Collection: Allocated Tequila

Crafted in limited quantities and chased by collectors around the globe, Wine Dispensary’s Allocated Tequila collection showcases rare bottlings that highlight the artistry and heritage of agave distillation. From ultra-aged expressions to cult-favorite blancos, these tequilas are made available exclusively to our The Inside Pour email subscribers before they’re released to the public. Want first dibs on the next big drop? Join our email list and gain early access to some of the most coveted tequilas in the world.

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What Does Craft Beer Mean Any More?

Craft beer didn’t begin as a marketing term. It began as a reaction.

Before “craft” was stamped on cans and shelves, it described a loose movement of small, independent brewers pushing back against consolidation, sameness, and industrial beer. What united early craft breweries wasn’t a single style or technique, but intent: independence, experimentation, and a belief that beer could express place, people, and creativity.

This collection is built around that original spirit - not nostalgia, not hype, and not just scarcity. Below is how craft beer got here, where it often loses its way, and how we choose the beers we feature today.


Section I: When Craft Beer Meant Something

Modern craft beer took shape in the late 20th century as small breweries emerged in response to a market dominated by a handful of multinational producers. These early brewers focused on flavor, freshness, and styles that had largely disappeared from American shelves. Brewing was personal again. Local again.

At its best, craft beer meant independence, hands-on production, and accountability to drinkers rather than shareholders. Breweries were small because they chose to be, not because they lacked ambition. Quality and character mattered more than scale.

Over time, the word “craft” became shorthand for this ethos. But as demand grew, so did ambiguity. Corporate acquisitions blurred ownership lines. National distribution challenged freshness. And a word once rooted in values became increasingly elastic.

Understanding this history matters, because “craft” was never meant to describe everything that tastes different. It was meant to signal how and why something was made.


Section II: Where Craft Beer Lost the Plot

Today, consumers are savvier than ever, and also more skeptical. Many drinkers feel the word “craft” has been stretched thin - used to describe beers that look independent but are owned by large corporations, or beers marketed as rare without offering anything meaningfully different in the glass.

Limited releases, hype drops, and allocation tactics borrowed from other categories have complicated things further. Some scarcity is real - small batches, seasonal ingredients, or experimental fermentations. Other scarcity is manufactured, designed to drive urgency rather than enjoyment.

Freshness adds another layer. Unlike spirits, beer is perishable. A hyped beer that is mishandled, warm-stored, or past its prime fails the most basic promise to the drinker. Yet too often, the conversation focuses on access rather than quality.

The result can be fatigue. Drinkers chase labels instead of flavor, while exceptional everyday beers go unnoticed. In this environment, “craft” risks becoming a signal of noise rather than trust.


Section III: Our Standard for Craft Beer Today

Our approach to craft beer is grounded in selection, transparency, and care.

We prioritize independence and clear ownership whenever possible, and when a brewery is not independent, we don’t pretend otherwise. Transparency builds trust. From there, quality takes the lead. Every beer we carry is chosen intentionally, with attention to balance, freshness, and how it performs in the glass - not just how it looks online.

We treat beer like the agricultural, time-sensitive product it is. Packaging dates matter. Cold storage matters. Freshness is never a reason for markup.

When beers are limited or allocated, we apply the same fairness principles we use across the store. Pricing aims for the lowest third of the market whenever possible. Communication goes to customers who actually buy the category. Short hold windows prioritize people who drink beer, not those who collect it. And when the window closes, access opens to everyone at the same price.

Most importantly, we taste everything. Scarcity alone never earns shelf space. A beer belongs in this collection because it delivers - whether it’s a widely available lager, a seasonal release, or a small-batch drop.

Craft beer still matters. Not as a buzzword, but as a commitment to flavor, independence, and honesty. This collection reflects that belief - beers chosen not because they are hard to get, but because they are worth drinking.