X Marks the Scot - An on-line community of kilt wearers.
|
-
28th January 06, 05:49 PM
#1
 Originally Posted by Rigged
There's probably some laws against selling beer without some kind of license, but I think it can be given away to friends and family, or sold as a fund-raiser for a registered non-profit organization.
I don't know about the licensing laws, but I do know that some states have problems with shipping alcohol across state lines for personal use (commercial use too, in some states). And the main shippers - UPS, FedEx, Postal Service - won't knowlingly ship alcohol to/from those states.
Something to keep in mind.
-
-
29th January 06, 10:12 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by Wompet
I don't know about the licensing laws, but I do know that some states have problems with shipping alcohol across state lines for personal use (commercial use too, in some states). And the main shippers - UPS, FedEx, Postal Service - won't knowlingly ship alcohol to/from those states.
Something to keep in mind.
I thought the Supreme Court ruling last year in regards to wine sales also applied to beer as well. Or is beer classified as a different type of beverage?
-
-
29th January 06, 07:00 PM
#3
 Originally Posted by 646guy
I thought the Supreme Court ruling last year in regards to wine sales also applied to beer as well. Or is beer classified as a different type of beverage?
Help me out, what was the ruling?
-
-
29th January 06, 09:37 PM
#4
Actually as far as shipping wine goes, none of the private carriers will ship wine or beer from private individuals. You must be licensed to distribute or sell alcoholic beverages and hav e a prior agreement with UPS or FedEx in order to ship wine. Shipping beer is problematic because of the carbonation, and falls under the same restictions as wine. In addition it is a federal offense to send any type of alcoholic beverage through the mail. I have worked with a shipping business for the last nine years so I am well versed in the various regulations (the Supreme Court decision only deals with wineries being barred fromn shipping wine to states while at the same timre those states allow their own wineries to ship wine).
As far as making the beer goes, thats relatively easy. I have done in the past and if you can cook oatmeal and sanitize equipment you can brew beer. A X-Marks beer could easily be produced and either given a way or be served at a fund raiser or similar event. If it is to be sold it would have to be distributed through the brewery.
I would be more than happy to lend a hand if this project goes ahead.
-
-
30th January 06, 06:38 PM
#5
I'm in for a case and live local. What we could do is get 5 or 6 people to chip in for the 5.5 cases beer, bottling and labels. We could have a few hundred extra labels made and sell them (in packs of 6 or 12) to our members to help offset the label printing cost. Any extra $ could go to Hank for the website upkeep and his kid's college fund
Now the question is... what type of beer!!!
Devil's Canyon already makes their own Scotch Ale!
-
-
30th January 06, 07:45 PM
#6
Alex Keith's man responds:
I'm an IPA man myself.
CT
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks