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Beer Signs and More

From Beertaps ~ The Beer Supply Experts!


When Government Figures Out The Huge Industry of Alcohol

CBS News

(AP)  HARRISON, Ark. — Dee Gusewelle used to rail against the sale of alcohol, posting signs in her yard and encouraging neighbors and passersby to keep booze out of this patch of northern Arkansas.

But now that her county has dumped its ban on the sale of alcohol, she and her husband are doing something that would have been unthinkable — and illegal — just months ago: opening a liquor store.

“It’s not like it’s going to be Sodom and Gomorrah,” Gusewelle said as customers lined up to buy beer at the gas station where she worked this summer.

For years, cities and counties across the South have been quietly throwing out Prohibition-era laws banning the sale of alcohol. But as local governments confront ever-greater budget problems, many are now tapping into booze as a source of untouched income. That means towns where preachers once condemned “demon rum” are now counting on six-packs and cheap wine to make up for declining revenue.

“It’s the same thing with the lottery,” Gusewelle said. “People didn’t want that. But then I see avid churchgoers that come in on Sundays and buy their lottery tickets.”

In Harrison, a city of 13,000 tucked between tourist attractions in the Ozark Mountains, stores began stocking beer and wine earlier this year. Liquor stores are slated to open in the coming months.

The city hopes to collect up to $200,000 a year from alcohol-related sales taxes and fees once spirits hit the shelves. That will account for about 1 percent of the total annual budget.

Local officials say the availability of alcohol encourages visitors to stay longer — or at least long enough to polish off a beer. Lodging is up 25 percent so far this year compared with the same period in 2010, when voters approved a measure to shift the county from “dry” to “wet.”

When the area was dry, many tourists cruising along the region’s curvy highways kept driving after realizing they couldn’t wash down a rack of ribs with a cold brew.

Now convenience stores peddle lagers and ales, and a former feed store sells wine in flavors and colors that sound as if they belong in a bag of Skittles — wild cherry, sunshine pink, blue Hawaiian. Officials hope the change will also attract chain restaurants and other companies that typically avoid investing in dry counties.

“We’re a pretty poor county, and we just can’t afford to say we don’t want anyone’s business,” said Gerald Ragland, the city’s finance director.

But for years, they did just that. Anyone craving a cold beer or a glass of wine in Boone County had to cross the county line or head north to Missouri, where liquor laws are less restrictive.

After Prohibition ended in 1933, dry laws popped up in counties and municipalities across the nation. Like the laws they replaced, the restrictions controlled the sale of alcohol, not consumption.

“People are going to drink regardless,” Antone Zeller said before buying a 30-pack of Keystone Ice at the Harrison convenience store where Gusewelle worked. “It doesn’t matter how far you’ve got to go to get it. So you might as well just get it here and keep our money here.”

Zeller didn’t know what a dry county was when he moved here from Shreveport, La., about 15 years ago. But he quickly learned. For him, it meant a long drive to stock up on booze. And while he was out of the county, Zeller would often spend money on other things.

“We’d eat. We’d buy gas,” he said. “But now for the most part, all my money stays here.”

Some people who fought to keep the county dry say easier access to alcohol fuels underage drinking and raises crimes rates.

“Tax revenue doesn’t make up for loss of quality of life,” said Ralph Hudson, a real estate broker in Harrison who sought to keep the county dry, just as it had been for more than half a century.

Others share his beliefs and post them on church signs here. One, across the road from McDonald’s, told people that Jesus, not Budweiser, is the “light.”

But supporters of the change say forbidding alcohol did little to prevent problems — and sometimes contributed to them.

For instance, Zeller said, when he had to drive elsewhere to buy booze, he often bought in bulk.

“Normally, it actually worked out bad because I would drink more,” he said.

Fears that alcohol would overtake the community didn’t materialize, either.

“They thought there was going to be a bar on every corner,” said Terry Cook, who runs the visitors bureau. “But there’s not.”

There were alcohol-related arrests long before the county permitted alcohol sales, and there hasn’t been a spike since the law changed.

“Nobody’s drinking any more than they did, but they’re driving a lot less now,” Ragland said.

Elsewhere across the South, counties and towns that permitted limited alcohol sales are easing their laws, too, often dispensing with rules that prohibited sales on Sunday.

In Texas, 418 out of 542 ballot questions on alcohol sales have gone wet since 2004, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, a trade group. And more alcohol issues are likely to appear on ballots this fall.

Besides addressing economic needs, the shift in liquor laws mirrors a change in consumer demographics since Prohibition.

“In today’s economy, consumers are out shopping on Sundays,” said Ben Jenkins, a council spokesman. “It’s inconvenient to have to drive to a different county to buy alcohol.”

Posted 4 months, 1 week ago at 6:40 pm. Add a comment

Happy Thanksgiving Beer Signs

This year when we’re drinking your home brew for Thanksgiving…

What?  You’re not making beer for Thanksgiving?  You don’t have a home brew that you make special for Thanksgiving?

Well, how weird is that?

It must not be a tradition everyone shares.  But, see if you can relate to any of these:

 

 

 

  • Sitting on the couch and eating Thanksgiving while watching football.
  • Same thing…sitting on the recliner with a food tray.
  • Saying, “It’s not worth it.  We’re going to a restaurant.”
  • I ordered Pizza and Wings one year…

 

That was the year I had just finished my home bar and I made my first home brew for our New Happy Thanksgiving Tradition. 

I hope everyone has a Happy Thanksgiving and enjoys their own traditions, whatever they may be!

Posted 2 years, 2 months ago at 2:18 pm. Add a comment

Toronto Restaurants, An International Affair

Toronto is truly an international city with restaurants from every cuisine that will fit any budget. You can find food represented by Italy, Greece, United Kingdom, and Asian all the way to the local Canadian cuisine. You can find elegant Toronto restaurants sitting next to a steak house which is right down the road from a hamburger joint. If you enjoy food, then Toronto is the place to be.

The CN tower is about 114 stories above the ground in Toronto and houses an elegant restaurant called Restaurant 360. This restaurant revolves to give you a floor to ceiling view of the city. The items on the menu will cost anywhere from C$75 to C$100 but the wine list is what people come for along with the view. There are over 550 international wines on their list that can cost upwards of C$1000. Don’t forget to make reservations as it is difficult to get into if you don’t.

Two other fine restaurants that will cost you upwards to C$100 for a meal are Splendito and Truffles. At Splendito in the Distillery District seasonal ingredients are used to make great tasting and unique Mediterranean cuisine. The great thing about this restaurant is that you can choose from an a la carte menu or go to the tasting menu where you only get a little bit of everything you want. This restaurant has a great wine list as well. Truffles is located in the Four Seasons’ Hotel and is an award winning restaurant. Everything is quite elegant and very extreme in French style.

Should these restaurants be too rich for your blood try some other less inexpensive where meals cost C$35 up to C$75 and the food is still great. Go to Canoe Restaurant and Bar to sample some of the best Canadian cuisine around where they use maple sugar to make their tempting entrees. They also use local produce and offer wild game as well. Look to Toronto Harbor and you will find this place that looks like it came out of the forest in style. Always have reservations before you go and don’t go on weekends because it won’t be open.

Want something quirky and Bohemian in style then go to Lolita’s Lust in Greektown. Not only is the ambiance different so are the menu offerings including some unique meat and seafood dishes.

There are many budget conscious restaurants in town where you will pay less than C$35 for a great meal. Look to the Midtown area to find a place that gives diner a good name at Fran’s. Specialty of the house is meatloaf but you can get a great tuna melt and interesting chicken wraps. This restaurant is open 24 hours and you have to check out the wildly enormous breakfasts they serve.

Fresh on Bloor (on Bloor Street) is an affordable health food restaurant with great tasting food. Not only does it have the great food it also features 40 different juices and some of them are very interesting.

For those who are budgeting, remember to factor in taxes. Toronto imposes three different taxes on food consumed in a restaurant that will not be included in the menu price. They are added on to the bill after you eat. They include the 8% provincial sales tax, 10% alcohol tax, and the 5% federal goods and services tax. Irregardless you can find exactly the type of food you want to satisfy in Toronto. The restaurants above are a minuscule sampling of what is available in Toronto and you only have to go to the city and explore to find many more.

See what the City of Toronto has to offer by dining at a Toronto restaurant this weekend. If you’re in Quebec, then a restaurant Montreal is a great idea for spending some quality time.

Posted 2 years, 3 months ago at 10:05 pm. Add a comment



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From Beertaps ~ The Beer Supply Experts!