-
Wine Jobs
Assistant Manager
Assistant Cider Maker
Viticulture and Enology...
-
Wine Country Real Estates
Winery in Canada For Sale
-
Wine Barrels & Equipment
75 Gallon Stainless Steel...
Wanted surplus/ excess tin...
Winery Liquidation Auction...
-
Grapes & Bulk Wines
2022 Chardonnay
2023 Pinot Noir
2022 Pinot Noir
-
Supplies & Chemicals
Planting supplies
Stagg Jr. Bourbon - Batch 12
-
Wine Services
Wine
Sullivan Rutherford Estate
Clark Ferrea Winery
-
World Marketplace
Canned Beer
Wine from Indonesia
Rare Opportunity - Own your...
- Wine Jobs UK
- DCS Farms LLC
- ENOPROEKT LTD
- Liquor Stars
- Stone Hill Wine Co Inc
A Skeptic Sidles Up to the Wine-Bar Boom
Sep 23, 2013
(WSJ) - WHY DO PEOPLE love wine bars so much? A single-beverage bar where the food is tiny and the tables smaller still is an arrangement whose appeal is a bit of a mystery to me. Yet I realize mine is a minority point of view, since the number of wine bars all over the world just keeps growing and growing.
When the wine-bar boom began about five years ago, I thought it was a trend that would eventually end. How big an audience could there be for establishments that specialized in small plates of cheese and wines by the ounce? I was sure that people would realize that a good glass was best savored by the bottle and not in a "flight." (A "flight" is a cute wine-bar name for tiny glasses of wine with a big price.) But clearly my powers of prognostication are flawed, as Americans' love of wine bars seems to be a long way from flaming out.
According to Stefan Mailvaganam, the wine-bar market will "only get bigger" in the coming years. Mr. Mailvaganam is a successful, serial wine-bar entrepreneur; he has opened three thriving New York wine bars in the past five years (Bar Veloce, Vanguard Wine Bar and Custom American Wine Bar) and is looking to add a fourth to his empire.
Mr. Mailvaganam believes wine bars fill an "untapped niche" for drinkers, especially budding young oenophiles. These vinous neophytes use wine bars in part to "transition into adulthood," said Mr. Mailvaganam, who characterizes his establishments as "adult coffee shops" that are thriving in this Internet-dating era.
Comments: