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9th Annual BrewFest at Mount HopeMay 13 • Tickets on Sale Now! 10th Annual FlavorFestMay 27 & 28 • Free Parking, Admission & Sampling! 25th Annual VolksFestOn the Grounds of Mount Hope Estate Divine SwineWeekly SpecialsFeaturing Friday'sFish Fry! Now Hiring for the 2017 Season! Become a part of the fantasy at the Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire! New on the Grounds of Mount Hope FoodStock • July 29, 2017 Tickets on sale now! Enjoy an all-you-can-eat buffet, music, and more while helping end hunger in our community! Join the Royal Email and stay up to date on all specials, events, discounts, and more! Celebrate the annual Murder Mystery dinner theater with specialty labeled wines—Only available for a limited time!Please see the Winery Homepage for more details. Stop by the Wine Shop for year-round Swashbuckler merchandise and refills of your favorite flagship beers in your SBC Growler!Please see a Wine Shop Associate for details.

BOGO Rothschild Farms Dips—Available in a wide variety of styles and flavors! Please see the Winery Homepage for more details.Why wait, give us a ring on the phone & talk to a real person. Google Voice (762)BeerIPA (762)233-7472 Or drop us a line (please allow 2-5 business days to reply via form) NOTE: ALL emails about website update/work will be marked as spam and your email address will be added to Google & WordPress's blacklists.East Longmeadow's premier craft beer/wine shop. Western Massachusetts selection of craft beer. We have over 1000 beers stocked daily, sold as singles. Did you know that we sell kegs? Nearly 1000 craft beers are available in kegs. Stop by and talk beer with us.Happy Harry’s Bottle Shops have been an integral part of the North Dakota landscape and lifestyle for over 70 years. Our iconic “barns” average 16,000 square feet per store and are designed with your shopping convenience and enjoyment in mind. Each of our conveniently located stores in Fargo and Grand Forks offer one of the largest and finest selections between Minneapolis and Seattle.

Our low prices and outstanding customer service don’t hurt either! Come see for yourself why Happy Harry’s is consistently voted the best! FIND THE NEAREST LOCATION NOW >> Happy Harry’s Bottle Shops have been an integral part of the North Dakota landscape and lifestyle for over 70 years. Our iconic “barns” average 16,000 square feet per store and are designed with your shopping convenience and enjoyment in mind.
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Winter 2016 Issue Below: Big Sky Brewing Co- Montana Big Sky Brewery Company Brewery of the Month – April 2017 Written by Alex T. – Happy Harry’s Brew Crew Big Sky’s history starts back in Michigan where two friends, Neal Leathers and Brad Robinson, started homebrewing in the 80s.
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top selling wine in the usa Schell's Brewery Brewery of the Month – March 2017 Written by Alex T. – Happy Harry’s Brew Crew At 156 years old, Schell’s Brewery is the second oldest brewery in the United States;
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Surly Brewing Company Brewery of the Month – February 2017 Written by Alex T. – Happy Harry’s Brew Crew Surly Brewing company began back in 2004 when Omar Ansari, a homebrewing fanatic, decided he wanted to turn his family’s failing abrasive metal factory into a... CLICK HERE FOR THE MONTHLY WEB COUPON.
best wine for christmas dinner 2016 (ONE MORE REASON FOR YOU TO BE HAPPY.) A new vodka from the Lonestar State, truly hand-crafted in a single pot still. Double Gold at the World Spirits …" 2014 Franciscan Cabernet SauvignonLovely plum nose and rich fruit with layers of complexity. Hints of licorice, vanilla, blackberry, …" This single hop APA delivers an incredible hop bouquet dripping with citrus and tropical fruit. Light in body, its …"Spicy charred oak, sweet toffee, and pepper aromas. A rich entry leads to a dryish medium-to full-…" Don't have an account?

Sign up now, it's FREE! Use our Online Store Binny's offers shipping within the state of Illinois for select items. Our web site will not allow orders placed for shipment outside of Illinois. Would you like to have your order shipped or would you like to come pick it up at a Binny's near you? Login or register to use lists. Save your favorite products and share lists with friends. We Appreciate Your FeedbackGallery: People come to shop in the Surdyk's liquor store in the snow. Gallery: James Surdyk, 60, is the owner of the Surdyk's liquor store. Gallery: The cashier desks are busy in the Surdyk's liquor store. Gallery: Susie Gindorff, 33, comes to shop in the Surdyk's liquor store. She said she heard about the Sunday sales from a Facebook post. Gallery: Nicole Larson, 30, and Lisa Gatzke, 33, take selfies in front of the open liquor store. Gallery: People come to shop in the Surdyk's liquor store. Gallery: People wait in a long line for checking out inside of the Surdyk's liquor store.

Gallery: The line is wrapped all the way around the inside of the Surdyk's liquor store. At first, the e-mails seemed like a joke, or a misprint. Surdyk’s, the family-owned liquor store in northeast Minneapolis, issued a social-media blast Sunday morning saying “Open Today,” followed by a short message that the store would be open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.Yes, the 159-year-old ban on Sunday liquor sales was lifted by the Minnesota Legislature, and the bill was signed by Gov. Mark Dayton, but the first day of legal sales was to be Sunday, July 2, four months from now. “We just decided to open up,” said Jim Surdyk, owner and president of the business. “We’re here, we’re busy, it’s great. People are happy to be here.” Among those less pleased was Minneapolis licensing manager Grant Wilson, who phoned Surdyk before noon Sunday to advise him to lock up the store or be in violation of state law. “Not just the state law,” Wilson said by phone on Sunday, “but the city ordinance also needs to be revised,” which has not yet happened.

Wilson said he figured Surdyk would say he had made a mistake, but that didn’t prove to be the case. Even though Surdyk said he was “in the middle on the new law,” he decided that since it was approved, why wait? “The governor signed the bill, everyone wants the bill, they voted for it, why not be in business?” Surdyk said by phone from the store on Sunday. “Why send our tax to money to Wisconsin, when we can do the business ourselves?” Surdyk did not consult with any authorities before opting to open his store. It was a decision that he claimed was in line with his family’s tradition, dating to a 50-year-old state law that permitted stores to offer discounts on liquor for the first time. “My father was the first one to discount liquor way back in the 1960s, and he didn’t wait till July to do it,” Surdyk said. Wanted to be first About 1 p.m. Wilson showed up at Surdyk’s, where the parking lot was full of cars, and advised Surdyk to “lock the doors.”

If he did not comply with the advice, Wilson “was going to write me up,” according to Surdyk, who added that he planned on staying open till 6 p.m. By midafternoon, checkout lines stretched to the back of the store. Said Wilson, “I documented three liquor sales so I could instigate citations.” The city allows a fine of $500 for the first violation, and doubles the fines for each added one. “I’m guessing the fine for Sunday would be $3,500,” Wilson said, but the matter will go to the city attorney on Monday. “The City will also pursue sanctions against the off-sale liquor license held by Surdyk’s based on the owner’s clear disregard of the law,” said a statement issued by the city Sunday evening. Many customers, meanwhile, were at Surdyk’s to be among the first in Minnesota history to purchase liquor from a store on a Sunday. “I have a receipt that I bought beer!” said Rick Spaulding, of Minneapolis. “I guess maybe [Jim Surdyk] is trying to make a point,” Spaulding said.

“But what if he loses his license for a week?” Alan and Vinette Hamm drove down from Forest Lake when they heard about the store opening, and bought some wine. “We wouldn’t have come all this way except for the first-day thing,” Alan Hamm said. Some stores opposing Sunday sales said it was hard on employees, and Surdyk agreed, up to a point. “It’s tough to get help,” he said, adding that he needed to schedule about 10 people for the liquor store and a few others for the adjoining cheese shop, which had not previously been open Sundays, even though no liquor is sold there. “People who are not used to working Sundays would rather have the day off. But people will get used to it. I just hope in the future, a lot of people will do shopping on Sunday. We have to wait and see.” While he noted some other liquor retailers grumbling on Twitter about his decision to open early, Surdyk said he had not heard of any other stores doing the same. The new law doesn’t require liquor stores to remain open on Sunday, and some may opt to remain closed.