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Meet this wine and whiskey bar taking its big flavors from California to TexasMeet this wine and whiskey bar taking its big flavors from California to Texas

District is taking a regional approach to its global dining and craft cocktails

Holly Petre, Assistant Digital Editor

August 16, 2022

3 Min Read
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Jon D’Angelica was living in the Bay Area, which he calls the “unofficial wine capital of the country,” when he realized there were no wine bars, despite its growing popularity.

“We started in 2007 on this basic, very basic notion of wine consumption in this country growing for multiple generations, uninterrupted growth — the kind of curve a Wall Street person would love to see, just slow, steady growth,” said District co-founder Jon D’Angelica.

“We understood this was an underserved market,” he said.

So, he and co-owner Ryan Vance went out looking for a venue. What they wanted was simple.

They thought, “Let’s build around it all the things that are missing that you can’t find in other venues. A great menu food menu again, really simple things that were missing — core music, sports on TV, or when sports weren't playing, we played vintage movies that were based in the Bay Area.”

The first location, in the South of Market Area — described by D’Angelica as the Meatpacking neighborhood of New York City before it got cool — was “a hit from day one.”

“We really touched on something that the market was missing,” D’Angelica said. “This idea that you can drink great wine without having to travel out to Napa.”

Rather than starting with food and building a bar menu around that, D’Angelica and Vance made wine the focal point and built the food menu around the extensive wine.

Guests could sample multiple kinds of wine without having a full glass, which D’Angelica viewed as a bonus for District. Customers could try wines from all around the world without committing to a full glass of wine but rather purchasing a sample size from the menu to go with the global foods.

“So that was the first part of our story,” D’Angelica said.

In 2012, District opened its second location, in Oakland. A lot had changed in the restaurant landscape in those five years, according to D’Angelica, including the popularity of craft cocktails, small batch spirits, and craft beer.

The space District took over in Oakland came with an inherited liquor license, so the restaurant decided that with the changing environment and this stroke of luck, it would focus on something besides wine: Whiskey.

D’Angelica found it was very similar to wine in that District could serve flights of whiskey, it went with the same kinds of food, and it had a cult following the same way some wines did.

District then opened in San Jose as a wine and whiskey bar. It was at that point that D’Angelica knew he had something good and was ready to move the concept to another location in the country.

Texas. Dallas-Fort Worth, to be specific.

“We really started looking at other markets to recreate what we did in the Bay Area by creating a regional brand, and kind of in that in a hub those three locations,” he said. “We wanted to do the same and so we landed on DFW and starting in Dallas, we opened our first location [in May] and our goal in DFW is to do the same thing we did in the Bay Area, opening three to five locations creating a local-slash-regional brand there and then moving on to other markets as well to do the same thing.”

There’s a lot of promise in the market.

“When you look at DFW, it’s bigger than the entire Bay Area,” D’Angelica said. “So, if we had three successful locations here without saturating the market, there’s a possibility [of] even more just in that DFW area. So, we’re really excited about that.”

District is also opening a location in the Oakland airport in December through a partnership with SSP America.

“In terms of brand exposure, you really can’t beat the number of eyeballs that come across your brand at an airport day-to-day,” D’Angelica said.

About the Author

Holly Petre

Assistant Digital Editor

Holly Petre is a digital editor for Nation’s Restaurant News as well as the host of NRN’s podcast, Extra Serving, and producer for Informa Restaurant and Food Group’s other three podcasts, One On One by Food Management, Off the Shelf with SN and In the Kitchen with Bret Thorn. Holly holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts with a concentration in Sculpture, fibers and Material Studies and Ceramics from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. A native New Yorker, Holly enjoys her place on staff as the resident pop-culture expert and millennial with a sassy attitude and great sense of style.

Holly Petre’s work on Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality often covers marketing and trends, either aimed-at or examined-through the millennial mindset. Holly is responsible for introducing TikTok and Twitch to NRN and RH readers as well as explaining terms like “Karen” to staff and readers alike. She also spends her time on staff trying not to make every headline a pun.

Holly Petre hasn’t spoken at any events or on panels, but she is readily available with a killer shoe wardrobe and several witty quips.

 

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