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North America

Brewpub entertainment in North America

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of 2

  1. A

    Snake River Brewing Co

    With an arsenal of 22 microbrews made on the spot, some award-winning, it's no wonder that this is a favorite rendezvous spot. Food includes wood-fired pizzas and pasta (mains $6 to $15). Happy hour is from 4pm to 6pm.

    reviewed

  2. Belmont Station

    Excellent rotating taps in a simple café. Attached to one of the city's best bottle shops.

    reviewed

  3. B

    Green Dragon

    Owned by Rogue Breweries, but serves 49 guest taps in an echoey east-side warehouse.

    reviewed

  4. C

    Upright Brewing

    Basement brewery with intimate tasting room for sampling farmhouse-inspired ales. Only open Friday to Sunday.

    reviewed

  5. Northampton Brewery

    On a sunny day you'll find half of Northampton chugging ales on the rooftop beer garden at New England's oldest microbrewery.

    reviewed

  6. D

    Widmer Gasthaus

    In a trendy industrial area in the north, this yuppified brewery-restaurant offers very tasty beers – some available only here. Their Hefeweizen (unfiltered wheat beer) is a good choice, and goes well with the schnitzel. Widmer Gasthaus has weekend tours, and sports on TV, and it's close to live music at the White Eagle.

    reviewed

  7. E

    Denver Chophouse & Brewery

    Chophouse brews are mostly European in style – pilsner, ales and lagers – and there's a good American pale ale. The Chophouse Brewery has sites in Boulder, Cleveland and Washington DC.

    reviewed

  8. F

    Gritty McDuff's

    This Old Port brewpub has it all: harbor views, high energy, good pub grub and award-winning ales. Order up a robust pint of Black Fly stout and join the crowd.

    reviewed

  9. G

    Big Time Microbrew & Music

    A fun hangout in the U District, this expansive brewpub is quiet and casual in the daytime, but gets hopping at night. During the school year, it can be crowded with students still testing out their alcohol limits.

    reviewed

  10. H

    Steelhead Brewing Co

    Classic, award-winning brewpub with all the usual suspects on the menu, plus around a dozen homemade brews including seasonal and dark beers, plus a raspberry ale. Bottoms up.

    reviewed

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  12. I

    Walnut Brewery

    A hangar-sized sports bar and brewery that crafts and serves seven varieties of microbrew, ranging from golden pilsners to midnight stouts. It also serves liquor, has all the ball games on flat screens, and serves decent pub grub.

    reviewed

  13. J

    BridgePort Brewpub

    Almost too-fancy brewery with bakery, espresso bar, atrium and rooftop bar. Also at 3632 SE Hawthorne Blvd.

    reviewed

  14. K

    Breckenridge Blake St Pub

    Blake St is home to the, ah, Breckenridge Blake St Pub, also known as the Breckenridge Ball Park Brewpub. Breckenridge's portfolio of beers is long and includes an unusual vanilla porter. The Trademark American pale ale is the signature brew and probably a good place to start.

    reviewed

  15. Iron Horse Brewpub

    Rather swanky for a brewpub, the Iron Horse includes a plush upstairs bar complete with a saltwater aquarium. It's popular with students for its microbrews and traditional American pub grub.

    reviewed

  16. L

    Uptown Brothers Brewery

    When we checked in, the Brothers were just getting their brewing operation off the ground, but looking at their selection of taps and bottles gives us high hopes. The menu? More of the typical bar food standards. Come here to drink and wander around Colfax to work up an appetite.

    reviewed

  17. M

    Elliott Bay Brewery & Pub

    Long and narrow, with a loft at the back of the room and a beer garden outdoors, this comfortable brewpub makes a nice retreat after a day at Alki Beach. Pub food emphasizes organic, locally sourced ingredients and includes monthly specials. There are always two cask-conditioned beers available.

    reviewed

  18. N

    Dad Watson’s Restaurant & Brewery

    Fremont’s representative of the McMenamins brewpub chain, headquartered in Portland, has worn wooden booths and a big open dining room with a long, crescent-shaped bar; despite its spaciousness, the place feels warm and cozy. Signature burgers like the Captain Neon ($8.95) complement McMenamins microbrews – try the Hammerhead.

    reviewed

  19. O

    Great Divide Brewing Company

    This excellent local brewery does well to skip the same-old burger menu and the fancy digs to keep their focus on what they do best: crafting exquisite beer. Bellying up to the bar, looking onto the copper kettles and sipping Great Divide’s spectrum of seasonal brews is an experience that will make a beer drinker's eyes alight.

    reviewed

  20. P

    Hale’s Brewery & Pub

    Nestled between Fremont and Ballard, Hale’s makes some fantastic beer, most notably its ambrosial Cream Ale. But its flagship brewpub feels a bit like a corporate hotel lobby. It’s worth a quick stop, though; ask the friendly staff about the personalized mugs hanging above the bar. There’s a miniature self-guided tour in the entryway.

    reviewed

  21. Q

    Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery

    Drinkers are met with the gleaming stainless sheen of brew kettles as they enter this chain brewpub, perched on the prime real estate of the 16th St Mall. It’s outgrown 'micro' status and is not so hot compared to smaller craft brewers in the region, but the award-winning Red Rock Red and people-watching from the patio make for a pleasant afternoon.

    reviewed

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  23. R

    Breckenridge Brewery

    With seven malty aromatic brews being cooked up in the kettles directly behind the bar, you know what this is all about. When we visited the flavors included an agave wheat, a vanilla porter and an IPA. Pub grub is served all day and late into the night, but you're here for beer, no?

    They have four other Colorado locations, including three in Denver, but this is where their heart is.

    reviewed

  24. S

    Pyramid Ale House

    South of Pioneer Square by Safeco Field, this brewpub has the cleaned-up-industrial feel – all bricks and brass and designer lighting – that defines the Pacific Northwest brewpub. It’s a nice and mainstream (but still appreciably Seattle-ish) place to take your parents or tenderfoot visitors. But don’t even try on a game day, unless you want to squeeze into the standing-room-only beer tent outdoors.

    reviewed

  25. T

    Draft House

    Another of boulder's popular microbreweries. This one brews six handcrafted beers, including an IPA and a Big Bella Brown, which owes it's deep tones from honey and Blackstrap molasses. Food here is pedestrian pub grub, but the open interior, with glassed-in brew tanks, exposed rafters and three gleaming HD flat-screens, offers a touch of class.

    There's live music most nights: salsa night is Tuesday; Reggae rocks Wednesdays.

    reviewed

  26. U

    Ska Brewing Company

    Big on flavor and variety, these are the best beers in town. Although the small, friendly tasting-room bar was once mainly a production facility, over the years it's steadily climbed in the popularity charts. Today it is usually jam-packed with friends meeting for an after-work beer.

    Despite the hype, the place remains surprisingly laid-back and relaxed. Ska does weekly BBQs with live music and free food. Call for dates - they are never fixed.

    reviewed

  27. V

    Wynkoop Brewing Co

    Wynkoop's Rail Yard Ale is the city's most celebrated red ale, and beer fans file into to this spacious brewpub to knock them back while tossing darts, shooting pool or taking in the breeze on the wide porch. The taps change with the season and the menu offers passable pub standards. Call ahead for Saturday brewery tours.

    The basement of the brewery hosts a long-running sketch comedy shows on the weekends, and the jokes are appropriate for all ages.

    reviewed