13 May 2009

Why is Pikesville Dry?

Quick Q for thought:

Why is there seemingly no good beer bar in Pikesville, or Northwest Baltimore, or Owings Mills or Reisterstown?

We have good beer on the northeastern quadrant/corner (Racers, Hamilton Tavern, Red Brick Station, etc.). North: Grand Cru and some good liquor stores. West: Ellicott Mills, Judges Bench, etc. Fells Point, Canton, Federal Hill, downtown. Good beer follows money (or vice versa), so I can't/don't expect anything in Brooklyn Park, southwest Baltimore, West Baltimore, etc.

But what's the Pikesville corridor's excuse? The money is there for upscale dining and shopping--boutique coffee shops and clothing, art, a Trader Joe's. There is a historically heavy Jewish concentration up the Park Heights corridor, but Jews aren't historically teetotalers like, say, Mormons or Methodists have been.

Ideas?

2 comments:

The Oriole Way said...

No idea, but it drives me crazy as an Owings Mills resident. We used to have a restaurant called Hops that was a national chain akin to Rock Bottom. My wife and I paid it a visit once and asked what was on tap. "Bud, Bud Light..." Needless to say, we didn't go back.

Mark said...

We lament the same lack of a decent place with a decent craft draft beer selection that drives us up the road to Westminster, Gettysburg or Kclingers in Hanover.

The closest to a middling selection of craft on draft or bottles is the Full Moon on 140.