Foodservice Equipment & Supplies

OCT 2016

Foodservice Equipment & Supplies magazines is an industry resource connecting foodservice operators, equipment and supplies manufacturers and dealers, and facility design consultants.

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90 • FOODSERVICE EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES • OCTOBER 2016 e&s; segment spotlight WINNING WITH WINE Wine bars transform in an effort to attract a broader, more diverse demographic. By Lisa White, Contributing Editor L argely viewed as an occasion destination, wine bars offer a unique experience. Strangers are far more likely to interact in a wine bar format than in traditional full-service restaurants, and guests more frequently share menu items. "Consumers are looking for dining options that offer explo- ration and discovery, and wine bars have built this into the ser- vice style and food approach," says Aaron Allen, owner of Aaron Allen & Associates, an Orlando, Fla.-based restaurant consultant. "There's still room for growth and expansion in this segment. "We're also seeing unique things in terms of flavor profiles, with South African wine and dessert wines from Hungary," Allen continues. "Consumers are looking for more authenticity and profiles, and wine bars give operators a point of differentiation among non-wine bar competitors." Overall, restaurants now offer a larger variety of wines. In fact, wine menus grew by 33 percent between 2012 and 2015, according to market research firm Mintel, based in London. While dessert and sparkling wine showed the biggest change, growing 61 percent over a 3-year period, almost every type of wine experienced growth — wine coolers and rose/blush varieties were the only exception to growth trends. While port wine makes up the bulk of the dessert wine category, many other dessert wines also show strong

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