1815 Arsenal Street

St. Louis, Missouri 63104
 

 
Phone (314) 772-1977
Fax (314) 772-1015
Web Site  

Hour of Operation

Monday: 24hrs
Tuesday: 24hrs
Wednesday: 24hrs
Thursday: 24hrs
Friday: 24hrs
Saturday: 24hrs
Sunday: 24hrs

 

 

This review is brought to you by:

Joel's Shell Food Mart

Joel's Shell Food Mart was a topic of discussion on alt.smokers.cigars in November 1996. Joel's was one of the first gas stations to begin selling cigars seriously (meaning the sticks are properly stored and humidified) after the cigar fad began.

Joel, though, is into cigars for the long haul. His major clientele are from across the highway at Anheuser-Busch. Joel's prices are at or below the norm for this area and his stock is improving day by day. He recently installed a beautiful oak display humidor for his expanded offerings. Plus, Joel's is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week (including holidays)! What other cigar store can say that?

Joel's Shell Food Mart is my favorite cigar store. In fact, I put the story of my "discovery" of his store on my personal web site at www.viaduck.com/scottm/cigars.html. I encourage you to check it out! (There are also many other cigar-related items of interest there.)


Scott Martin - January, 1997



I wanted to get some good cigars for my boyfriend for Christmas and I am clueless when it comes to cigars. Then one day I decided to do a search on the Internet for cigars. I came across your Cigar Store Story. I took your advice and visited Joel's Shell Station.

When I walked in I guess I looked a little puzzled. I asked the gentleman behind the counter about the cigars and he showed me where they were. I was amazed and confused at the same time. I looked around for someone to help me since the gentleman had returned to the counter and there was an older man who came up and asked me if I needed some help. Obviously, he must be a friend of Joel's or a regular. He even introduced me to Joel himself. I told Joel what lead me to his Shell Station and he was amazed!

So in a nutshell, thank you for introducing me to such a cool cigar store. The service was just outstanding--you can bet that I will be returning. I also noticed that they carried more brands of Ben and Jerry's ice cream than other stores!!!!

Karen M. Filla - December, 1996

P.S. my boyfriend just loved his cigars!
 

 

This review is brought to you by:

Warsteiner Premium Verum

By Randall Roberts, Mar 8, 2006

The gas-station quick shop is the engine of the urban economy, a streamlined machine that consumes as much energy as it dispenses. It feeds our cravings: fruit pies and Life Savers, Funyuns and Fanta. They glow like beacons along the boulevard, each a variation on the platonic quickie-mart ideal. To achieve perfection, it must strike that delicate balance of necessity and impulse. One brand of tampon, but a dozen different varieties of Doritos. Cheap deodorant, but eight Now & Later flavors. Advil packets and beef jerky. The things we buy when we only have a few crumpled ones in our pocket.

Here, at the corner of Arsenal and Lemp in Benton Park, right across from Gus's Pretzels and in the shadow of Anheuser Busch, is the greatest quick shop in St. Louis — Joel's Shell Food Mart. Maybe that's because it's closest to our home. When we're bummed, Joel dishes us Ben and Jerry's pistachio. When we've got the munchies, he offers us many varieties of Bugles. When we hate our job, he sells us Powerball tickets; when we love our job, he sells us Hustler.

Who, exactly, are you, Joel? Is your mart our Valhalla? None of the clerks sport your nametag when they wear your polyester smocks. Do you exist, Joel? And who orders the beer here? (Read Kelly Link's fantastical short story "The Hortlak," from her collection of last year, Magic for Beginners. It's set in a quick shop that has a strong zombie clientele.) In the heat of the summer, bats orbit the Shell sign like comets through a fast-forward galaxy. On cloudless mornings you can watch the sun rise from Joel's parking lot. As it struggles to lift, the sun makes the brewery glow orange and electric. They're making beer over there. You can just tell.

But they're not making Warsteiner, which is loathed by as many beer connoisseurs as loved. It's brewed in Warstein, Germany — between Düsseldorf and Berlin. It's clean and light, with a touch more amber in its hue than Budweiser. The haters say Warsteiner's akin to Heineken, but it's much closer to Czechvar, a sturdy, no-bullshit pilsner that's light on the intake but solid going down the throat. Joel sells Warsteiner, but that stands to reason. The shop has a shockingly good beer selection for its size: Sierra Nevada pale; Schlafly coffee stout; Boulevard wheat; Bass ale; Newcastle Brown. And, of course, all the Anheuser-Busch products. You can also buy wrestling tickets here.

At night, Joel's inhales and exhales customers like it's hyperventilating, and many exit with a six pack or a couple 24-ounce cans in tow. There's never a rush here, per se, but there's always a line, which moves toward the register like bubbles in a beer bottle. Somehow, the customers pace themselves. Or maybe they're fated (by Joel?) to arrive when they do, each craving precisely timed against the master plan.

 

 

Last updated: Friday, November 14, 2008


 

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