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  2. State Alcohol and Tobacco Company of Iceland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_Alcohol_and_Tobacco...

    Inside a Reykjavik Vínbúð. The State Alcohol and Tobacco Company of Iceland (ÁTVR) is a state owned company that is the sole legal retail vendor of alcohol in Iceland. [1] It runs a chain of 51 retail stores named Vínbúðin (the wine shop), known colloquially as Ríkið (The State). [1]

  3. Kolaportið - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kolaportið

    Kolaportið is Iceland's only flea market. It takes place indoors close to the harbour of the capital city, Reykjavík. Goods sold include second-hand records, liquorice, clothing, antiques, and fermented shark. Kolaportið is normally open only during weekends.

  4. Brennivín - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brennivín

    Brennivín (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈprɛnːɪˌviːn]) is considered to be Iceland's signature distilled beverage. It is distilled from fermented grain mash and then combined with Iceland's very soft, high-pH water, and flavored only with caraway. A clear, savory, herbal spirit, the taste is often described as having notes of fresh rye ...

  5. List of supermarket chains in Iceland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_supermarket_chains...

    Stores Type of store Parent; 10-11: 3 convenience Basko ehf. Bónus: 33 discount Hagar hf. Costco: 1 hypermarket Costco Wholesale: Euro-Market: 3 convenience none Hagkaup: 8 department store Hagar hf. Krónan: 26 discount FESTI hf. Kjarval 2 convenience FESTI hf. Stórkaup 1 big box store Hagar hf Iceland [1] 6 convenience Samkaup ehf. Kr. 2 ...

  6. Kringlan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kringlan

    Kringlan (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈkʰriŋlan]) is a shopping mall located in the Icelandic capital region. [2] It is the second largest in the country, after Smáralind in Kópavogur, with over 180 shops and restaurants. [3]

  7. Beer in Iceland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_in_Iceland

    Iceland's early settlers came from cultures where drinking beer and mead was commonplace. Poems such as the Hávamál reference the drinking of ale (öl).The climate of Iceland (particularly the cooling trend of the Little Ice Age, c. 1300–1850 locally) may have made beer production difficult as it became impossible to produce barley domestically.

  8. Prohibition in Iceland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_in_Iceland

    Prohibition in Iceland went into effect in 1915 and lasted, to some extent, until 1 March 1989 (since celebrated as "Beer Day"). The ban had originally prohibited all alcohol , but from 1922 legalized wine and in 1935 legalized all alcoholic beverages except beer with more than 2.25% alcohol content.

  9. Liquor store - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquor_store

    A beer shop (also referred to as a beershop or beer store) is a retail store where beer and other goods related to beer are sold; it is a specialised type of liquor store. Beer shops can be found all around the world, but there are many located in countries where beer is a major cultural product, including Belgium, Canada, Germany, New Zealand ...