What to
do? What to do?
Maybe you
don’t feel like skiing again today or it’s too muddy to run. There’s
nothing good on TV and you’ve got a free day from work or school.
Suppose you’re thirsty for a good beer, but tight in funds?
Maybe you
are a beer lover too, and were wondering just how those brewmaster/magician
folks down at the local brewery can take essentially four main ingredients,
mix them together, wave their magic wand and create such a wonderful
beverage.
Well, have I got an idea for you. Head on down to your local brewery,
catch a free tour of the facility and some of their freshest, most
special beer. And usually, they will even share a few pours with you
for FREE, just for coming down to visit.
As a matter of etiquette, remember that the good folks giving away all
that free beer also need to make a living, so please support their
endeavors by buying a pint, a T-shirt, or some beer to take home with
you.
There are plenty of breweries to visit, in part because craft brewing is enjoying a rejuvenation these days with sales increasing by about 10 percent per year the past few years. Meanwhile, the "macro"-breweries have seen sales of their bland yellow fizzy stuff drop by about the same amount each year. Folks around the country (and globe) are tasting flavorful, creative beers that display the ingenuity and affection of small brewers for their craft and they're loving the stuff.
Most breweries love to show off their facilities and teach the masses how beer is made. Many also have tasting rooms that spotlight the small-batch, über-creative beers brewers love to create but which are not bottled for sale.
Herein lies the beauty of visiting smaller breweries: it’s the best stuff at little to no cost while you learn about the process.
Colorado is chock-full of beer-producing facilities. Some are huge. Think Coors. Some are tiny. Think the Golden City Brewery. Some have a pub attached. Think the Mountain Sun Brewery. I’d like to share a few words with you about some local breweries you can visit that also produce some of the best beers around.
New Belgium
Brewery
500 Linden
St.
Fort Collins, CO 80524
1-888-NBB-4044 (1-888-622-4044)
www.newbelgium.com
Tours: Monday-Friday
at 1, 2, and 3 p.m.; Saturday on the hour from 11 a.m.– 4 p.m.
Tasting room:
Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Makers of: Fat Tire, 1554, and La Folie
Possibly the most earth-friendly and advanced brewery in the United States, the New Belgium Brewery has spared no expense in producing incredible out-of-the-box style beers (usually Belgian types) while leaving the smallest possible footprint on the planet.
The tasting
room is very fun and informative. And after imbibing some of their seasonal
and special brews there, you may even find yourself wondering why you
are still drinking Fat Tire, the biggest selling microbrew in the country.
Try La Folie, a sour, unique beer made with cherries and aged in oak
barrels.
If you have
a little more time and a designated driver, head over to Odell Brewery,
makers of mostly English style beers. Odell also makes some wonderful
brews and is also a very green operation. Then it’s off to the Fort
Collins Brewing Company, which focuses on German-style lagers and makes
a terrific Chocolate Stout.
Just imagine,
three great breweries within eight miles of each other producing the
gamut of beer styles—and all are willing to teach you about the art
and science of beer production.
Avery
Brewing Company
5763 Arapahoe
Ave. Unit E
Boulder, CO 80303
303-440-4324
www.averybrewing.com
Tours: Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday at 5 p.m.
Tasting room:
Wednesday-Friday: 2 p.m.-6 p.m., Saturday: noon- 4 p.m.
Makers of:
Ellie’s Brown Ale, Hog Heaven, and The Beast
A small brewery
with really big beers, Avery Brewing is doing some of the tastiest,
hoppiest and strangest beers known to man. Adam Avery is one of the
young studs in American brewing, part of a group of fine envelope-pushing
brewers reinventing the book on what “American-made” now means in
the world of beer making.
Yep, they
make the usual stable of brown, pale and stout ales, but watch out my
friends, the other stuff will get you good. With names like “The Kaiser,”
“Mephistopheles' Stout,” and “Collaboration not Litigation Ale,” you
gotta know these beers are full of hops, unusual spices and fruits,
and lots of alcohol. Avery Brewing Company recently created a comfortable,
inviting tasting area where they serve up all of their best stuff and
some special brews unavailable outside the tasting room.
I would try
one of the “Crucified Trinity.” The beers in this group are aged
in wood barrels. They include Hog Heaven, The Reverend and Salvation
Ale. I’d also give Samael’s Ale a try. It could possibly be my favorite
beer.
Nearby, you
can find Twisted Pine Brewing Company, which I love because you can
take your dog with you, and they serve up some mighty fine beer and
peanuts as well.
Left Hand
Brewing Company
1265 Boston
Ave.
Longmont, CO 80025
303-772-0258
www.lefthandbrewing.com
Tours: Saturday:
1 p.m.-3 p.m. (call ahead for times) and by appointment
Tasting room:
Monday-Thursday: 2 p.m.-8 p.m.; Friday: noon-9 p.m.; Saturday: noon-7 p.m.
Makers of:
Polestar Pilsner, Sawtooth Ale, and Milk Stout
Consistency,
quality ingredients, variety, and recently, creativity are all words
I associate with Left Hand. Since their absorption of Tabernash Brewing,
they now produce lager as well as ales. The skillful brewers have recently
started to let their hair down and produce some funky, flavorful, high-gravity
products.
Like many local beer makers, they are very community centered. Left Hand created Smokejumper Porter in order to donate much of the proceeds to your forest firefighters. Of course, it’s a thick, smoky experience.
The tasting
room is first rate. Indoors or outdoors, it has a great bar, plenty
of special brews and a friendly staff. You’ll want to stay a while.
Left Hand also is nestled next to a river and a park, so you just might
make a lazy hazy day of it.
I’d try
St. Vrain Ale or the Smokejumper.
Flying
Dog Brewery
2401 Blake
Street
Denver, CO 80205
303-292-5027
www.flyingdogales.com
Tours: Monday-Friday:
4 p.m.; Saturday: 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.
Tasting room:
Open prior to tours
Makers of:
Doggie Style Pale Ale, In-Heat Wheat and Horn Dog Barley Wine.
At first,
it’s the labels and humorously naughty names that catch your eye.
Infamous gonzo illustrator Ralph Steadman designed labels of distorted
dogs having a good time.
Names like
“Doggie Style” Pale Ale invite you to give the beers a try. It’s
a great idea if you do. The beers have wonderful flavors and plenty
of styles, including many much-appreciated historical German styles.
Flying Dog
beers are easy to find and with the recent creation of the Wild Goose
Brewing Company in Maryland, they will soon become even bigger players
in the craft beer world. The arrangement allows Flying Dog to brew on
the East coast as well as in downtown Denver.
Located adjacent
to the Blake Street Tavern just east of Coors Field, the brewery is
deceptively large, but the tasting area is on the smaller side. Free
beer tastes are available and the tour is very cool. You even get to
taste fresh beer right from the huge aging tanks.
The late
Hunter S. Thompson was a great friend of the brewery and Flying Dog
has created an incredible beer in his honor, Gonzo Imperial Porter.
Look for his pictures around the brewery.
If you have
some time before or after the tour, the grub at the Blake Street Tavern
is good and they carry the full line of Flying Dog beers at the bar.
Another great addition to the tour is a stop at Stranahan’s Colorado Whiskey
Distillery adjoining the brewery. Colorado’s first whiskey makers;
they use grains from Flying Dog in production and then age the final
product in wood barrels until perfect.
I recommend
trying a Horn Dog Barley Wine or any of the specialty beers in the over-the-top Wild Dog series.
Bristol
Brewing Company
1647 S. Tejon
St.
Colorado
Springs, CO 80906
719-633-2555
www.bristolbrewing.com
Tours: Call
ahead to arrange a tour
Tasting room:
Monday-Saturday: 10 a.m.- 9 p.m.
Makers of: Red Rocket Pale Ale, Edge City Harvest Ale, and XXX Warlock.
Famous for
its Laughing Lab Scottish Ale which has won a ton of awards over
the years; Bristol is another one of our local breweries that asks itself
daily, “Why not?” Why not add a bunch more hops? Why not add
herbs and spices and fruits to our beer? Why not age our best stuff
in oak kegs for years? Why not make an 18 percent ABV beer?
Bottling
an excellent line of standard styles, they save their most innovative
brews for the great tasting room on location. Featuring around 15 beers
on tap and free snacks to boot, one of my local professional brewer
friends calls it his favorite Colorado brewery. He doesn’t think twice
about driving an hour and a half just to do “research.”
They encourage
guests to come on down and if not busy with production, one of the staff
with be happy to show you around and explain beer production at their
facility.
My suggestions
include Edge City Harvest Ale—no style box adhered to here, or XXX Warlock, a double imperial stout that weighs in at an impressive 18 percent.
A few last
tips on visiting one of our great Front Range microbreweries: drink
responsibly, tip the staff if deserved, ask lots of questions and purchase
some of these beers for the house. Help support these local artisans
and businesses that in turn support our economy as well.
Dry Dock Brewing Company
15110 E. Hampden Ave.
Aurora, CO 80014
303-400-5606
www.drydockbrewing.com
Tours: Someone will be glad
to show you around during tasting room hours.
Tasting Room: Tuesday-Friday:
3 p.m.- 9 p.m., Saturday noon- 8 p.m.
Makers of: Victory E.S.B.
Aurora
has, sadly, never received much love for its gustatory promise (see “chain restaurant” in the dictionary). Fortunately for
those folks living on the “East Side,” that has all changed now.
The
Dry Dock Brewing Company is making some world-class beer and it is time
the word gets out!
Debuting
in January of 2006, the Dry Dock is one of the smallest breweries in
the country and, unlike the microbreweries I have discussed thus far,
they currently don’t bottle their beers (that is hopefully coming
soon). One can purchase growlers, half-gallon jugs or kegs to go, or
pull up a chair and drink a pint or two in their tasting room. Heck,
they don’t care if you bring in some food as long as you share.
Kevin
and Kevin are the owner-operators of the Dock and what makes this
place truly unique is that they also run The Brew Hut, a home-brewer supply store next door. As evidence of the Kevins’ love of
sharing great beer with the world, they even post the five-gallon batch
recipes on their Web site for customers interested in attempting to
replicate some of their awesome brews at home.
Speaking
of awesome beers, their Victory E.S.B. won a gold medal at the 2006
World Beer Cup competition in the best bitter category. For people still
drinking beers from the American-style lager category, consider that
there were 85 styles of beer judged at this year's World Beer Cup
(give one of them a try sometime soon). Small batch sizes allow the brewers
to be creative in dreaming up new twists to old styles, making the adventurous
beer drinker very happy. The oak-aged beers at the Dock really
rock.
My
suggestion: head on down on Firkin Friday when the brewers tap
a special cask-conditioned beer. Ales from a firkin are naturally carbonated,
served at cellar temperature and are usually the pinnacle of the beers
available at a brewery. The bung hole gets tapped at 3 p.m. and when
the keg is dry, the beer is gone. Don’t be late!
PS—If you see my friend Justin at the Dock please tell him that
his family and friends really miss him…
Photos courtesy of Bobby Bemis and Bristol Brewering Company
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