Every year a group of passionate wine lovers queue in tents outside a store in Oslo for the latest bottles of Burgundy wines. At the beginning January, a strange event occurs on the streets of Oslo. A queue of wine fans, each with large tents and thick sleeping bags, assemble outside a store. The queue is a result of Norway’s unusual alcohol laws, which mean that the government-owned retailer, Vinmonopolet – often shortened to just Polet – are the only company allowed to sell alcohol over 4.75% ABV in the country. Although unusual, it means that this unique event happens every year. On 1 February, the government will release the latest set of wines from Burgundy, with a ticketing system in place for fans hoping to get a bottle of Domaine de la Romanée-Conti (DRC) or Domaine Armand Rousseau. But these special bottles will be in short supply. Incredibly, despite the queuing, the customers will not know until just a week before what will be available for purchase. They will have spent several weeks in freezing conditions, including snow settling on the roof of their tent, and may not even be able to get the wines they desire. Norwegian news outlet E24 reported on two of the early queuers, Henrik Malme and Leonhard Spidsø, who came direct from a New Year’s party to the store in order to get in early for the release. The duo slept and lived outside the store until February, using local cafes to eat and keep
This Article was originally published on The Drink Business - Fine Wine