• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Your Favorite Local Breweries

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
St. Louis:

2nd Shift - They make really good beer in a boatload of styles from pils to BA stouts to funky stuff. The people there are great and they don't take themselves too seriously. The food at the taproom is killer too.

Urban Chestnut - Consistently perfect mostly German styles. Zwickel, Stammtisch, and their Oktoberfest are regular staples in my fridge. Both taproom locations have good food as well.

Civil Life - Sessionable English styles, nice little taproom they are about to expand. Their brown ales are the best I've had.
 
Coors - Ten minutes from home. Great tour with free beer at the end. Secret is that you don’t have to go on the tour. Just go to the check-in for the tour, tell them you just want to go straight to the free beer, and they give a different wrist band then point you on your way.

I went there ~20 years ago and I remember two things. One, my aunt who I was with was very cool with my newly turned 21 self getting buzzed. It was the first time I legally drank in front of any family and it was so chill. And two, the only other people in the room with us was a group of 7 or 8 biker skinheads. They were very pleasant but had no shame in showing off their swastikas. Good times.
 
Quebec Canada
--------

Here is a few of the Quebec local breweries that I recommend. I am pretty sure the other TB from Quebec would recommend the same

- Pit Caribou:
First Quebec brewery to experiment with spontaneous beer. They do really go barrel-aged stuff (mostly sour/saison). Their regular stuff is also really well made.

- Harricana: In Montreal. Really good and creative stuff

Also: Auval, Dunham & Castor
 
St. Louis:

2nd Shift - They make really good beer in a boatload of styles from pils to BA stouts to funky stuff. The people there are great and they don't take themselves too seriously. The food at the taproom is killer too.

Urban Chestnut - Consistently perfect mostly German styles. Zwickel, Stammtisch, and their Oktoberfest are regular staples in my fridge. Both taproom locations have good food as well.

Civil Life - Sessionable English styles, nice little taproom they are about to expand. Their brown ales are the best I've had.

Never been to 2nd Shift, but really enjoyed my visits to Urban Chestnut (6 or so years ago) and Civil Life (last year). Civil Life is the kind of place I would go all the time if it was in my city.
 
Civil Life - Sessionable English styles, nice little taproom they are about to expand. Their brown ales are the best I've had.

Been meaning to ask, so now's as good a time as any....do they package at all? Growlers?

I may have mentioned, one of my coworkers with me on that trip is a home brewer and he freaked out over their brown ale that was on at Narrow Gauge - I think he alternated 1 NG 1 Civil Life brown the whole time we were there.
 
That Civil Life brown ale was on draft at Spacebar in the DC area last time I was up that way, fantastic beer.

Been meaning to ask, so now's as good a time as any....do they package at all? Growlers?

I may have mentioned, one of my coworkers with me on that trip is a home brewer and he freaked out over their brown ale that was on at Narrow Gauge - I think he alternated 1 NG 1 Civil Life brown the whole time we were there.

The food at Narrow Gauge (Cugino's or whatever the attached Italian restaurant is called) is so good.
 
Been meaning to ask, so now's as good a time as any....do they package at all? Growlers?

I may have mentioned, one of my coworkers with me on that trip is a home brewer and he freaked out over their brown ale that was on at Narrow Gauge - I think he alternated 1 NG 1 Civil Life brown the whole time we were there.
They usually have cans available at the brewery. When they finish their expansion they should start to distro more than just kegs. I'll let you know when I go next and I can grab whatever you want.
 
Wish we had a decent brewery or taproom. My favorite semi-local brewery (from a nearby city so not exactly local) is draft only in a few select restaurants so I rarely drink it unfortunately. They don't have their own taproom yet. They only bottle their beer about every 3-4 months so I make sure to load up when they do, I just loaded up last week in fact so I'm currently happy.
 
Green Bay:


Titletown - The one place everyone recommends out-of-towners should visit. on the river. in an old train depot and they pay homage to it. separate tap room across the lot from the main/original spot. beers are just meh across the board. in all my years drinking there i've had maybe 1 or 2 that really did it for me. everything tastes the same to me.

These are the delusional ramblings of a man who smoked way too much crack. "Everything tastes the same to me" tells you everything you need to know.
 
These are the delusional ramblings of a man who smoked way too much crack. "Everything tastes the same to me" tells you everything you need to know.

let's do a blind tasting. i bet you couldn't pick the witbier out from the pale ale from the rauchbier.



















because i'm going to cut your tongue out first
 
Happy to respond here as well. Two breweries in Louisville that, I think, will be viewed among the best in the state within a couple of years:

Mile Wide- I love their mix of everyday beer and their attention to detail on their more limited offerings. Noteworthy among the former is their McPoyle Milk Stout, Leroy Brown Ale, Idlewild (an IPA with a rotating hop each batch) and Wooderson (a smoked beer with a mesquite thing going on). Their recent Saison, Chair Lift, is one of the better American examples I've had in the last few years.

Gravely- As we speak, they have twelve taps of their beer on at their brewpub, and in twelve different styles. Who does that right now? Nobody else in KY at least. I get instantly excited when a new brewery can make an able Pils or Vienna right along with their APAs, etc. and Gravely accomplishes that exceptionally well for a young brewery.
 
Raleigh/Durham

Brewery Bhavana - they are making some great under the radar saisons that really don't get the love they deserve. Their hoppy beers are also great for the most part. Will certainly be looking to BiF some of these beers in the future. They also get credit for having an amazing kitchen, if you can ever get a table.

Casita Cerverceria - he's gypsy brewing at Duck Rabbit, but has been turning out some delicious beers of just about any style. He has made some great IPA, lagers, and I'm sure most have heard of Southward. I'm really looking forward to what he does.

Trophy - they have had great IPAs for awhile. The brewery is always packed, but that's assisted by the great pizza they have. Need to revisit them soon.

Under the radar but likely going to explode in 2019 is White Elephant. They are in podunk NC, but the beers I have had from them have always been extremely well executed for the style. They are really killing it and have started barrel aging. I'm hoping they are the next great thing to come out of North Carolina.

Overrated category includes Fonta Flora and most of the breweries in Durham. Fonta has been entirely too inconsistent and some of their beers just end up tasting like pickle juice. Their is a terrible issue with their customer service and I've also heard that their membership is entirely too disorganized.

Thought I would love but ended up disliking - Barrel Culture - I was super excited to have a local brewery that was trying to go after the same styles as Casey. After all, the brewmaster was obsessed with what Troy has been doing. What we ended up with is a bunch of overfruited and throat burning sours that are barrel aged for about 25 days. Don't even get me started on their hashtag game and their amazingly terrible use of adjuncts in beers that end up making them unbalanced messes. The membership club is terribly organized and their brewery seems to lack any direction for the future. The worst part is that the owners are great people that are genuinely awesome people to grab a beer with. I just wish the brewers would stop chasing the new fad and get back to brewing beers that have some sort of nuance.
 
Overrated category includes Fonta Flora and most of the breweries in Durham. Fonta has been entirely too inconsistent and some of their beers just end up tasting like pickle juice. Their is a terrible issue with their customer service and I've also heard that their membership is entirely too disorganized.

I've only had 2 beers from them and I saw the inconsistency. One was one of the best and most well balanced sours I've had in a long time (a sour pancake Kvass with maple syrup...sounds dumb as hell but holy ****, it blew me away). The other tasted like burnt plastic.
 
The "pickle juice" thing seems to have to do with the malt they are using, or maybe the combo of that malt with the yeast. It's pervasive across almost all of Fonta Flora's beers, or at least the saisons/wilds/etc. I definitely like some of what they are doing, but there's for sure inconsistencies and their fart-huffing social media presence doesn't help. Their incensed reaction when people questioned the original pricing structure of their club being a good example, there was a spicy thread on the BA South Atlantic forum about that with a lot of unwarranted defensiveness.
 
The "pickle juice" thing seems to have to do with the malt they are using, or maybe the combo of that malt with the yeast. It's pervasive across almost all of Fonta Flora's beers, or at least the saisons/wilds/etc. I definitely like some of what they are doing, but there's for sure inconsistencies and their fart-huffing social media presence doesn't help. Their incensed reaction when people questioned the original pricing structure of their club being a good example, there was a spicy thread on the BA South Atlantic forum about that with a lot of unwarranted defensiveness.

Plus making members renew before getting a single member beer (which all ended up being blends of beers they already produce) is ****** behavior. They also refused to acknowledge the Urban Monk infection and were late to acknowledge Sal. Their handling of Zwanze was my final straw with them. I won't buy another beer from them, but plenty of others will.
 
Not too much here for me in Wienerville, MD (Census designated location).

Realerevival Brewing aka RAR: First things first, this is one of the dumbest brewery names ever. They are pretty much known as RAR (rawr) now, and seem to have all but abandoned whatever Realerevival was. This is probably the closest brewery to me, and it also happens to be one of the two or three "it" breweries in Maryland (along with Burley Oak, which is slightly too far to include on this list for me). They follow the nu-money brewery model that is popular right now - Hazy IPAs and Kettle Sours. I think most hazy IPAs taste exactly the same outside of the few breweries that really transcend the style (Hill Farmstead, Trillium, Transient, Brew Gentlemen, etc.). These guys are no different. If you like hazy IPA, you'll like these guys. If you like kettle sours with a bunch of lactose and fruit, you'll like these guys. For me, I do really enjoy their Pales and lower-abv IPAs. That's their sweet-spot. Once they approach and exceed 8%, their beers just drink way too sweet for my liking.

Evolution Brewing: This brewery is not flashy at all, but may be my favorite in MD. They make a couple of good IPAs (Lot 3 and Lot 6) that are sort of in the "2010" realm of IPAs with a bit of crystal, but they avoid being overly sweet. They make a Chardonnay Barrel-Aged Saison that is absolutely crushable when the batch is on. Where they really get their money from me is with their Rise Up Stout and Delmarva Pure Pils. Rise Up Stout is a <7% Coffee Stout. But it is just about perfect. Lots of coffee, perfect stout underneath, and no green pepper or charred character. The Pils did well in Paste's blind Pilsner ranking - which means jack **** - but it's nice to have such a good local Pils readily accessible. No lactose necessary.


Union Brewing and Burley Oak are both ~1 hour away, which pushes the "local" thing a little too far. I enjoy both of them, as well.
 
Union Brewing and Burley Oak are both ~1 hour away, which pushes the "local" thing a little too far. I enjoy both of them, as well.

Union's variants on their Old Pro gose - the Older Pro that's barrel-aged with various fruits and the Tee Time versions that are designed to taste like fruited iced teas - are absolutely phenomenal beers.
 
Union's variants on their Old Pro gose - the Older Pro that's barrel-aged with various fruits and the Tee Time versions that are designed to taste like fruited iced teas - are absolutely phenomenal beers.
I went to their 5th anny party last summer and drank soooooooooo much of their fruited goses and BA BWs
 
Evolution Brewing: This brewery is not flashy at all, but may be my favorite in MD. They make a couple of good IPAs (Lot 3 and Lot 6) that are sort of in the "2010" realm of IPAs with a bit of crystal, but they avoid being overly sweet. They make a Chardonnay Barrel-Aged Saison that is absolutely crushable when the batch is on. Where they really get their money from me is with their Rise Up Stout and Delmarva Pure Pils. Rise Up Stout is a <7% Coffee Stout. But it is just about perfect. Lots of coffee, perfect stout underneath, and no green pepper or charred character. The Pils did well in Paste's blind Pilsner ranking - which means jack **** - but it's nice to have such a good local Pils readily accessible. No lactose necessary

really enjoyed that pils when I was down last summer and their food was pretty dope, at least for this landlocked old bay lover. nearly made myself sick by eating an idiotic amount of shrimp and crab.
 
Back
Top