Saturday, April 15, 2017

Wine Industry Finds a Companion in a Competitor: Marijuana

Photo
Phil Coturri, a viticulturist who oversees the vineyard at Kamen Estate in Sonoma, Calif., has also been growing marijuana for almost 40 years. CreditJason Henry for The New York Times
Legal intoxication is big business and getting bigger. More states have legalized marijuana, leading some in the alcohol industry to regard it as a threat to their profit margin.
Those concerns are warranted in some cases. In Colorado, Oregon and Washington, where recreational use has been legal for several years, beer sales are down, mostly among mass-market brews. The liquor industry opposed several marijuana legalization initiatives last year, and has expressed fears for its bottom line.
The fine wine industry, however, has not panicked. Despite occasional efforts to pit wine and weed against each other, people in the wine business exude an air of mellow acceptance that the two substances can coexist in harmony.
“People are trying to say there is a threat, but I really haven’t talked to any wine industry person yet who actually sees it that way,” said Tina Caputo, a freelance wine and food writer, who in August will be a moderator at the first Wine & Weed Symposium. The event, a wine industry initiative, will explore possible business opportunities in California, which legalized recreational marijuana use in November.
“We haven’t actually seen anybody who’s laying down their glass of wine to pick up a bong,” Ms. Caputo said. “There’s room in people’s lives for both.”
Continue reading the main storyRCH 18, 2017
What brings consumers of cannabis (the marijuana industry’s preferred term) together with lovers of wine, craft beer and artisanal spirits is a sense of connoisseurship.
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