Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine

Editors’ Picks & Whalez, Bro

-

Stay at home for weeks without wider human contact? Easy. Stay at home for weeks without beer? Be serious, please. In the age of COVID-19, we’ve all been getting to know our families better—and our beerorderi­ng platforms. Here is a rundown of some of the options, and what makes each app useful (or not). Tavour about.tavour.com

This delivery app is totally devoted to beer, particular­ly the rare and special variety. Optionally, you can receive an email once or twice per day that describes in Fomo-stoking detail the hot new bottles or cans that have just become available. They get some real scorchers, too, from breweries such as Anchorage, Jester

King, Side Project, Weldwerks, and many more from 47 states. The downside: They might not be able to deliver to your state yet, depending on local laws.

Craft Cellr craftcellr.com

Primarily, this is an app to help a brewery manage things such as special releases, pre-sales, and rare-bottle membership clubs. However, there is a consumerfa­cing side to it: Anyone can download and see what breweries in their area might be using it to make beer available. The app makes it easy to reserve and purchase beer as well as gift cards, swag, and tips or donations to keep your favorite taproom staff fed until this thing blows over. Downside: It’s useless unless breweries near you are into it.

Drizly drizly.com

This nationwide alcohol-delivery app has been flourishin­g in the age of social distancing. How it works: Liquor stores and bottle shops sign up and register their inventorie­s. You use the app to browse and fill your cart, and the shop delivers your purchase to your doorstep—often in less than an hour, if you live in the city. The downside: In more sparsely populated areas, service may be nonexisten­t or may require a few days’ time plus high shipping fees.

Saucey saucey.com

Similar to Drizly, connecting with local liquor stores who handle quick delivery to your doors—if you’re in a major metro area. At a spot check using an address in central Washington, D.C., the craft selection was mainly limited to nationals and large regionals, with virtually no locally brewed beers. (That may change with your neighborho­od and affiliated store.) Still, there were enough options to find a great beer, if you don’t demand wide selection and live in a big enough city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States