![]() Th wine purse includes a hidden pouch you can fill with your favorite beverage of choice, and a discrete spout. Here’s the perfect solution for the style conscious woman looking for the ultimate low-key way to transport her “mommy juice”. Luckily we live in a nation of builders, a country built on creative entrepreneurs who think of everything, including some ingenious ways to smuggle your booze. And yet, despite so-called inalienable rights, you often face harsh restrictions against bringing your own drink to certain establishments.īummer right? Not so fast. These are just a few of the places you probably want to enjoy an adult beverage. A rubber bottom makes sure the Baggy Wine Coat does not tip over - neither on the dinner table, nor on the lawn.Airplanes. There is room for an ice pack too, if you prefer to have your wine chilled. Simply take the wine bag out of the box, place it in the Baggy Wine Coat and close the flexible top. Wine Tote Purse + 2 Disposable Wine Baggies - Holds Up to 3 Litres (4 Bottles) - Wine to Go Made Easy! - Neoprene Carrier for BYOB (Black) Vivajennz Chevron Wine Purse (Green Chevron and Autism Puzzle)Disposable Refreshment Baggie (Pack of 3) DuVino 2 Bottle Wine Travel Bag - Mother's Day Gift for Mom - Thick Insulating Neoprene Wine Bottle Tote- Expandable, Taller Design - Zipper Closes over Corked Bottles, Adjustable Shoulder Strap Baggy Wine Coat gives the popular Bag in Box wines a casual but stylish look. A 1.5-liter purse will run customers about $20. There's a Chardonnay Viognier (in a white bag), a Cabernet Shiraz (black), and a Rose (pink, of course). Oenophiles should be happy to know that Vernissage is pumping French wine from Vin de Pays d'Oc into its airtight bags. Hence, it keeps longer - even up to a few weeks. The bag-in-box technology forces the wine out of the tap while only allowing in a minimal amount of oxygen. When a glass bottle is uncorked, air rushes in and starts to oxidize the wine, and distort the flavor. And yet there's a silver lining to all the cardboard and plastic: Bags seem to actually be better than glass for preserving wine. ![]() Plus, a box can't really compete visually with a sleek glass bottle. But since wine consumption continues to steadily climb, what took the purse so long to make its voyage here? The answer may lie within the stigma of boxed wine, which suffers a reputation for being cheap and generally lousy. will start seeing these bags of wine in the next few weeks. Since its Swedish debut in 2010, the wine-in-a-purse has launched in China, Japan and several other countries in Europe. Soldatos then paired up with the bag designer, Sofia Bloomberg, and came up with the Vernissage brand. Alternative wine packaging has been surging across Scandinavia, and luxury wine expert Takis Soldatos took notice, Stern says. The idea for the wine purse originated a few years back in Sweden. More than half of female drinkers chose wine over other alcoholic beverages, according to a recent Gallup poll, so there's reason to think this might appeal to a few women out there. ![]() He says it's a "whole new concept of design" meant to appeal to a classy lady heading out to lunch with the girls or dinner with her significant other. Elliot Stern, CEO of Squish Wines, is in charge of importing the bags, which originate in Sweden, into the U.S. Ladies, if the thought of showing up at a party or a picnic with a box of wine seems a little gauche, there's now a product for you: Vernissage's "bag-in-a-bag" of wine.
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