
When you are having lots of parties, serving beer and wine might be pain, thinking of all the bottles and beer cans. But it’s not a problem anymore, thanks to wine dispensers and beer dispensers. For those who serve a variety of booze, the liquor dispenser is a necessary addition to a wet bar. Having a liquor dispenser around before you need it is more economically sound that needing one when you don’t have one. Till date, we have come across a range of liquor dispensers, and here I am with the best of them. Check them out after the jump.
• B95 BeerTender

Let’s start with the stylish B95 BeerTender. The high-tech countertop beer draughting system uses the DraughtKeg carbonator pressure technology to ensure a perfect draught beer at home. An innovative, controlled and ultra quiet chilling technology allows the BeerTender to maintain the beer at the perfect serving temperature and features a temperature gauge that tells you when the beer is ready to draught. Just snap on the disposable draught beer tube onto the DraughtKeg, insert into the BeerTender and serve.
• Perlick Beer Dispenser

The luxury of enjoying a draught beer at home achieves a new level with a Perlick Beer Dispenser. The refrigerated cabinet from Perlick, even offers a three tap Beer Dispenser to serve three different beers at one time. The beverage centre features electronic digital temperature control and display and the variable speed compressor provides precise temperature control and energy-efficient cooling.
• Skybar Wine Cabinet

The Skybar Wine cabinet houses three chilled chambers to serve three different wines which are chilled to perfection. A small LCD displays the temperature that you can set. It features preset nine chilling options, and the vacuum technology that helps to preserve wine for about 10 days without any change in its taste. You also won’t need a decanter, as this cabinet is equipped with a smooth pouring technique that decants a perfect glass of sparkling wine. Yours for a cool $1,000.
• Robocco BeerBot

This unique robot can store up to half a dozen cans of beer in its belly. Whenever you thirst for the nectar of the gods, the Robocco BeerBot will get to work, pouring you a cold one. The Asahi Robocco BeerBot was originally the product of a contest in Japan, but now these robots have been reconditioned.
• MyFountain

MyFountain robotic bartender takes orders, mixes cocktails, and then cleans up automatically. Underneath the countertop dispenser, you will find a dorm-style refrigerator that houses up to 12 varied types of alcohol and mixers, a water-line link and a carbon-dioxide cartridge for effervesce. The device is 100% customizable depending upon your tastes as you can create any recipe you can think of, and make it available at the touch of the LCD screen. The brain of the system sits at the top of the fridge and it’s an Internet-linked Windows XP computer. Users can even limit access via password-protection allowing parents to restrict access to alcoholic beverages. The price range for the MyFountain drink slinger starts at $2,575.
• Enomatic self-service wine bar

Popular throughout Europe for years, at wine bars and stores, Enomatic is a self-serve wine dispenser. The dispenser can hold up to 16 bottles and features a card reader for self-service usage. The system keeps wine fresh for up to three weeks and custom configurations can be made to hold any number of bottles. Above all, the enomatic dispensers look stunning.
• John Carnett’s home brewing system

John Carnett’s home brewing system is the ultimate piece of invention. The glossy stainless steel system uses a propane burner to boil the wort for 90 minutes, and then it is transferred to the fermenting tank through a heat exchanger. As the name suggests, the heat exchanger then cools the wort to between 53˚F and 63°F. The magic lies inside the fermentation chamber where an electronic temperature controller activates a pump, which circulates liquid through an intricate array of copper tubing. You have to wait for 10 to 15 days and the beer is drained to one of the two serving kegs, where it is further carbonated. The beer then transfers to one of the two serving kegs. As it pours into your glass, it is finely chilled. Priced at $4,315.
• Chassis bartender bot

At times when you want another mug of beer, but are too drunk to go get one, wouldn’t it be great if a genie could pour endless mugs until you say STOP? Chassis, the beer pouring robot built by Jonathan Foote and Al Honig to enjoy your uninterrupted drinking binge has a built-in chrome grill beneath his turn signals which is a speaker for audience interaction. All you have to do is start giving commands with headset and cordless phone transmitter and direct the robot using the remote control. Chassis comes in a fiery red coating.
• Fagor Beer Dispenser

The Fagor Press-05 Beer Dispenser is a sleek and modern take on the old barrel and keg with the unit’s smooth aluminum shooter being compatible with tanks and cans of beer up to 5 liters. The dispenser maintains the temperature of the beverage just right along with a sturdy pressure to deliver the smoothest flow of beer until the last drop.
• CDA integrated beer dispenser

The integrated beer dispenser from CDA fits neatly into a 60cm tower unit and the appliance is ready to dispense chilled beer within five minutes of installation. The contemporary stainless steel finish is illuminated with stylish blue LED lighting. The hidden chiller offers variable temperature control to cater for your personal preferences. The built-in beer dispenser comes complete with a steel-mounted professional connection kit that sits below in a standard kitchen cupboard. The kit consists of CO² cylinder, keg adapters, temperature gauge and variable pressure gauge allowing for precise pressure control guaranteeing the perfect ‘pub’ pint for nearly $2300.
• Asahi bartender robot

The new Asahi bartender robot is not a genie, but then, not less than him. This bartending bot is latest from Asahi and was built in about 200 hours and spent a full six months to learn the bartending skills perfectly. There is a hidden PC that features a touchscreen interface and runs Windows Vista. It takes beer bottles from a conveyor belt, pops the caps off, and then turns them around on a whirling wheel.
Concept worth mention:
• Neptune Champagne Dispenser

Neptune by designer Nicolas Mélan is able to serve all your guests in one go. The champagne dispenser features a dispenser tray that can accommodate nine glasses at-a-time. All you need to do is pour the Champagne in the basin and put the glasses on the special tray, and place it under the dispenser. It works with the weight of the liquid. Nothing comes down before it reaches a certain weight. The other part is to get the bottles of Champagne at hands and kept cold. The metallic bottle handler is in aluminum and can be opened to pour ice in it. A faucet is placed behind, to empty the molten ice cubes.
Let the party begin...





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Comments
Great storage with beer and nice tech.