dinnerstick
Well-Known Member
the new government here is trying to pass a law that liquor cannot be sold to under 18's!! but 16 and up and can still possess and drink liquor, and buy beer and wine
hahaha!!
hahaha!!
Actually, homebrewing in Utah just became legal about two years ago, if I remember the time period correctly!
Finally, the taxes here in Ontario are brutal. A case of 24 "domestic" beer will run you between $35-$45, plus bottle deposit ($0.10/bottle).
It was actually four years in March of 2012. Technically it wasn't illegal to homebrew prior to that. The problem was that there was no distinction between homebrewing and commercial brewing, so if you were willing to post a $10,000 bond with the state, you could legally homebrew.
If I could do away with one stupid law in Utah it would be the 4% restriction on draft beer. It makes no sense that I can't get a >4% beer on tap but I can get one in the bottle.
zachattack said:Surprised nobody's mentioned MA yet!
Compared to some of the other things I just read, we don't have it too bad. Plenty of locally owned fantastic beer/liquor stores, and decent distribution here.
Some MA quirks:
1) No happy hour / drink specials allowed
2) A franchise/chain can only have 3 stores in the state that get liquor licenses. So even if there are 10 Trader Joes, only 3 can sell beer/wine.
I grew up in NH and that wasn't bad. Beer and wine can be sold in grocery stores, but liquor stores were state owned. This is actually fine, since the state gets the profit the booze is generally dirt cheap. And the selection's not bad.
In Pennsylvania things are pretty f'ed up as well. Liquor and wine is sold by the state (they have some stores inside grocery stores, but they are still operated by the PA LCB. On the plus side they've expanded the wine offerings, opened some stores on Sunday and gotten more competitive on pricing (mostly because it is just too easy to drive to Delaware or New Jersey in SE PA.) Home brewing is legal (thankfully) but beer sales are stuck in the past. You have to go to a beer distributor to get decent pricing - but you must by full cases and/or kegs. If you want a six pack or some 22oz bottles you have to go to a bar/restaurant that has a carry-out license. Prices are higher and you can buy no more 192 ounces at a time.
Luckily the licenses for brew pubs and breweries isn't that restricted and we have some decent ones in the area. Craft beer is at least easy to get in there!
I have a question.... is it true that in Texas you have to have a license to buy alcohol? one of my friends went there a couple years ago, and that's what he told me. I've never heard of anywhere that had an alcohol buying license, just one if you were selling alcohol.
No, of course not. You can buy beer and wine in the grocery store (or gas station) and you can buy booze/wine/beer at any liquor store.
Brewtah said:Utah does have some wacky laws, but much has changed last 10 years. I miss the mini-bottle. The state did not want big liquor bottles in bars, so they would make your drink with an entire mini. You could also bring your own bottle and pour your own. It was great. In the 40's and 50's bars had lockers so you could leave your bottle there.
The wall came around in the 80's. Then went away, now it's back. No more private clubs, or buying memberships anymore. Rumor has it wine will be in the grocery store soon. I doubt it, but you never know. I always have hope.
The great thing is you can still bring your own wine to a restaurant. Small cork charge, still huge money saver. I would rather deal with Utah laws then some of the southern state laws.
In North Carolina, all distilled spirits are sold through the ABC store. Beer is capped at 15% ABV, most(all?) counties have no sales of beer/wine before noon on Sunday. ABC is closed Sundays. Some counties are still completely dry. Some have a wet city within a dry county.
I seem to remember NC being no liquor on Sunday, no liquor in grocery stores, no 24/7 liquor stores.
I feel like I remember not being able to buy lottery tickets in California after certain hours. But Google isn't turning anything up.
Southern states laws? Any examples. Ga has none of the laws mentioned above, only restriction is not purchase after 11:30. Groceries store can't sell liquor. That's all
NC recently accepted the lottery. They call it the "NC educational lottery" because it takes the devil out of gambling.
Still no liquor on Sundays or 24 hr liquor stores. Only ABC state run stores.
Yeah. I remember the lottery thing.
A holier-than-thou type I knew got addicted to the scratchers. Every time she'd lose, she's swear them off as "the devil". Sure enough, she'd be right back to it next payday, playing herself broke over the few days after, then complaining she was the devil made her broke until the next pay day...
OrdinaryAvgGuy said:These Aunt Jemima characters are usually the first to accredit Jesus for their good luck.
Got a speeding ticket on your way home? It was the devil pushing your foot down. Found a $100 bill the same day in the parking lot - now that was Jesus.