OK, childish post title. So, sue me.
But in addition to the announcement of some weird beer happenings, there is also this: Lendevours reports today that the fight over grocery stores selling wine has spilled over into the wine festival circuit in New York. Meanwhile, Sarah and I shopped at the Penfield Weggies Sunday, and they had a guy soliciting petition signatures supporting the sale of wine in grocery stores. That’s right, a Wegmans guy.
Overall, I’d say I’m fairly agnostic on the whole affair. As a personal issue, buying wine at the grocery store along with all the other fixin’s for a good meal makes sense to me. At the same time, do you really want the sixteen year old who got drunk on Natural Ice last night to be your only reference when purchasing a bottle of French wine? I don’t think I’d be anywhere near as knowledgeable about wine – and I’m not that knowledgeable about wine – if it weren’t for the kind and patient folks at Schubert’s Wine on Park Avenue.
And while we’re discussing it, how does this fight relate to the recent tagging of Marketplace Liquor for selling wine gift bags? ((Can’t find a link right now, and don’t feel like looking deeper)) Back around Christmas time, Marketplace was fined for selling gift bags to throw wine bottles into, because they’re considered grocery items according to some arcane law or another. Sarah and I went there expecting to find martini rimming sugar a few days ago, but that’s a grocery item as well.
So, are these two events related? Was this some in-the-paint elbow throwing between the grocers and the liquor store owners? And if not, will the laws preventing liquor stores from selling grocery items be relaxed if the opposite is allowed?
2 replies on “Booze Nooze You Can Yooze”
No martini rimming supplies… I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. The SLA has enumerated every inch of what is allowed, and apparently everything else is not. I wonder if they can provide kleenex for employees who have a cold.
Is this all connected? I kind of doubt it. But I’ll be very curious to see if liquor stores receive any concessions if and when grocery stores get wine. It’s hard to believe they wouldn’t be in line for some kind of relaxations or re-writes, no?
Well you would think that, if they’re going to go about things the smart way, they aught to be getting their lobbying ducks in a row and try to make that happen. After all, let’s face it: the martini rimming sugar business is as lucrative as all get out. . .