Brewpubs

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my BBQ plate at Maddy's We chilled out during the day, something I’d sorely lacked on the trip thus far, and with my parents, headed to Maddy’s Rib & Blues for dinner. Maddy’s isn’t a craft beer destination but carries the local Sweetwater and Terrapin on draft as well as a couple other crafts. I ordered a Terrapin Rye Pale Ale and a half rib and chopped pork combo plate with mac ‘n cheese as the side. Maddy’s uses a tomato-based barbecue and is quite good. It’s a bare bones kind of place, with a long rectangular painted cinder block room and blues music on the speakers, and live music on the stage at the back of the room most nights. It’s a great place to sip a local beer, eat ‘cue & listen to the blues, and it’s on the way to Decatur from my parent’s house, my favorite craft beer area in Atlanta.

Twain's Sated, the five of us (my brother had met us at Maddy’s) drove a short way to Twain’s Billiards and Tap. Twain’s became a brewpub only a year and five months ago, before that it was a bar/pool hall. This was my second visit to Twain’s, I’d been nicely surprised by the quality of their beers last year and was looking forward to trying them again. Twain’s is located in a huge, open warehouse-like space with large front windows. Georgia brewery logo murals are painted on the walls, large model planes hang from the ceiling, breweriana, artwork, and book pages decorate the walls, chandeliers made of tap handles dangle overhead, booths constructed of concrete blocks & wood, while wood champagne racks hang above the boots and half oval-shaped wood bar the bar at Twain'swith sixteen padded backed chairs. The chandeliers, bar, and much of the artwork hanging on the walls was made by the brothers that own the bar’s retired physician father. The brewer, Jordan brewed at the defunct Dogwood Brewery. Seven of his beers were on tap: Sleepy Conscience ESB, mad Happy Pale Ale, Randalized Mad Happy (oak chips tonight), Irreverent Liberty IPA, Billiard Brown, 3 Lies Cocoa Stout, and Stormy’s Trippel Ale and one on cask, the Aptap handle chandelier at Twain'splewood aged Stout. My favorites were the ESB, very nice toasty aroma, light sweetness, nice biscuity/toasty flavor with bitterness increasing after the swallow, the Brown, beautiful toastiness, a sweet light molasses balanced with hop bitterness, and the stout with its big cocoa nose, roasty with more chocolate in the mouth and a nice bittering balance. I was underwhelmed by the pale ales and IPA, although they were all very drinkable, just not as impressive as the others. The tripel had fresh fruit and alcohol heat dominate the nose, honey and more fresh fruit and alcohol heat in the mouth and a pretty big body, a smooth beer at a whopping 12% ABV, would never have guessed it was that high. The cask was also a favorite, with tons of chocolate, dark fruit and a bit of heat in the nose, woody smokiness in the mouth, very flavorsome. Twain’s alsinside Twain'so offers 44 craft bottles and 5 micros. There’s a live music stage in the front, thirteen pool tables, two shuffleboard tables, four dart lanes, a foosball table and various arcade games for entertainment. Twain’s is a funky, comfy and spacious joint to hang out in, and with the fine quality of beer offered, a place I’d be hanging if I ever find myself living in AtlaBrick Store Pubnta again.

Brick Store Pub was calling, though, and we drove over, lucking out with a parking space out front. It should be noted that both Twain’s and Brick Store are within walking distance of the Decatur Marta station, making them even more attractive to a public transportation junkie like myself. This was my 4th or 5th visit to Brick Store and it was still as natty as on my first visit. You walk into a room with a two-story high dark ceiling with exposed brick walls on the right side, rough painted walls on the left, wood floors, wood tables and chairs up front and a large u-shaped bar with aroBrick Store Pub downstairsund sixteen stools in the back. Stairs to the left of the bar lead up to a small loft area overlooking the main room with more exposed brick and walls composed of wood doors, fitted with wood tables and chairs. Continue walking once you reach the top of the stairs, hang a left and you enter the Belgian bar and its adjoining room, low-ceiling with exposed rafter ceilings, more exposed brick, walls lined with doors, skylights, wood booths, tables and floors. The whole place is cozy, intriguing and utterly cool. We started at the bar upstairs but were quickly moved to a table. 25 draft beers are on offer, broken down into seventeen American craft and import from the downstairs bar and eight Belgian or Belgian-style from the upstairs bar plus around 200 bottles. Mom ordered a bottle of Troublette, Dad a cask Victory Storm King, JB a Flying Dog Gonzo Baltic Porter, and I a DeProef Signature Ale and a Schlenkerla Fest, completely breaking my local streak. The Signature was beautiful, sour, sweet, and fruity while the Schenkerla was Brick Store Pub upstairs barsmoky goodness. We ordered Brunswick Stew (a Southern specialty I don’t see much up north), soft pretzels, and a cheese plate, going local here as well, as all the cheeses were from Sweet Grass Dairy in Thomasville, Georgia: Green Hill double cream cow’s milk, Sevenwood 3 month aged raw cow’s milk and Georgia Pecan Chevre aged goat’s milk with organic pecans. Everything was yummy. Brick Store can get quite crowded, but that’s the only drawback as far as I’m concerned, it’s a must when in Atlanta!

Thirsty Monk outside On the road again, completely blew any notion of being healthful by breakfasting on two of these at Zack’s in Burlington, NC. I can’t resist a place that’s been around since 1928, though, and they were delicious, especially washed down with a bottle of Cheerwine. After visiting the Folk Art Center and checking into the hotel, we headed out for some beer. I couldn’t help but detouring to The Chocolate Fetish on the way to our first bar. We split two truffles as an “appetizer”, the Ancient Pleasures, a cayenne dark chocolate, and Dragon’s Kiss, a wasabi dark chocolate topped with white & black sesame seeds, both were delightful. We walked down to The Thirsty Monk, Asheville’s newest craft beer bar. I had learned about the Monk on the Asheville Beer Blog and was eager to check it out. Located in the back of the “purple building”, we walked down a long ramp running the length of the bar to enter. Housed in a deep rectangular shaped room with a high brown ceiling, cream painted walls, exposed stone, and classy light fixtures, Thirsty Monk is a warm, inviting inside the Thirsty Monkplace. A long wood bar on the right with sixteen padded captains’ chairs and chairs and tables in the back provide seating, fourteen taps, and a sizeable bottle cooler provide beverages. It was happy hour when we arrived (M-Th 4-6 pm, F-Sat midnight to 2 am), the cheese plate was discounted to $7 and all baguette sandwiches were only $4. JB and I ordered smoked trout sandwiches and I settled in to study the beer list. I settled on two small pours (or flights, as they call them) of the local Pisgah Solstice and Cuvee Angelique. Solstice is a tripel and simply delicious, with honey & fresh fruit in the nose and mouth but nicely balanced with some Thirsty Monk cooler hop bitterness, very nice. The Cuvee Angelique poured with a huge head, apricot aroma, bready maltiness, tinge of sour, and a sizeable amount of hop bitterness, also very good. The sandwiches arrived and we chowed down. Thirsty Monk uses a lot of local ingredients, including bread from City Bakery in downtown Asheville, spicy mustard from Lusty Monk, and trout from nearby Sunburst Farms. The sandwich was pure bliss. The Thirsty Monk would most definitely be one of my local hang-outs if I lived in Asheville and a fantastic start to our Asheville beer crawl, highly recommended for an Asheville visit.

Jack of the Wood We rounded the corner and crossed the street to Jack of the Wood Public House, purveyors of Green Man Ales. Also a very welcoming place, with a concrete floor, painted & exposed brick walls, U-shaped wood bar with sixteen padded wood captains’ chairs, lots of wood tables and chairs, and a mural on the back wall. Jack of the Wood is kind of a hippyish English pub that integrates itself perfectly into the vibe of Asheville. On draft, they were pouring six of the Green Man Ales, the Gold, Pale, IPA, ESB, Porter, and Abbey Ale, as well as Highland Gaelic, Pisgah Pale, Duck Rabbit Porter, Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, Harp and Guinness. I ordered the sampler and found all of the Green Man beers very nice, with the exception of the Jack of the Wood inside Abbey, which I found weak, although Vic enjoyed it. The Gold, ESB, and Porter were my favorites, the Gold a light, grainy, clean, almost Kolsch like beer, the ESB with biscuity/light toasty maltiness, some bitterness, easy drinking, and the porter lightly sweet, toasty, lightly roasty, with smooth milk chocolate flavor. I also tasted samples of the Pisgah Pale and Highlands Gaelic, both were top quality. I didn’t eat, but JB had the tasty potato and bacon chowder. Cool place.

French Broad Chocolate Lounge Our next stop was the French Broad Chocolate Lounge. I had first learned of French Broad chocolates at the Thirsty Monk, where they offer a chocolate plate containing three French Broad chocolates, one of which is specially designed to pair with Belgian ales at the Monk. I looked them up on the every-useful iPhone, found that they have a retail store/café dowtown with local draught beer on the menu, and added them to the crawl. They offer four Organic Pisgah beers on draught: the pale ale, porter, stout, and seasonal Solstice, a fantastic almost-all organic truffle selection, amazing desserts, and Pisgah a la mode, a stout float made with locally-produced Ultimate Ice Cream, as well as Ultimate’s Mocha Stout ice cream. The Chocolate Lounge is a very comfortable place, with sky blue walls and ceilings, lots French Broad Chocolate lounge insideof exposed brick, chocolate brown trimming, carpet, and leather chairs and wood tables. JB ordered a stout, I selected four truffles, the lemon pepper, Indian kulfi, maple, and mole negro, Vic & Sarah split the mocha stout ice cream and a pecan tart, and we sat down to enjoy. The truffles are to die for, wow! I could spend some serious time in here, as well. This is a must for any craft beer lover wanting to drink local, organic beer and nosh on some first-rate chocolates and desserts in a comfortable setting.

Asheville Brewing Company outside

The Asheville Brewing Company on Coxe Avenue was our next destination. Although the outside of the brewpub is rather nondescript, I was bowled over by the large outdoor area where movies, sporting events and the like are shown. The inside is very laid-back, with an L-shaped wood bar with backed wood chairs, latte-painted walls, concrete floors, and high-backed wood booths. Pewter club mugs haninside Asheville Brewing Companyg behind the bar and there is a separate back room with arcade games and tables and chairs. Five beers were on draft, my sampler was served in plastic cups, a drawback to the experience. Of the Rolands ESB, Ninja Porter, Scottish Brown, Shiva IPA, and Stout, the latter was my favorite, with nice depth of dried fruit, sourness, roastiness, a nice-drinking beer. We split a Moon Pie pizza which was quite good.brewing equipment at Green Man

We swung by the Green Man Brewing Company in hopes of a cask pour. Alas, no cask was on but we enjoyed pints of the porter and complimentary pretzels with the local Lusty Monk mustard. The brewery is located in an old garage and is a swell space with a small L-shaped bar with around ten seats, additional seats in front of the bar and a small outdoor patio in the tasting area, nicknamed “Dirty Jack’s”. Five beers were on tap, board games were on offer and soccer was playing on the TV above the bar. They’re open from 4-9 each weeknight evening, a cool haunt.

inside Barley's Taproom & Pizzeria Our last stop was Barley’s Taproom and Pizzeria. Housed in a former 1920’s appliance store, Barley’s is another impressive space, the downstairs room has very high tin ceilings, wood floors, breweriana on the walls, a gorgeous wood bar with captains’ chairs, and wood tables and chairs. They have 25 tap lines downstairs, all craft including quite a few locals. I started with a small pour of the Pisgah “Thank You” Brown ale, specially brewed for their third anniversary, a tasty brew with light brown sugar character, easy drinking. JB opted for the Highland Oatmeal Porter, Sarah had thupstairs beer list & taps at Barley'se Catawba Valley Blackwater Uber Pale Ale, at 9.2% ABV, brewed with five hop varieties and four malts, this is an intense potion, toasty, bitter and balanced. Vic had the French Broad Alt-Bier, a clean and biscuity drink. There is an upstairs room, with more high tin ceilings and wood floors, four pool tables, four dart boards, an L-shaped wood bar with 28 taps and coolers full of water for the taking. Vic’s French Broad Imperial Porter was excellent, very fruity and toasty/roasty in disposition.

small barbecue plate at Nunnery Freeman Up by nine, a run on the treadmill, then blogged Day 1, got to keep some balance on these beer trips. We were on the road by noon, stopping at the Dairy Freeze in McKenney for a snack. A late lunch was had at Nunnery Freeman Barbecue in Henderson, NC. No beer, but extremely tasty barbecue plates, with complimentary hush puppies to start. The green beans were delish aHorniblow's Tavernnd the fried okra was perfection. A bowl of homemade banana pudding finished off a very satisfying meal. Our first stop in Raleigh was Horniblow’s Tavern, home of Big Boss Brewing Company. They featured five beers on tap, the three full-time Angry Angel kölsch, Hell’s Belle Belgian Blonde, and Bad Penny Brown Ale, with two part-time, the Surrender Monkey Belgian farmhouse style and High Roller II, strong the selection at Horniblow's TavernAmerican IPA. I tried all of the beers as the bartender was generous with samples and all were good – interesting, clean, and appealing. I settled on a pint of Surrender Monkey, which is brewed with coriander and pepper, a smooth 8%, enjoyable brew. JB loved the Bad Penny enough to have two pints. Horniblow’s is a cool place, with a warren of upstairs rooms with comfy couches, a pool table, ping pong table, dart board, and board and arcade games. Beer bottles line the top of almost every room. Located in an industrial area, i has that feel and I found it to be a laid-back, comfortable place. Althe bar at Horniblow'sthough they don’t offer sampler flights, they pour pitchers and growler fills and sell 6-packs of the Hell’s Belle and Bad Penny. They have casks about twice a month and the most recent one lasted only 29 minutes, nice. Good schwag, too, I picked up a tee for myself and a pint glass for my Dad. Sirius 74 Blues was playing and I was one happy beer-drinking girl.

Flying Saucer interior We headed over to Vic’s, our home base while in Raleigh, and chilled for a bit. But craft beer was calling and we headed to the Flying Saucer for the pre-fest brewer’s party. I left JB & Vic on the patio and headed into the very crowded party. I met Julie Bradford, editor for All About Beer magazine, sponsor of the World Beer Festival that we would be attending on Saturday. She introduced me to her husband, Dan, publisher of the magazine. I spent most of the party talking to my friend Gregg Glaser, news editor of AAB. I enjoyed a pint of the Carolina Spring Bock, a nice Maibock rendition, followthe taps at the Flying Saucered by a Ham’s Pale Ale. Although I didn’t hang out inside, the Flying Saucer is an appealing place, the walls and ceiling lined with various plates as in the other Flying Saucers. The patio has picnic table seating and is a big draw in warm weather. I found the Beer Goddess tank tops and microskirts on the waitresses distasteful (exploitative, let’s be honest), but the guys disagreed, naturally. But the immense tap and bottle selection would bring me back next time I’m in town.

front door of the Raleigh Times We headed a few blocks over to The Raleigh Times for a late dinner. A very hip place, although a bit overdone in my opinion, the carefully peeled walls displaying different surfaces protected by sheets of plexiglass. Very appealing, though, the restaurant/bar is named for the defunct newspaper’s building where it is located. Old copies are tastefully displayed throughout the space. 80+ bottles and six taps are on offer, that night the bar at the Raleigh Timesbeing Big Boss Surrender Monkey, PBR, Brooklyn Extra Brune, Gaffel Kölsch, Maredsous 8, and Blanche de Bruxelles Witbier. I had a bottle of the Carolina Pale Ale, the tasty shrimp burger and the excellent housemade chips. I tasted Vic’s House-Cured Corned Beef Reuben, very nice. We finished up and headed home, stopping for a “hot now” fresh-off-the-conveyer-belt Krispy Kreme donut, a sweet ending to a great day.

Brewer's Alley On the road, day one of an eleven day journey, seeking the best local craft beer, art, food, and music. We left Harrisburg at 10 am and headed down to Frederick, Maryland for our first stop, lunch at Brewer’s Alley, arriving ten minutes before they opened at 11:30. We opted to sit at the bar, I ordered the sampler and JB the cask Trinity Stout. Brewer’s Alley serves six beers on tap: a kolsch, IPA, Oatmeal Stout, Pils, Nut Brown Ale and Dunkel Weizen. The IPA was my favorite, although more like a pale ale in character, it had a delightful citrus aroma and flavor and was nicely balanced. The the bar at Brewer's Alleyoatmeal stout and kolsch tied for second, the former displaying a roasty character and good balance between sweet and bitter flavors and the latter lightly fruity with clean grainy maltiness and a pleasant hops presence. I recommended the kolsch to Mary Kay, who is experiencing a burgeoning appreciation of craft beer, and she loved it. My six-beer 5 ounce sampler was $7.08

Brewer's Alley beer boardI’ll admit, I was expecting more interior personality being in the historic downtown of Frederick, but Brewer’s Alley is a swell place – worn wood floors, mustard colored walls, high ceilings, and exposed brick behind the brewing equipment, which is separated from the bar area by glass etched with beer sampler at Brewer's Alleyhop plants, a very cool touch. The u-shaped wood bar seats at least fourteen, with tables and chairs around. There’s a medium-sized dining room off to one side as well as a small front deck that overlooks Market Street.

My buffalo catfish po’boy special was quite tasty and JB declared the Smokehouse burger, a burger topped with applewood-smoked bacon and pulled pork, extremely good, while Mary Kay found the broccoli and cheese soup delicious. The Brewer’s Alley has a pleasant atmosphere and flavorsome food and beers, check it out next time you’re in Frederick, Maryland!

Legend Brewing Company outside Almost two hours later we pulled into Legend Brewing Company, just south of the James River and downtown Richmond. The spacious deck was calling and we took a seat at one of the many iron patio tables available. Six regular and five seasonal draft beers were on offer. I ordered a sampler of each and we relaxed and enjoyed the beautiful sprininterior at Legend Brewing Companyg weather. The year-round beers are a lager, pilsner, brown, golden, pale ale and porter, the current seasonals a Vienna Lager, Hefeweizen, Maibock, Doppelbock, and Imperial Brown. The lager was my favorite of the year-rounds, a very clean easy drink. The pilsner and brown were also tasty. The seasonals were where it was at, though; the Maibock was delish, with a lightly sweet grainy nose and flavor and a hint of honey on the tongue. The Imperial Brown and Doppelbock were very drinkable, the brown Legend beer samplerhaving a lot of depth, raisin/molasses and a good amount of hop bitterness to balance and the doppelbock very easy-drinking, a clean, toasty-sweet beer. We split a Munich Platter, which included a bratwurst, soft pretzel, and Gruyere cheese, the perfect late afternoon snack. The deck is the draw here, with at least 27 tables and a scenic view of downtown Richmond, the perfect place tothe fab deck at Legend Brewing spend a 79º breezy Spring afternoon. The inside seems cool, too, with a beer hall feeling – lots of light-colored wood, high ceilings, and a spacious feeling. Classic rock was playing, adding to the laid-back atmosphere. Legends is located in a former machine shop in an industrial-type area. If I lived in Richmond, I’d be hanging out on the deck sipping a Maibock or a lager many an afternoon.

Capital Ale House front After checking into the hotel and some freshening up, we walked two blocks to Capital Ale House for dinner. We sat ourselves at the impressively long L-shaped wood bar stretched along the left side. I’d first heard about this bar from my parents, who were awed by the ice strip that runs along the length of the bar to keep your drinks cool. This was not a selling point for me and I didn’t find it very effective at keeping my water cool, bCapital Ale House beer coolerut it’s a draw for many. An inviting atmosphere, the deep room has lots of wood – wainscoting, trim above the bar, and the booths lining the right side. Historic prints add a nice touch. JB ordered the Blue Grass Jefferson Reserve Imperial Stout from Kentucky, at 10.5%, a deliciously smooth, complex example of the stylethe taps at Capital Ale House. I opted for a bottle of the St George Brewing Company Spring Lager, a Vienna-style lager that was quite pleasurable, clean with a lot of malty flavor. I started with a house salad with a savory dill-blue cheese dressing and followed with the smoked gouda-bacon mussels – light yet hearty and very satisfying. JB devoured his sausage-stuffed pretzel sandwich. Capital Ale House has 2 cask ales and JB opted for onmussels at Capital Ale Housee of these for his second. I was remiss in writing it down, but it was a delicious IPA from a Virginia brewery. Capital Ale House has 46 taps total, between the main bar and the downstairs game room and around 250 bottles. Great live music was playing the in the side room while we were there and drawing a lot of people in. The place can get a little noisy and smoky, but with the classy yet comfortable atmosphere, terrific beer selection, and delightful food, this is a must on any visit to Richmond.one corner of Richbrau

the bar at Richbrau Brewing Company I was pretty beat at this point, but we forged on to Richbrau Brewing Company, an easy walk from Capital Ale House. This was the coolest space – with an exposed wood rafter ceiling, lots of exposed brick, a metal-topped wood bar, old-fashioned tall windows, and interesting beer memorabilia on the walls.beer board at Richbrau My palette wasn’t the best by now, but I wasn’t impressed with either the golden or the pale. The E.S. Kelly’s Springtime Stout was a solid drink, as well as the Winter Warmer on tap. The cask Winter Warmer had gone south, tasting more like a sour fruit ale than the nice malty beer that we had just had. JB finished with a pint of the house root beer, a delectable drink. Overall, worth the stop, but be sure to ask for samples before you order your pint.

Ryan & Paul installing the cask engineI was fortunate to catch the installation of a new cask engine at Iron Hill Brewery in Lancaster yesterday. We stopped in for a beer (or a sampler of 10 as it were) and head brewer Paul Rutherford and assistant brewer Ryan Wibby expertly placed the real ale dispenser as we watched.
A pint of Russian Imperial Stout was poured and proclaimed quite tasty. Our enthusiasm must have shown (we were taking a lot of photos) and we were lucky enough to be recipients of that pint. Three cheers for one more cask engine in Pennsylvania!Iron Hill Brewery building

This was my second visit to the newest Iron Hill and I was even more impressed this time than the last. Our first visit was on Superbowl (“the big game”) Sunday and they were a bit short on beer. The bartender said that he had poured at least 30 growlers already and it was only 3 in the afternoon! It is wonderful to see such local support for a brewpub. And what a brewpub; it’s a beautiful building with lots of dark wood paneling & tables, blonde wood floors,and funky sound-absorbing ceilings that give the whole place a modern mission feel, upscale yet still very comfortable. Iron Hill samplerAnd the beers are great. My ten beer sampler ($7) contained the five standards: Iron Hill Light Lager, Raspberry Wheat, Vienna Red Lager, Ironbound Ale, and Pig Iron Porter, plus the Belgian seasonal, a tripel, and four seasonals, the American Brown Ale, Munich Dunkel, Irish Red, and Indulgence Chocolate Stout, the latter two poured on nitro. All were quite drinkable (yeah, even the light), with most being in the excellent category.
Iron Hill brewery bar
The American Brown, Munich Dunkel, and Tripel were my favorites. The Indulgence was quite nice, a little light but with a significant chocolate character, as expected being brewed with five pounds of Venezuelan chocolate nibs. the beer board at Iron Hill Brewery The Russian Imperial Stout on cask, was excellent, although I’ll admit my palate was a bit blown at this point. No food this time as we’d eaten earlier, but I loved the Pesto Chicken and Artichoke pizza I had on my first visit. All of the employees are well-trained and very friendly, the server who explained my sampler had taken part in Iron Hill’s brew-for-a-day program and was very enthusiastic and proud of all of the beer. The Iron Hill Brewery of Lancaster is highly recommended, a comfortable environment with delicious beer & food, what more could you ask for? Go, please.

Iron Hill Brewery
781 Harrisburg Pike
Lancaster, PA 17603
Phone 717 291.9800
Monday-Sunday: 11 am-Close

thursday-signs.jpgI recently traveled with four friends to Portland, Oregon on a beer trip. Three of us (Slander, Ken, & me) flew in late Wednesday night. I watched the movie American Beer on my Mac on the plane – a very entertaining film that I highly recommend all craft beer lovers watch. Check out the website for a clip. It was the perfect way to start a beer trip. baron-brews.jpgDavo met us at the hotel (as he had been beering it up in California and Seattle for the previous 5 days) with two chilled bottles from Baron Brewing Company in Seattle. The Helles Bock and Uber-Weisse weizenbock were both very nice – and perfect after the 5 1/2 hour flight! I preferred the helles, which was very clean with a nice caramel-toffee maltiness, lightly sweet, bittering a bit at the end – quite refreshing. The weizenbock was quality, but a bit too smoky for my particular tastes (I really respect the smoked beers, but just don’t love them). Our friend Jon picked us up the next day for our pub crawl. johns-marketplace-outside.jpgWe started at John’s Marketplace, a beer/wine/grocery store. johns-marketplace-inside.jpgI had brought my friend Warren’s beer suitcase (a brilliant piece of luggage for anyone travelling with beer or wine or liquor) and filled it up with West Coast beers that can’t be found in NYC. We also picked up a few bottles to enjoy at the hotel, of course.

old-lompoc-outside.jpg Back in the car and on to our first brewpub, New Old Lompoc. Located in Portland’s Northwest district, the current New Old Lompoc has been open since 2000 and brewing beer since 1996. old-lompoc-mosaic.jpgUpon entering, a beautiful hop mosaic (created by one of the bartenders) above the bar caught my eye. We sat in the room to the right of the bar area – bare wood floors, casual chairs, tables, and booths, old pictures and ads on the walls, and a high shelf lined with beer bottles give this brewpub a comfortable, laid back feel. old-new-lompoc-inside.jpgSlander and I split the sampler (key to making it through an all-day brewpub crawl)new-old-lompoc-sampler.jpg NOL brews eight of their own beers and features six guest tap. The sampler was $6.50 and included the seven in-house beers available and one guest, Caldera Dry Hop Orange. Our friendly waitress gave also gave us a sample of the Caldera Pilsener Bier. We tried the Fool’s Golden Ale, Parliament Red, Sockeye Cream Stout, Condor Pale Ale, Centennial IPA, Lompoc Strong Draft(LSD), and the C-Note. All excellent, but my favorites were the Sockeye (creamy, roasty, sweet, very smooth), the Condor (citrusy, biscuity, subtle yet tasty), and the LSD (malty, toasty, some smoke in the back, complex yet easy to drink). Both Caldera’s were also good. new-old-lompoc-hop-vines.jpgSlander and I split the French Dip(eating a bit at every place, another key to my lasting all-day), which was quite tasty – the gorgonzola used adds a whole new dimension. The house-made lemon basil vinaigrette on the accompanying salad was delicious. I admired the spacious back deck after I finished and the wall of hop vines growing back there. New Old Lompoc is a must for a Portland brewpub crawl.

luckylabradorinside.jpgLucky Labrador Brew Hall was a short walk. The brew hall is a large, garage-style space, with a very long back counter where you order and pick up your beer and food. luckylabchalkboard.jpgA terrific hand-drawn chalkboard behind the counter displays the beers available. 1/4 pint samples are $1.25 each – Slander and I ordered five and took a seat at the family-style tables. We tried the Hellesaurus Rex, Crazy Ludwig’s Alt, Stumptown Porter, Wheat Stout, 5-ton Strong, Bike Route Rye, and Triple Threat on nitro (thanks to Jon for sharing). luckylaboutsideseating.jpgMy favorites were the Hellesaurus (sweet maltiness, a bit grainy, clean), the 5-ton (intense citrus/pine/floral hoppiness and sweet clean maltiness in the aroma and flavor), and the Triple Threat (all piney/citrusy hoppiness with some sweet maltiness to back it up). A bowl of roasted peanuts was eaten. Lucky Lab also has a side room with more seating and a nice outside area (complete with hop vines and recycled keg planters). Darts are available as well as a few board games. A cool place.

laurelwoodoutside.jpgAnother short walk brought us to Laurelwood NW Public House. laurelwoodchalkboard.jpgSet in a lovely house built in 1902 with wood floors, a fireplace, natural lighting, and a great color scheme (golds, oranges, brick reds) the public house is a cheerful, charming place. A hand-written chalkboard by the bar displays the available beers (brewed at their other two locations). Slander and I again split the sampler, 8 beers for $8.00. laurelwood-sampler.jpgWe enjoyed the Mother Lode Golden, Ettinger Amber Bier, Organic Free Range Red, Organic Tree Hugger Porter, Space Stout, Hooligan Brown, Piston Pale Ale, and Boss IPA. laurelwoodbar.jpgAll were excellent, but my favorites were the Hooligan Brown (toasty melanoidins with coffee in the back), Tree Hugger (toasty with some roast, malty, bittering a bit at the end), and Space Stout (roasty coffee aroma and flavor, dry, licorice in the back). laurelwood-upper-deck.jpgWe also enjoyed an order of the garlic fries (delicious). The Public House also has an upstairs seating area with an outdoor balcony as well as a front deck. The service was excellent. Laurelwood is another must when in Portland.

amnesia-outside.jpgA drive across the river brought us to Amnesia Brewing. amnesia-inside.jpg
Set in a converted warehouse, Amnesia’s high ceilings, wood bar, chalkboards, and varnished picnic tables under a large outside tent give it an eclectic and laid-back vibe. We again split the sampler and took a seat outside. We drank the ESB, Summer Ale, Dusty Trail Pale, Desolation IPA, Copacetic IPA, plus the Laurelwood Porter, as they were out of theirs.amnesia-welcome-sign.jpg All were drinkable, but we found them to be quite similar in taste. My favorites were the ESB (more hoppy than a traditional one) and the Copacetic (Amarillo goodness). We also shared a hearty sausage appetizer, which included 2 sausages cooked on the outdoor grill, bread, cheese, and pickles. I was digging the board welcoming Oregon Brew Fest attendees (especially since we were going the next day). Amnesia has free wi-fi and an altogether chill feel.

roots-inside1.jpgroots-outside.jpgOur last brewpub of the day was the all-organic Roots Brewing Company. Decorated in the spirit of the islands, Roots has green walls hung with interesting artwork and island memorabilia, a wood bar with mini-surfboards for taps, and picnic tables – yet another cool place! Surprise – we split the sampler, 7 for $7.00. We supped the Gruit Kolsch, Burghead Heather Ale, Island Red, Exxxcalibur Stout, Roots Rye, Woody IPA, and Snake Bite. roots-sampler.jpgroots-mosaic.jpgAll were quite good, favorites were the Gruit (all herb/spice in the nose and on the tongue, ta-sty) and the Roots Rye (nicely spicy). Slander and I split the jerk rubbed smoked pork wrap, yum. Roots brews on-premises in side and back rooms. A marvelous place – free wi-fi, unusual beer styles executed well, all organic beers and good food. Another must-hit Portland brewpub.

horse-brass-outside.jpgHorse Brass Pub was our next destination. horse-brass-inside2.jpgWow – walking in, I felt like I was back in London (it reminded me a bit of Market Porter, actually). This is a fascinating place – the walls and ceiling practically drip with English paraphanalia, the L-shaped wood bar is massive, it’s a big place with a completely cozy feeling. Very English and way cool. Horse Brass features 55 taps and 5 cask ales. I ordered a glass of the Caldera Exotic Erotic Passion Fruit Ale (I needed something light at that point) – quite nice, very refreshing with a natural passion fruit flavor.horse-brass-inside.jpg I also tasted Slander’s Walking Man Cherry Stout, Full Sail’s Son of Spot IPA, and Ninkasi Brewing’s Total Damnation IPA (we’re a sharing group). I didn’t order food here, but shared Ken’s Fish & Chips and Davo’s Scotch Egg. Everything was good. Yeah, you guessed it, another must-see.

belmont-station-outside.jpg A few blocks over to Belmont Station, which previously resided next door to Horse Brass. Belmont is both a beer bar and store. belmont-inside.jpg We entered via the bar room, and I promptly ordered the New Belgium Eric’s Lips of Faith Sour Peach (oh, yeah, a beautiful sour ale). Belmont Station has four drafts in the cafe and over 800 bottled beers and ciders, as well as wine and sake, in the store – an impressive place. We wandered around for a bit, picking up a few more bottles and some English chocolates. Nifty place.

concordia-outside.jpgconcordia-bar-area.jpgConcordia Ale House was our last stop of the evening. We walked into a room that felt a little like a giant shoebox, then back into the sophisticated yet intimate bar area. The high ceiling and shelves of extra tap handles on the right wall are nice touches. We chose our beer (22 taps and a lot of bottles in a glass-front cooler behind the bar) concordia-tap-handles.jpgand retired to the the long and narrow side game room (pool tables and several arcade games). I chose the Deschutes 19th Anniversary Golden Ale, their first Belgian-style ale. concordia-beer-cooler.jpgI found it imperfect but drinkable, a nice fresh fruitiness but a lot of alcohol heat and a bit rough around the edges, concordia-pool-room.jpgwhich will probably change with age (everyone else either liked it or hated it, interestingly). I ordered the enticing mussels appetizer (the rest of the food menu looked equally tempting) and ate while the guys played games. Sated, stuffed, and completely satisfied with the Portland pub scene, we headed back to the hotel for a good night’s sleep.

New Old Lompoc
1616 NW 23rd Ave
503.225.1855

Open M-Sat 11 am-1 am, Sun 11 am-midnight

2 other Portland locations: The Hedge House and 5Q

Lucky Labrador Brew Hall
1945 NW Quimby
503.517.4352

Open M 11am-10 pm, Tu-Sat 11 am-midnight, Sun noon-10 pm

2 other Portland locations: Lucky Lab Brew Pub and Lucky Lab Public House

Laurelwood NW Public House
2327 NW Kearney St
503.228.5553

M-Sun 11 am-11 pm

2 other Portland locations: Laurelwood Public House & Brewery and Laurelwood Pizza Co

Amnesia Brewing
832 N Beech St
503.281.7708

M-Thu 2 pm-11 pm, F-Sun noon-midnight

Roots Brewing Company
1520 SE 7th
Portland, Oregon
503.235.7668

M-Th 3 pm-11 pm, F 3 pm-midnight, Sat noon-1 am, Sun noon-10 pm

Horse Brass Pub
4534 SE Belmont
503.232.2202

M-F 11 am-2:30 am, Sat & Sun 10 am-2:30 am

Belmont Station
4500 SE Stark St
503.232.8538

store hours: M-W 10 am-10 pm, Th-Sat 10 am-11 pm, Sun noon-9 pm
cafe hours: M-W noon-10 pm, Th-Sat noon-11 pm, Sun noon-9 pm

Concordia Ale House
3276 NE Killingsworth St
503.287.3929

M-F 11:30 am-2:30 am, Sat 9 am-2:30 am, Sun 9 am-midnight

(All in Portland, Oregon)

Worked all day. Upon exiting the convention center, I noticed a brick building with Steam Whistle Brewing Steam Whistlein big letters. Brewing? Hmm, that’s not one of the ones on my list. Let’s go check it out. I dragged two coworkers along. We walked into the crowded doorway and were handed 2 tasting tickets. Walked up to the bar and were given 2 plastic cups of Steam Whistle, Canada’s Premium Pilsner. They went down easy enough – a smooth, refreshing pilsner, and were on our way back to the hotel to change for dinner (group dinner: excellent steak, but alas, no decent beer).

After dinner, I headed to the distillery district and Mill Street Brewpub. There was a line to get a table, but plenty of seats at the bar. The bartender gave me a small sample of their kriek in a small plastic cup as I sat down. They don’t have a sampler, but the bartender was generous with the samples after I asked (in glass, instead of plastic). I had 11 drafts and 1 cask. I’ll highlight some of my favorites: the Tankhouse Ale was light amber and clear, with a floral, orange blossom, citrus aroma and the same flavor and a nice biscuity maltiness to back it up. The Coffee Porter was a dark brown, with a huge tight tan head, roasted coffee predominating in the nose, excellent roasted coffee tones, bittering slightly at the end, with a sweet maltiness underlying and rounding out the flavor profile. I found the Mill Street Pilsner to have a clean, grainy sweet aroma, same in the flavor with a bit of hop spice, a well-balanced pilsner. The ESB had biscuity maltiness in the aroma, with some herbal hoppiness as well. It was light-bodied, with a nice biscuity maltiness, bittering nicely at the end, quite balanced, with some clean sweetness. Their lightest offering is the Original Organic Lager, which I think is very cool – at least the light beer crowd is drinking organic at Mill Street. Mill Street barThe wood bar at Mill St seats about 13, set in a large lofty brick space. The brewing equipment is in a glassed-off area in the middle of the room, hockey was playing on the 2 flat screens in the bar area, with several more flat screens scattered throughout the restaurant. Pop music from the 60s to now was playing, and the lighting is diverse and relaxed. There’s also a retail store where you can buy beer and schwag. A comfortable place. And the Distillery District is very cool – lots of shops, galleries, restaurants, etc in a historic and interesting location.

Steam Whistle Brewing
The Roundhouse
255 Bremner Blvd
nearest station: Union, walk west on Front St, south on York, west on Bremner. You’ll see the Roundhouse at the end of the park.
Open noon-6 pm Monday-Saturday, noon-5 on Sunday

Mill Street Brewpub
55 Mill St, Bldg 63
Directions to the Distillery District can be found on their website.