $35 Through August 18; Week of Event Tickets: $40. https://www.neptunefestival.com/events/neptunes-coastal-craft-beer-festival Sat, Sep 7 - 4th Annual VA Cork & Craft Festival, 12 - 5:00 pm, Chincoteague Island KOA, 6742 Maddox Blvd., Chincoteague Island. Join us and the Special Olympics of Virginia for the 4th Annual Cork & Craft beer and wine festival. Sip on a variety of beer & wine while listening to the Island Boy Band and enjoying the breathtaking views of Chincoteague Bay and the lighthouse on Assateague Island. Shop for local artisan wares & crafts and indulge in great food provided by local food trucks. Buy your tickets online now for $30 (includes unlimited tastings and a commemorative tasting glass). Price goes up to $40 at the gate the day of the event. Designated Driver option available beginning January 2019 for $10, which includes soda/water. Children 15 years old or younger enter free. Need a place to stay? Check out our recommended accommodations and special packages available at Chincoteague Island KOA and Fairfield Inn & Suites. For all the details, visit www.VACorkCraft.com Fri, Sep 13 - Barrels, Brew & BBQ, 6 - 10:00 pm, Hunt Club Farm, 2388 London Bridge Rd., Virginia Beach. Come out on September 13th and help support Ronald McDonald House Charities of Norfolk!  All you can eat BBQ, drink Craft Beer, Wine and Champagne. Silent Auction, Raffles, Games, Music and much more!  https://barrelsbrewbbqfest18.thundertix.com/ Sat, Sep 21 - MacArthur Center Beer, Cider & Wine Festival, 11:00 am - 5:00 pm, Hosted by River City Festivals, 300 Monticello Ave., Norfolk. Join us for an amazing day of CRAFT BEER, Music, Games, Food and Fun. The gates open at 11 am so come early and stay late to enjoy all the day has to offer! Last call is 4:30 pm and taps will close at 5 pm. Tickets for UNLIMITED sampling are only $25 in advance, or $35 at the door! We will have craft brewers from all over the region sampling some of their award winning beers. They will be pouring some of your favorites as well as a sneak peek in to what will be on tap for 2020. Live Music performances. Please remember to drink responsibly…and plan ahead if you need a place to stay or a ride home for the evening. Sat, Sep 21 - Virginia Beach Oktoberfest 2019, 12 - 6:00 pm, Hunt Club Farm, Virginia Beach. Wasserhund Brewery and the Nobleman are presenting the Annual Oktoberfest Event for all of Coastal Virginia and beyond on September 21st from noon till 6 pm at Hunt Club Farm in Virginia Beach. This event will serve as the quintessential Oktoberfest for our area featuring over 30 breweries, traditional German food and fair, festival atmosphere, and so much more: The opportunity to enjoy multiple styles of beers including, of course, a wide variety of German beers; live music; petting zoo and bounce houses for family friendly kid fun. Portion of proceeds will be donated to The Noblemen to support local charities. Sat, Sep 28 - Craft Beer Festival, 12 - 5:00 pm, Hosted by Cape Charles / Chesapeake Bay KOA, 32246 Lankford Highway, Cape Charles. Calling all Craft Beer Lovers! We have more than 30 brews just waiting for you to sample. Once you've quenched your thirst check out the live entertainment or do some shopping with the vendors onsite. *This is a ticketed event  https://koa.com/campgrounds/chesapeake-bay/ Sat, Oct 5 - Oktoberfest 2019, 12 - 9:00 pm, Hosted by The Bier Garden, The Ambassador Club of Portsmouth, 364 Peninsula Ave., Portsmouth. The Ambassador Club in Portsmouth and The Bier Garden are teaming up to co-sponsor Oktoberfest again this year! Look forward to authentic German beer, food and activities. Strongman competition,  corn hole, raffles, bounce houses and more. Can't wait to see you there! For more information please email me at [email protected] Sat, Oct 12 - 7th Annual 757 Battle of the Beers 2019, Hosted by Beach Ambassadors, 1 = 6:30 pm, Camp Pendleton, Birdneck Road, Virginia Beach. This is the only festival in Hampton Roads that exclusively features local 757 Craft Breweries as they battle it out to win in different beer categories – with 100% of the proceeds go to local Hampton Roads charities including St. Mary's Home and Hope House Foundation! This award-winning and unique event pits Hampton Roads-based breweries against each other to determine who has the best beer in Hampton Roads. Each year, local breweries put their best brews on tap and are rated by an official brewer tasting panel and by attendees of the event to see which beer is the best in the 7-5-7. Sat/Sun, Oct 19/20 - Virginia Beach Craft Beer Festival, 1 - 6:00 pm, 30th St., Oceanfront, Virginia Beach. Over 50 craft beers from over 25 breweries will be available for sampling at the Virginia Beach Craft Beer Festival.  Tickets include unlimited sampling, a commemorative cup, and live entertainment. In a huge tent on the beach at 30th Street, our location is conveniently near parking at the municipal garage across the street. A limited number of tickets will be available each day. Chairs and pets are not allowed into the gated venue. This is a rain or shine event; refunds not available. Drink Happy - Be Safe Follow the blogs at: www.brew-n-rock-tidewater.blogspot.com or www.guapo-t-w.tumblr.com and follow the latest listings of local brew events on Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/hamptonroadsbeerforum/
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instantdeerlover · 4 years
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The Beer Delivery Guide added to Google Docs
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There’s only one place you can drink right now: Your home. But the only alcohol in your apartment is a dusty bottle of hard cider you found in the bottom of a free tote. That’s where we come in. If you need to restock your beer supply, check out these spots offering cans, bottles, and growlers for takeout and delivery in all five boroughs. Even though you can’t go drink at these places, you can still show your support (and try something great) by ordering from them. We’ll keep updating this guide with more information - so stay tuned, and stay well.
Got a beer bar, restaurant, or taproom offering curbside service or delivery? Email us at [email protected].
   Featured In The Ultimate NYC Delivery & Takeout Guide See all our guides Jump To
Manhattan
Brooklyn
Queens
The Bronx
Staten Island
MANHATTAN Alphabet City Beer Co. $ $ $ $ Bar  in  East Village $$$$ 96 Avenue C
Stop this beer bar in-person from 12pm to 7pm daily for craft cans or place a delivery order online. Check their Instagram for updates and new beer drops.
Earl's Beer & Cheese $$$$ 1259 Park Ave.
This UES spot is offering discounts on all beer cans and has a rotating list available for delivery and takeout. For more information on the current its selection, check out Earl’s Instagram.
The Greats of Craft $$$$ 983 1st Ave
The Greats of Craft in Midtown is now offering Manhattan beer delivery from E 34th Street all the way up to E 76th Street. Order online or call 646-781-9600 for more information on their selection.
Harlem Hops $ $ $ $ Bar  in  Harlem $$$$ 2268 Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvd
Beer available for pick-up from 2pm to 8pm. Delivery available within a ten-block radius when you spend $40 or more. Call 646-998-3444 to place your order using a credit card only.
The Jeffrey $ $ $ $ Bar Food  in  Upper East Side $$$$ 311 E. 60th St. 7.9 /10
The Jeffery has beer cans from a range of NYC breweries, including several in Queens, available for pick-up and delivery from 12pm to 8pm daily. To order, you can call 212-355-2337 or head to their website.
Top Hops $ $ $ $ Bar  in  Lower East Side $$$$ 94 Orchard St
This Essex Market beer shop has cans available for pick-up and delivery from 2pm to 7pm daily. To place an order, call 917-261-2561 or send them an email at [email protected].
Torch & Crown Brewing Company $$$$ 12 Vandam St
Soho’s only brewery is offering beer delivery in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens right now. To place an order, head to their website between 3pm and 7pm daily.
BROOKLYN 18th Ward $$$$ 300 Richardon St.
From 12pm to 6pm every day, you can swing by this Williamsburg brewery for cans to-go or to get your growler refilled. 18th Ward is also accommodating delivery orders online.
Beer Karma $$$$ 470 Union Ave
Beer Karma is open for in-store pick up Wednesday through Sunday, but they’re hours change often. Check their Instagram for the latest on what’s in stock and when you can swing by.
Covenhoven $ $ $ $ Raw Bar  in  Brooklyn ,  Crown Heights $$$$ 730 Classon Ave Not
Rated
Yet
Beer cans and drafts available for pick-up. Bring your own crowler, growler, or reusable water bottle for an in-store refill. Check their Instagram for more information.
Do or Dive $ $ $ $ Bedford-Stuyvesant ,  Brooklyn $$$$ 1108 Bedford Ave Not
Rated
Yet
You can DM Do or Dive to place a delivery order, but if you’re in the Bed-Stuy/Bushwick area, stop by in-person from 2pm to 8pm for draft beer served in a paper cup.
Edie Jo’s $ $ $ $ American ,  Bar Food  in  Prospect Lefferts Gardens $$$$ 630 Flatbush Avenue 7.2 /10
This PLG restaurant has growlers and beer cans available for delivery and takeout every day. For information on their selection, head to Edie Jo’s website.
Sorry—looks like you screwed up that email address
INFATUATION NEWSLETTER Get our newest guides & reviews first,
plus more restaurant intel you won't find anywhere else. TRVL ATL ATX BOS CHI LDN LA MIA NYC PHL SF SEA DC Subscribe Smart move. Excellent information will arrive in your inbox soon. Do you have friends and family who also eat food? Enter their emails below and we’ll make sure they’re eating well. (Don’t worry, we won’t subscribe them to our newsletter - they can do that themselves.) Help Your Friends No Thanks Well done. You’re a good person. All good. We still like you. Want to quickly find restaurants on the go? Download The Infatuation app.   Finback Brewery $$$$ 545 President St
Both the Brooklyn and Queens locations of Finback Brewery are open from 1pm to 7pm, Tuesday through Sunday. You can swing by in-person or order a few six packs online. Check their Instagram for more information.
Four Horsemen $ $ $ $ American ,  Wine Bar  in  Brooklyn ,  Williamsburg $$$$ 295 Grand St. 8.6 /10
For a single can or a six pack, stop by Four Horsemen weekdays from 12pm to 7pm. You can also place your order through their website.
Folksbier $$$$ 101 Luquer St
This Carroll Gardens beer bar has cans and crowlers available for delivery and takeout from 1pm to 7pm daily. Order online or stop by in-person before swinging by Lucali, which is just a few blocks away.
Glou $ $ $ $ French ,  Wine Bar  in  Prospect Lefferts Gardens $$$$ 406 Rogers Ave 7.5 /10
Glou is now offering beer cans to-go from 12pm to 7pm, Monday through Saturday. They’re all in the $4 to $5 range and usually featured on their Instagram.
Gold Star Beer Counter $ $ $ $ Bar Food  in  Brooklyn ,  Prospect Heights $$$$ 176 Underhill Ave
Beer and cider available for curbside pick-up from 11am to 9pm daily. Check their Instagram for more information.
Greenpoint Beer and Ale Co. $$$$ 1150 Manhattan Ave
Stop by Greenpoint Beer in-person to pick up cans from a variety of local breweries or for a growler refill. This bottle shop is now a full blown beer market that’s open from 2pm to 8pm daily.
Grimm Artisanal Ales $ $ $ $ East Williamsburg ,  Williamsburg $$$$ 990 Metropolitan Ave
This taproom in East Williamsburg has cans available for takeout every day from 12pm to 8pm. But you can also place a delivery order with them online.
Interboro Spirits and Ales $$$$ 942 Grand St
Interboro is offering beer delivery in Brooklyn on Wednesdays, Manhattan on Thursdays, and Queens on Fridays. But if you’re in East Williamsburg and willing to get up off the couch, you can swing by this bottle shop from 12pm to 8pm daily. Check their Instagram for more information.
Keg & Lantern Brewing Company $$$$ 97 Nassau Ave
Greenpoint brewery Keg & Lantern is open for delivery and takeout every day from 11am to 11pm. For cans, crowlers, and growlers, call 718-389-5050 or place your order online.
Kings County Brewers Collective $ $ $ $ Bushwick $$$$ 381 Troutman St
This taproom is open and stocked with beer cans that you can pick-up from 12pm to 8pm daily. You can also get them delivered to your door, if you live in Brooklyn or Queens. Check out their Instagram for more information.
Leo $ $ $ $ Pizza  in  Brooklyn ,  Williamsburg $$$$ 318 Grand Street Not
Rated
Yet
Leo has beer and cider available for pick up and delivery every day from 11am to 11pm. Check their Instagram for more information on what’s in stock.
Mekelburg's $ $ $ $ Bar Food ,  Sandwiches  in  Clinton Hill $$$$ 293 Grand Ave. Not
Rated
Yet
This gourmet grocery store is open and stocked with cans that you can pick-up or get delivered straight to your door. Check their Instagram for more information.
Mekelburg’s $ $ $ $ American ,  Bar Food ,  Sandwiches  in  Brooklyn ,  Williamsburg $$$$ 325 Kent Ave 8.3 /10
This gourmet grocery store is open and stocked with cans that you can pick-up or get delivered straight to your door. Check their Instagram for more information.
Other Half Brewing Company $$$$ 195 Centre St
This popular brewery in Carroll Gardens has cans to-go available weekdays from 12pm to 8pm, Saturday from 8am to 8pm, and Sunday from 10am to 6pm. Other Half is also delivering all over NYC, so check their Instagram to find out when they’ll be in your neighborhood.
Strong Rope Brewery $ $ $ $ Park Slope $$$$ 574 President St
Strong Rope has cans to-go available for pick-up and delivery nationwide. The shop is open from 12pm to 7pm daily. Check out their website for more information.
Svendale Brewing Company Tasting Room $$$$ 486 Court St
If you’re in Carroll Gardens, you can stop by Svendale to pick up beer by the can weekdays from 3pm to 7pm and weekends from 1pm to 7pm.
Threes Brewing $ $ $ $ Bar Food  in  Brooklyn ,  Gowanus ,  Park Slope $$$$ 333 Douglass St Not
Rated
Yet
This brewery in Gowanus has cans available for pick-up weekdays starting at 12pm, plus delivery service available across NYC. Check their Instagram for more information.
Transmitter Brewing $$$$ 141 Flushing Ave Bldg 77
You can pick up cans from this brewery at The Brooklyn Navy Yard from 12pm to 6pm, daily, or just place a delivery order to have them dropped in front of your door.
Wild East Brewing Co. $$$$ 623 Sackett St
Wild East in Gowanus is open for pick up from 12pm to 8pm daily, but it’s also delivering to most of Brooklyn. Check out their Instagram for more information.
QUEENS Alewife NYC $ $ $ $ Long Island City $$$$ 5-14 51st Ave Not
Rated
Yet
Beer cans available for curbside pick-up. Call 718-937-7494 to place an order. Check their Instagram for more information.
American Brass $$$$ Center Blvd & 49th Ave, 2-01 50th Ave
Beer available for takeout and delivery from 12pm to 9pm daily. Check their Instagram for more information.
Big Alice Brewing $$$$ 8-08 43rd Rd
This LIC brewery is offering free beer delivery in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens. Plus, their taproom is open every day for to-go orders. All orders must be placed online.
Bridge And Tunnel Brewery $ $ $ $ Ridgewood $$$$ 1535 Decatur St Not
Rated
Yet
Bridge and Tunnel is open for beer pick up from 4pm to 7pm Tuesday through Friday, 1pm to 8:30pm Saturday, and 1pm to 6pm Sunday. You can also place an order for a Friday delivery online.
Evil Twin Brewing NYC $ $ $ $ Ridgewood $$$$ 1616 George St
Beer cans available for pick-up at the brewery’s retail shop Monday through Thursday from 2pm to 8pm and Friday through Sunday 12pm to 8pm. Check their Instagram for more information.
Fifth Hammer Brewing Company $ $ $ $ Bar  in  Long Island City ,  Queens $$$$ 10-28 46th Ave
Beer cans available for pick-up only. Check out their website for more information and to place an order.
LIC Beer Project $$$$ 39-28 23rd St
LIC Beer Project is delivering beer via their online store. But if you’re in LIC, stop by this brewery to pick up cans from 1pm to 7pm Tuesday through Saturday, or 2pm to 6pm on Sunday.
Maggie Mae's Bar $ $ $ $ Queens ,  Sunnyside $$$$ 41-15 Queens Blvd
Draft beer available for pick-up only on Saturday from 5 to 7pm. You can place your order in advance by texting 347-394-6414 and paying @Leanne-Moore-13 on Venmo. Check their Instagram for more information.
Mikkeller Brewing NYC $ $ $ $ Bar  in  Flushing $$$$ 123-01 Roosevelt Ave
If you’re serious about trying the best beer in the city (from the actual source), order lots of fancy Danish beer from Mikkeller right now. This brewery ships everywhere in New York State and you can order directly through their website.
Ovelia Psistaria Bar $ $ $ $ Greek ,  Bar  in  Astoria ,  Queens $$$$ 3401 30th Ave Not
Rated
Yet
Drafts and cans available for curbside pick-up or delivery weekdays from 2pm to 9pm, Saturdays from 11am to 9pm, and Sundays from 11am to 6pm. Check out their website for more information and to place an order.
Queens Brewery $ $ $ $ Bar  in  Ridgewood $$$$ 1539 Covert St Not
Rated
Yet
Queens Brewery has beer to-go available at their pick up window, which is open from 7am to 7pm weekdays and 8am to 7pm weekends.
Rockaway Brewing Co. $ $ $ $ BBQ  in  Rockaway Beach $$$$ 415 Beach 72nd St
Beer cans and crowlers available for pick-up and delivery from 12pm to 8pm daily. Head to their website to place an order.
SingleCut Beersmiths $$$$ 19-33 37th St
SingleCut is has curbside pick up available every day in Astoria, plus they deliver to Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, and The Bronx. For more information, you can call 718-606-0788 or head to their website.
BRONX Bronx Alehouse $ $ $ $ Bar Food ,  Burgers  in  Bronx $$$$ 216 W 238th St Not
Rated
Yet
As of April 29th, this beer bar will be open for online beer delivery orders and in-person pick up. Check their Instagram for more information.
The Bronx Beer Hall $$$$ 2344 Arthur Ave
Beer cans and growler refills available for pick-up weekdays from 12pm to 3pm. To place an order, DM them on Instagram, send them an email at [email protected], call them at (347) 396-0555, or just show up.
The Bronx Brewery $$$$ 856 E 136th St
The Bronx Brewery has beer to go available for pre-order online. But you can also get free delivery anywhere in NYC when you place a $100+ order.
The Bronx Public $$$$ 170 West 231st Street
Six packs of beer available from 2pm to 10pm for pick-up or delivery when you order online. Check out their Instagram for more information.
STATEN ISLAND Flagship Brewing Co. $$$$ 40 Minthorne St
Cans and growlers available for pick-up or delivery on Staten Island. Taproom open for beer to-go from 4pm to 9pm daily. Check out their website for more information.
Kills Boro Brewing Co $$$$ 62 VanDuzer
Beer cans and growlers available for curbside pick-up and delivery weekdays from 5pm to 9pm. Check their Instagram for more information.
via The Infatuation Feed https://www.theinfatuation.com/new-york/guides/the-beer-delivery-guide Nhà hàng Hương Sen chuyên buffet hải sản cao cấp✅ Tổ chức tiệc cưới✅ Hội nghị, hội thảo✅ Tiệc lưu động✅ Sự kiện mang tầm cỡ quốc gia 52 Phố Miếu Đầm, Mễ Trì, Nam Từ Liêm, Hà Nội http://huongsen.vn/ 0904988999 http://huongsen.vn/to-chuc-tiec-hoi-nghi/ https://trello.com/userhuongsen
Created April 29, 2020 at 01:20AM /huong sen View Google Doc Nhà hàng Hương Sen chuyên buffet hải sản cao cấp✅ Tổ chức tiệc cưới✅ Hội nghị, hội thảo✅ Tiệc lưu động✅ Sự kiện mang tầm cỡ quốc gia 52 Phố Miếu Đầm, Mễ Trì, Nam Từ Liêm, Hà Nội http://huongsen.vn/ 0904988999 http://huongsen.vn/to-chuc-tiec-hoi-nghi/ https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xa6sRugRZk4MDSyctcqusGYBv1lXYkrF
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easyfoodnetwork · 4 years
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Photo by: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images While grocery and liquor store sales are up during the pandemic, small breweries are on much shakier footing The dining room at chef Albert Di Meglio’s Brooklyn restaurant Barano might be empty, but business at Spirit Animal, his natural wine store next door, has never been better. “People have been buying cases,” says Di Meglio, who’s careful to let in just a few customers at a time to ensure social distancing. “The typical [mentality] used to be ‘let me get wine for a couple days.’ Now it’s ‘let me stock up for the week, or two weeks.” The dichotomy Di Meglio observes on his block in Williamsburg extends across the country. Beer, wine, and liquor sales have collapsed at bars and restaurants, whose on-site business has been largely shut down in an effort to limit the spread of the new coronavirus (though some states have recently permitted bars and restaurants to serve alcohol to go). But people haven’t stopped drinking — if anything, they may be doing so more heavily than before. Customers are raiding the shelves at liquor stores and wine shops, businesses deemed “essential” by many state governments and permitted to remain open, as if stocking up for a very wet apocalypse. “It’s more to calm the nerves,” Di Meglio says. “This is a catastrophe, what we’re living through… wine is delicious, and it takes the edge off.” According to Nielsen data for the week ending March 14, off-premise (i.e., grocery and liquor store) sales were up 27.6 percent for wine, 26.4 for spirits, and 14 percent for beer, cider, and malt beverages (compared to last year’s sales for the same week). Order sizes are bigger, too: Three-liter boxed wine is up 53 percent, and 24 packs of beer are up 24 percent. Some specific retailers point to even higher numbers. Gary’s Wine & Marketplace, which operates four locations in New Jersey and one in Napa, California, has seen a 62 percent increase in overall sales, a 20 percent increase in overall in-store foot traffic, and a 300 percent increase in local delivery. At Liquor Barn, the leading alcohol retailer in Kentucky, purchase sizes are up 48 percent, and delivery sales, a recent point of focus, are up 600 percent. “We always thought delivery was the future, and we spent a ton of capital investing infrastructure to do it,” says Jonathan Blue, whose equity firm owns Liquor Barn. Off-premise sales were up 27.6 percent for wine, 26.4 for spirits, and 14 percent for beer, cider, and malt beverages For online alcohol delivery startups, the future has arrived, and it’s waiting downstairs with your order. On Friday, March 13, wine rating app and ordering platform Vivino saw its biggest sales ever, with 300 percent growth internationally in terms of value of merchandise sold. Last week, the ordering app Drizly saw sales shoot up 300 percent from earlier this year. New Drizly orders are also larger than usual: Consumers are spending 25 to 50 percent more per purchase. Drizly doesn’t sell alcohol itself, but works with more than 180 U.S. retailers in 30 states that use their own delivery couriers. Almost all of those stores, which run the gamut from small neighborhood shops to liquor superstores like Bevmo, are still up and running, Drizly’s team says. Contact-less delivery — leaving a package on a doorstep, as is suddenly the norm for many food-delivery companies — isn’t legal for alcohol delivery. But Drizly is encouraging couriers to practice new social-distancing precautions, like not passing IDs back and forth and skipping in-person signatures. Liz Paquet, Drizly’s head of consumer insights, won’t say for sure that the current boom represents a new normal. ”All bets are off at this point,” Paquet says. Yes, “people are buying more — but that could be attributed to the fact that on-premise isn’t an option anymore in most markets.” Alcohol sales are up in aggregate, that is, but it’s possible that the uptick in off-premise sales (at retail stores) does little more than make up for losses at on-premise (or bar and restaurant) locations for most manufacturers and distributors. Lester Jones, chief economist at the National Beer Wholesalers Association, which represents almost 3,000 independent beer distributors, notes that the beer industry is split between about 80 percent off-premise sales and 20 percent on-premise sales. Wine and alcohol sales are split similarly, experts say. In past weeks, “we watched the on-premise channel whittle down to a slow trickle, but to balance that out, you see an increase in off-premise,” Jones says. “Our new reality is pretty fucking grim” The disruption isn’t ideal for distributors or big breweries, but it’s not disastrous for them, either. Small breweries, on the other hand, rely on taproom sales and self-distribution of kegs to local bars and restaurants, instead of expensive canning, bottling, and distribution contracts. That puts them on much shakier footing. “The reason there are so many small breweries now is because of taprooms,” says Sam Gilbert, owner of four-year-old Oakland brewery Temescal Brewing Co. “We can sell product across our own bars, and that makes the numbers work at a smaller scale. So having those taprooms no longer safe for the moment is going to have an outsized effect on breweries for whom taprooms are a primary source of income.” To survive, Gilbert has been forced to lay off staff, and Temescal has turned to new options like curbside beer pickup and online sales. The burgeoning craft-spirits industry faces the same plight. “Our new reality is pretty fucking grim,” says Lance Winters, founder of the 38-year-old craft distillery St. George Spirits in Alameda, California. “I think this is stopping dead in its tracks a really positive trajectory we’ve all been enjoying,” As a small distillery, the bulk of St. George’s sales go through bars and restaurants — roughly 75 to 80 percent. Winters relies on bartenders and restaurants to champion St. George products. “There are a lot of retailers who don’t know who we are, and there are a lot of customers shopping at retailers who don’t know who we are.” His concern, beyond the future of his own business and the bars and restaurants he works with, is that big companies will weather this storm, while small ones won’t. “Catastrophes like this tend to favor the institutional brands,” Winters says. Industry experts like Brian Rosen of Bevstrat, a marketing and strategy firm for small brands, agree. During and perhaps after this crisis, Rosen suspects people will gravitate toward “comfort brands” with familiar names — Tito’s, Franzia, Mondavi — and they’ll get all the help from distributors. “What’s going to happen is these big brands, Bacardi and all of them, have an open-door policy with big distributors — they have entire Bacardi divisions,” says Rosen. “So for everyone to come close to hitting any 2020 financial numbers they had forecasted, they’ll have to say, forgot [the little brands], I need to focus on Jim Beam right now... because the big commodity suppliers are saying, ‘Sell my brand, or I’ll leave.’” What customers can do to push back, Gilbert of Temescal Brewing suggests, is pretty straightforward: Buy small and local brands as directly from producers as possible — while maintaining a healthy, six-foot distance, of course. After all, people haven’t stopped drinking, as the numbers show. from Eater - All https://ift.tt/2JjFCaf
http://easyfoodnetwork.blogspot.com/2020/03/now-is-time-of-boom-and-bust-for-liquor.html
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kentavewine · 2 days
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Online Wine Delivery in Williamsburg at Kent Wines and Liquors
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For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
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kentavewine · 6 days
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Premium Wines and Liquor Delivered by Kent Wines and Liquors
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Discover a world of premium wines and liquor at Kent Wines and Liquors. Enjoy the convenience of online delivery, bringing a curated selection of exceptional beverages straight to your door. Perfect for any occasion, elevate your experience with Kent Wines and Liquors. Order now and indulge!
For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
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kentavewine · 6 days
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Elevate Your Everyday (or Any Day!): Wines & Liquors Delivered with Kent Wines and Liquors
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For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
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kentavewine · 9 days
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Elevate Your NYC Evenings: Fine Wine & Liquor Delivery at Kent Wines
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Unwind in style! Kent Wines & Liquors delivers premium wines & liquors to your NYC doorstep. Explore a curated selection online, from Bordeaux to small-batch bourbons. Order & enjoy - effortless luxury awaits.
For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
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kentavewine · 13 days
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Brooklyn Wines Delivered: Unveiling Kent Wines & Liquors!
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Elevate your evenings with Kent Wines & Liquors! Browse their curated selection of wines & spirits online, including Brooklyn gems. Fast & convenient delivery brings your perfect bottle right to your doorstep. Cheers to effortless Brooklyn living!
For More Details Kentavewines
☎️ Phone: (929) 337–6363 📬 Mail: [email protected] 💻 Website: kentavewines.com 📍 Address: 420 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11249
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