Tavour’s Beer Delivery Service Specializes in Experimentation

Not quite a beer delivery service, not quite a beer of the month club.

8.28.17
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Photography by Hop Culture Studios

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Despite numerous advancements in the alcohol industry, online sales are still a sticky subject. Laws vary state to state, and facilitating a beer, wine, or spirits purchase on the web can be complicated. And with 80 percent of Americans now living within 10 miles of a brewery, consumers have many options to buy quality suds in person. Still, successful online sales for companies like Drizly, which has stocked many house parties with vodka, rose, and large beer brands, has pulled others into online beer delivery. And thankfully, some of these services focus on craft beer.

What is Tavour?

Tavour, a craft beer delivery service, specializes in curated boxes of craft beer. Where Drizly offers availability and consistency — getting a 30-pack of Miller Lite, a handle of Smirnoff, or maybe a sixer of something like Rogue Dead Guy — Tavour brings experimentation, thoughtfulness, and discovery. This isn’t really an alcohol delivery service. But it’s also not a “beer of the month club.” It exists somewhere in the middle.

Tavour will send you daily emails with new, limited availability beers and a compelling story behind the brew. If you’re interested, you reply and they’ll add it to your “cellar.” Or, if you use the mobile app, you’re presented with a selection of beers and can click through to add your favorites to your “cellar.” Once your cellar is full (at around the four week mark according to Tavour) they ship your beer and you pay for what you picked.

How does it work?

Hop Culture recently got the chance to test out the service, and the sample box showcased the diversity of the system. Of the breweries on display, I was familiar with Allagash, Great Divide, and AleWerks (and of those I’d only had the Little Brett), so this was an awesome chance to try some completely new and exciting beers.

In my experience, it’s easy to reach for the next beer from a known brewery, instead of exploring the quieter or underrated breweries. The same goes for beer styles; the box contained a juicy IPA from Three Magnets Brewing, a raspberry sour from Lucky Envelope, and a red ale from Milwaukee Brewing Company. I got to sample a range of out-of-market beers that are fresh and may never see shelves again (the one form Three Magnets was only brewed once). Plus, they came in a variety of formats. Expect bombers, cans, and 12 oz. bottles.

The Beers:

 

Our Verdict

Despite some ease of use problems, the selection, freshness (especially with regards to the IPAs), and variety — which is what truly matters — shined through.

The beer is fresh and unique and delivered right to your door. And because this isn’t a “beer of the month club” you can leave room between shipments. For those looking to experiment with beer from the comfort of their couch, this is the solution.

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About The Author

John A. Paradiso

John A. Paradiso

Currently Drinking:
Saison Dupont

John A. Paradiso is the former managing editor at Hop Culture Magazine and current managing editor at Cool Material. His interests include listening to the tunes of King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizzard and watching Wes Anderson films. His Wednesdays are spent picking up comics at the local comic book shop and his weekends are spent watching Premier League soccer. He's probably down to get a beer later.

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