Category Archives: United States Brewpubs

WOODSTOCK INN STATION

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WHITE MOUNTAINS, NEW HAMPSHIRE

20 miles South of Italian Oasis in the heart of the White Mountains lies placid cedar-faced North Woodstock brewpub, WOODSTOCK INN STATION (visited December ’06).

Located behind a nostalgic Victorian country inn, its side-windowed brew tanks (wood-jacketed; stainless steel; brick-based), multiple cozy dining areas, and central low-ceilinged wood paneled bar provide rural splendor. Large menu included well-portioned pizza, steak, seafood, and chicken items while bar fare included frozen margaritas and daiquiris plus transcontinental coffee and mostly excellent brews crafted by Butch Chase and Rick Marley.

Seven-barrel fermentation system below ground level offered biscuit-honeyed maple-syrupy White Mountain Weasel and eloquently brandied cherry-fig-tangerine-bruised prune-stewed bread-buttered sedation Wassail Ale on the moderate side.

Healthier thirsts will gravitate towards tangy heavy-hopped citric-laced Pemi Pale Ale, silkily maple-birch-sweetened Kano Country Maple Porter, brown chocolate-coarsened nutty-ruddy hop-toasted cologne-musked black tea-like Pig’s Ear Brown Ale, and tenderly barley-roasted coffee-dried Old Man Oatmeal Stout.

www.woodstockinnnh.com

ITALIAN OASIS RESTAURANT & BREWERY

Italian Oasis Restaurant and Brewery | Littleton, New Hampshire

LITTLETON, NEW HAMPSHIRE

Plainly put, there were three interesting brewpubs running the gamut encircling snowy White Mountain region on December ’06 trip. Located on the second floor above Elephant’s Trunk in bustling mid-state village of Littleton, ITALIAN OASIS RESTAURANT & BREWERY featured inexpensive pub fare, small carpeted seating area, and sled-lined oak bar, but went out of business around 2014.

Brew tanks nestled alongside kitchen served unfiltered raw-honeyed wheat-chaffed diacetyl-tinged Oasis Golden Ale, prickly-hopped dry-grained orange-grapefruit-soured Cannon Amber Ale and soft-tongued barley-stacked licorice-doused walnut-dried ice coffee-finishing Black Bear Stout.

Parkers Marketplace, 106 Main Street, Littleton, NH

RIVER CITY ALE WORKS

RIVER CITY ALE WORKS, Wheeling - Photos & Restaurant Reviews - Order Online  Food Delivery - Tripadvisor
WHEELING, WEST VIRGINIA

A few blocks from the Ohio River in the midst of gambling-industrial hotspot, Wheeling, lies red-bricked window-faced RIVER CITY ALE WORKS. Formerly Nail City Brewery, West Virginia’s first brewpub, until a 2003 flood ruined its brew tanks and equipment, this spacious corner restaurant-sportsbar featured large dining space, middle stage area, left side bar (with billiards, bull ride, and several TV’s), and private glass-enclosed room with decent beer can collection (previously built as the brewing station).

On tap August ‘06, served West Virginia University’s favorite hometown beers from nearby Martinville’s Mountaineer Brewing Company. Though Mountaineer Stout was too light and oily despite silken bittersweet coffee-vanilla-black chocolate notes, affable Mountaineer Nut Brown secured pleasant charred hop roast to dry walnut, ice coffee, and brown chocolate illusions.

www.rivercitybanquets.com

SEVEN BARREL BREWERY

WEST LEBANON, NEW HAMPSHIRE

Across the Connecticut River one mile from Vermont’s White River Junction lies West Lebanon marvel, SEVEN BARREL BREWERY (1993-2016), a free standing wood-bedecked restaurant-styled brewpub in Colonial Plaza that gave first-rate Vermont competitor Mc Neill’s a run for the money, February ’04.

Soft watered lemon-spiced Quechee Cream Ale, doughy wheat-backed apple-grapefruit-soured Ice Rock Canadian Golden Ale, orange rind-embittered floral-spiced Red 7 Ale, frisky orange-lemon peel-embittered Champion Reserve IPA,and raw-honeyed citric-hopped mocha-malted Original Barrel Vienna Lager went well with appetizers.

Nutty coffee-roasted New Dublin Brown Ale, coffee bean-seduced Mick Jack Porter and spice-hopped black cherry-fronted licorice-accented R.I.P. Imperial Stout retained mocha certainty.

For perky fruited pick-me-up, brewer Paul White pours syrupy peach juice into kitsch-y Quechee Ale, creating ginger-y citric-berry-ripened sugar-lacquered lemon-dropped Peach Quechee Ale.

Seated next to windowed left side brew tanks with family December ‘05, quaffed medicinal, black cherry soda-like, birch beer-hinted, nutty-countered Cherry Brown Ale, soft-fizzed candi-sugared blueberry-ripened Blueberry Quechee Cream Ale, delicately pine-hopped cherry-soured grapefruit-embittered acerbity Cask Conditioned Champion Reserve IPA and creamy chocolate-roasted coffee-emblazoned cherry-bruised raspberry-pureed tobacco-chewed Raspberry Stout.

Revisited November ’06, sampling tea-honeyed, dried prune-soured, date-fig-recessed, wort-scented Scotch Ale.

January ’08, stopped in for likable cereal-grained fruit-spiced crystal-malted Paul’s Pale Ale.

New Year’s Day, 2010, sojourned back for soapy soft-hopped pumpkin-pied cinnamon-coriander-spiced Jenna-Lantern Ale and tea-like cocoa-soured earthen-backed grassy-hopped ESB.

Within walking distance of Seven Barrel, The Beverage King sold several local brews.

www.7barrel.com

phone: 603 298 5566

JOHNSTOWN BREWING

WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA

Carved out atop a busy Industrial valley and tied to its local steel town heritage and Old Colonial village, huge chateau-styled JOHNSTOWN BREWING was established September, 2003, visited April ’06, but closed 2008. Located in the heart of Pennsylvania, its upper level offers fireplace waiting area, left side bar, large eating area, and ample back deck with great window view of the river-based canyon.

Lower level seats 120 patrons and contains brew kettles, secondary bar and deck, mug club station, and hanging growlers boasting Johnstown and competitors insignias.

Lighter drinkers will lean towards popcorn-buttered wheat-maize-backed Flood Light, summery yellow-fruited mildly-hopped South Fork Dam Kolsch and dry red-fruited peppery-hopped cocoa-malted 1889 Amber Ale.

But friendly brewer Barrett Goddard’s finer elixirs included easy flowing subtly roasted caramel-chocolate-y hazelnut-macadamia-dashed Scottish-styled Stone Bridge Brown Ale, sharply bitter red-orange-fruited off-dry White Hat Pale Ale, buttery Scotch-licked red apple-sweet seasonal Lovette Brothers Irish Red Ale and arid clover honeyed peach-apricot-soured cereal-backed perfume-wafted Honey Raspberry Wheat.

Perhaps the best Dortmunder knockoff I’ve imbibed, the malt-sticky Incline Plaine plopped caramelized apple, pear, and apricot alongside dry-fruited grapefruit-fig bitterness.

For a closer, quaffed dry Irish-styled Steel Workers Stout, a mild workingman’s brew merging roasted coffee, black chocolate, and bitter nuttiness.

FOXBURG INN ON THE ALLEGHENY

Image result for foxburg inn on allegany
WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA

A rusty bridge connects teensy Foxburg to an access road three miles from Route 80. This well-maintained one-horse town with municipal building, church, general store, and wine cellar tucked inside a valley retains elegant old Americana charm reflected by its riverbank brewpub-restaurant, FOXBURG INN ON THE ALLEGHENY (visited April ’06).

Featuring a formal banquet hall, newly constructed waterway walk, and loft level brewpub, Foxburg Brewery had casually aggressive heartland grained beers poured from glass-encased copper kettles, and a decent bottled beer collection strewn across the bar walls.

Alongside delicious crab-stuffed portabella caps I imbibed buttery banana-lemon-spiced Toby Creek Pilsner, thinly dry berry-trailed Allegheny Ale and musky molasses-dried fig-date-tingled cocoa-beaned pilsner-bock mix Foxburg Lager.

Better were vegetal tea-dried hop-roasted fig-jigged Silver Fox Red Amber and sticky black licorice-fronted prune-centered pumpkin-spiced Foxburg Inn Stout (with earthen peat, unrefined molasses, raisin-fig, and medicinal hints).

Unfortunately, Foxburg’s beers were somewhat inconsistent. By the end of ’06, the brewery closed but the restaurant remained.

BLUE CANOE BREWERY (FOUR SONS)

Blue Canoe to close its doors | News | titusvilleherald.com

TITUSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA

Blue-collar old mill town, Titusville, is located halfway to Lake Erie, 30 miles beyond Route 80. Crossing a steel-framed bridge to this olden oil town (now a lumber community), its rustic brick buildings matched the desolate sleepy neighborhood. At premier Towne Square Building in gray first floor spot, FOUR SONS BREWERY (opened 2001 and by ’08, renamed BLUE CANOE BREWERY, but closed in ’19) featured good brews, copious pub food (nachos with pulled pork), and terse whiskey selection, April ‘06.

Silver brew tanks to right and carved oak bar to left bracketed wooden dining area. Kilt-wearing bartender rendered F-shaped serving tray offering corn-sugared maize-dried grapefruit-embittered Helles-styled Titusville Lager, floral-hopped orange-burnt grapefruit-centered oats-backed Plissken Pale Ale and barley-roasted mocha-dried coffee-thinned Schwarzbier-styled Rebecca’s Revenge.

Busier brews included intriguing hop-embittered butterscotch-sweetened caramel-curdled E’s S.Bb, yellow-orange-fruited oats-honeyed cocoa-malted Poor Richard’s Ale and hazelnut-walnut-lingered coffee-dried chocolate-roasted Hoops Brown Ale.

Absolutely delightful Heavy K Scotch Ale was densely syrupy alcoholic concoction with toasted caramelized malts, honeyed cherry perk, and overripe prune flume.

The above-mentioned beers have been put on hold for Blue Canoe’s new line: Distorter Porter; Class5 APA; Titusville Gold Lager; Heavy Kevy.

www.thebluecanoebrewery.com

NORTH COUNTRY BREWERY

North Country Brewing Co. - CraftBeer.com
WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA

One of the best brewpubs in Pennsylvania, Slippery Rock’s sterling Western-styled hunting lodge, NORTH COUNTRY BREWERY (visited during April ‘06 West Penn jaunt), had an earthen hippie atmosphere underscored by ramped left side bar, rustic wood floors, cozy dining coves, low ceiling fans, and bark-sidled walls.

Basic sandwiches, burgers, and salads were organically prepared. Right side front-windowed brew tanks contained basic fare and amazing rotational seasonal selections.

Sharply hop-spiced, orange-peeled, grapefruit embittered, peach-tangy, currant-bitten Paleo IPA was unbeatable while incredible Belgian Nightmare Tripel saturated bruised orange, overripe banana, and loud cherry with malt-syrupy alcohol whir.

Cask-conditioned Bucksnort Stout had rigid black licorice frontage, coffee-roasted beam, cocoa bean spleen, and soft black cherry seam, countering stylistically similar black coffee-soured, barley-roasted, walnut-tinged, tar-like Stone House Stout.

Wheat-cracked blackberry-raspberry-tart Fruit Bowl, yellow-fruited tea-hinged rye-tinged Paddlers Pale Ale, tea-honeyed fig-date-backed The Other One Strong Ale and Irish-styled tea-stained fig-sugared pear-dipped Station 33 Red proved admirable, though raw dry-hopped maize-addled wheat-chaffed Worth Your Weight In Gold stayed dismally phenol.

www.northcountrybrewing.com

RED STAR BREWERY

Red Star Brewery & Grill | Greensburg, PA | Reviews | BeerAdvocate
WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA

In the bustling small metropolis of Greensburg, 40 miles East of Pittsburgh in Laurel Highlands section, RED STAR BREWERY had offered excellent Americana fare (lobster, crab cakes, fire grilled lamb lollipops, and butcher’s cut steak on the high end) plus quality brews since October ’98. But by 2010, it closed down.

Formerly located at the train station in a stately red brick Victorian building with clock tower and Cathedral spires, its small front porch conveniently led into brew tank-addled hallway then central bar with glass-enclosed copper kettles and ample TV’s. Wooden furnishings adorn surrounding dining area and an upstairs loft bedecks the left side.

April ’06, brewer Jeff Guidos and I sampled his lauded suds at high noon, beginning with phenol raw-grained lime-soured pepper-hopped oats-maized Redstar Golden Light (strictly for proletariat), bitter hop-grained fig-dried Locomotive Breath Steam Beer and mild hop-embittered red-fruited sedation Canvasback American Pale Ale (a nitro-injected smoothie with creamy Guinness head).

More intriguing were heartland-grained peat-framed honey-spiced rye-tinged 4 Grain Ale, oats-honeyed, orange-apricot soured, kiwi-mango-pineapple-tinged Mai-Effin Maibock, and fermented tea-like, barley-hopped, dry-bodied Extra Special Bitter.

Best bets for headier thirsts were darker brews such as caffeinated coffee-burnt, cocoa bean-soured Coffee Porter and silken nitro-injected Milk Stout (with its roasted coffee-mocha surge, coarse nuttiness, and creamy milk chocolate froth).

www.redstarbrewery.com

MARZONI BRICK OVEN & BREWERY

Marzonis-6 - River Rat Brew Trail
WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA

Discovered a host of good brewpubs curling ‘round the woodsy highways and rural byways crossing Duncansville, Johnstown, Greensburg, Slippery Rock, Titusville, and Foxburg on April ’06 family excursion.

Opened 2003, freestanding tan-hued brick-stucco Duncansville pizza place, MARZONI’S BRICK OVEN & BREWING, offered Italian dishes (penne-parmigiana-lasagna), brick-oven pizzas, and seafood to double-sided dining area. Brew tanks behind left side bar (with multiple TV’s) stored craftsman Bill Kroft’s eclectic fare quaffed April ‘06.

Though unassuming cereal-honeyed yellow-fruited Locke Mountain Light Lager and slight wheat-chaffed lemony-tart soft-hopped Highway “22” Wheat cater mostly to softer palates, mocha-malted chestnut-roasted fruit-bruised Marzoni’s Amber, bittersweet hop-malted red-fruited Patchway Pale Ale, raisin-y fig Weisenbock, and whiskey-rye daubed Marzen made germane alternatives.

Dry black chocolate-roasted, coffee bean-soured, Brazil-walnut-smitten Stone Mason Stout flowed easy.

Best bet: bitter floral-spiced Avalanche IPA, a fab 5-star knockout pitting brusque lemony orange peeled grapefruit zeal against tropical peach-pear-kiwi-mango tango.

www.marzonis.com

PITTSFIELD BREW WORKS

Pittsfield Brew Works | Pittsfield, MA | Beers | BeerAdvocate

WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS

Steep in the northerly Berkshire Mountains along railway in updated industrial town, elegant tan-hued PITTSFIELD BREW WORKS was tracked down December ’07 (then closed 2010). Formerly a train station then warehouse, a round sign with black sheep insignia welcomes patrons. Though its yellow cross-sectioned interior with maroon pews and furnishings seemed exquisitely upscale, reasonable bar prices and reliable appetizers, snacks, and sandwiches attracted families and businessmen alike.

Entering to glass-encased brew tanks and right dining section, its left bar area (with central TV) divided midsection brick wall, providing additional dining space and small hearth. Intriguingly, rear Bier Hall offered large banquet facility, secondary bar, billiard tables, and darts.

Christine Bump, brewer since 2005, crafted woody Saaz-hopped mild-spiced yellow-fruited Czech-styled Prost Pilsner, lemony biscuit-honeyed quince-sidled Kolsch-styled Dohoney’s Gold, dry Simcoe-hopped, black tea-surged, grapefruit rind-embittered W.A.S. Pale Ale and dryer Cascade-Chinook-hopped, tangy apricot-tangerine-splashed, honey-malted Legacy IPA.

Bitter green tea, charred nuts, and dry hops enveloped alcohol-burnt Extra Special Bitter while its cask-conditioned version found fig and date overtaking nearly all bittering.

Burnt beechwood chips benumbed fig-date midst and nutmeat splurge for black-spiced Rauchbier.

www.pittsfieldbrewworks.com

GARDNER ALE HOUSE

WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS

In the old industrial town of Gardner, 60 miles west of Boston and 20 miles south of Brattleboro’s fabulous Mc Neill Brewpub, lies maroon-hued black-trimmed GARDNER ALE HOUSE, originally visited December ’07. A red brick wall with open archways separates right bar (with two TV’s) and opposing dining space plus far-left open kitchen.

Appetizers, soups, salads, and lunch specials (pizza-grinders) went well with seven sampled suds on initial family sojourn.

A similarly sanguine citric flavor profile ran through mildly grapefruit-soured, orange rind-embittered, maize-dried, wheat-chaffed Summer’s End Kolsch, woody Cascade-hopped, lemon-dropped, orange-peeled, barley-oats-backed Chair City Pale Ale, sharper lemon-peeled, wood-lacquered, grapefruit-apple-apricot-juiced Facelift IPA and honeyed yellow-orange-fruited Oma’s Altbier.

Irish-styled Naked Stout had archetypal blackened chocolate-coffee theme while fig-draped cocoa-dried Winter Lager and banana-ripened, clove-spiced, lemon-peppered, raisin-date-dried Dunkelweizen sufficed.

On a seasonably warm post-Thanksgiving 2011 perusal, I sat at the right side bar with my wife and quaffed five previously untried libations. The food improved immensely but I only chomped on the immense chicken nacho platter at this mid-afternoon Monday stopover. Gardner currently sports three bar side TV’s and now boasts a wildly successful Mug Club (with an end-of-year party for members).

Before my dangling conversation with brewmeister Dave Richardson, I consumed two terrific India Pale Ales and three stylistically disparate finds. Face Off Double IPA brought a brightly glazed tropical fruiting to creamy caramel-malted pecan-almond sweetness and bitterly alcohol-burnt peppery-hopped pining, showcasing a tangy panorama of pink grapefruit, red cherry, naval orange, red apple, brown pear, peach and pineapple. Richardson’s latest favorite, the aggressively detailed Nightcrawler Black IPA may be even better. Tossing a large grapefruit presence atop piney molasses-sapped cola nuttiness, earthen wood-burnt charred hops and cocoa-dusted black chocolate roasting, this peat-malted Cascadian Dark Ale takes a backseat to none.

While my wife settled into the light-bodied Summer’s End Kolsch, a local hot weather session beer with a vegetal citric-spoiled corn sugaring, I discovered XSB, a smoothly rye honeyed, caramel toasted, Extra Special Bitter prototype with an ethanol burn similar to citric-fronted, lightly spiced, peppery-hopped strong ale, Belgian Chair.

For dessert, stalwart mocha-laden Chocolate Porter easily sufficed. Its cocoa-dried dark chocolate and vanilla sweetness gave way to oats-roasted hop-charred bittering and peat-y walnut undertones.

Richardson spoke about his brewing methodology afterwards. Since being renovated January ’06 and opening months later in June, Gardner Ale House has become fiscally solid. And the beers have gotten increasingly better.

“It’s all about the balance for each beers’ unique flavor profile,” the University of Vermont undergraduate suggests. “I’m not afraid to experiment. I used a secret wild yeast for the Belgian Chair. But it’s at the end now, 6-months old, so most of the yeast is pretty much gone. I had the yeast cultured and came back with two strains. One was my pale ale yeast and the other was unknown yeast I decided to brew with. It’s Belgian-styled because it’s wild. I knew exactly what I wanted from it.”

Richardson began brewing in a basement, then began dreaming about opening a brewpub when he tasted the awesome results. He worked in environmental science at New Haven, where he convinced BruRm’s Jeff Browning to let him apprentice and gain experience. In those eight months, he realized what he wanted to do with his life and took out a loan to join UC-Davis’ elite brewing school. Red Hook Brewery in Portsmouth, New Hampshire hired him thereafter.

While enjoying a late lunch, he maintains, “Red Hook makes a million barrels per year. At Gardner, I make 500 barrels. Some people may hate most of my offerings, thinking they’re ‘too much,’ but each one is distinctly flavorful. I’ve been to Cologne, Germany, so I’m familiar with the kolsch style I emulated. For a lighter beer, it’s got a nice grainy resolve and hop balance. My Altbier is probably a touch hoppier than the ones tried in Germany, but within stylistic range. And the Chocolate Porter runs the gamut between chocolate, coffee, and vanilla. I put a lot of pale chocolate malts in there and a whole bag of oat malt.”

Richardson admits loving the variety of beers available nowadays. He says, “Unlike women, beers don’t care if you try another beer. In Burlington at UVM, I’d drink old school Magic Hat, Otter Creek, Catamount and Vermont Pub brews, all those nice homey offerings that honed me into wanting to brew. When I went to college, Three Needs Brewpub had a Thursday Happy Hour when The Simpsons aired. They had Dollar Duffs, which were actually Saranac bottled beers for a buck.”

www.gardnerale.com