Breweries

Brewing started out as a cottage industry, with production taking place at home. But by the ninth century farms and monasteries began to produce beer on a larger, commercial scale. Today breweries vary greatly in size and production capacity—brewpubs function as pubs or restaurants and make their own beer to sell to customers, while major brewing companies like Anheuser-Busch can employ as many as 150,000 people. Conversely, microbreweries produce small amounts of beer and are usually independently owned. Check out our guide to breweries to find ananobrewery in your stateor to learn where to buymonk-brewed Trappist ale.

Most Recent

America Is Finally Getting a Second Guinness Brewery and Yes, You Can Visit
Construction is set to start on the 15,000-square-foot facility in Chicago's Fulton Market district this fall.
This Brewery Is Completely Ignoring Western European Brewing Traditions
Denver’s Dos Luces Brewery is making beer with blue corn, like the Incas and Aztecs did in pre-Columbian America.
阿什维尔的雄心勃勃的啤酒厂,推高了伯恩daries of Beer
The city's experimental brews include wild peach lager, Thai green curry-inspired beer, and a porter painstakingly recreated from a 1922 recipe.
Smuttynose Brewing May Be on Its Last Legs
In another blow to midsize brewers, the beloved brewery is desperately seeking a buyer.
A New England Brewery Road Trip
New England is ideal for so much more than leaf peeping this time of year. It is home to some of the best beer in America. As a style, the hazy New England IPAs born out of the region have exploded and there is fine barrel-aged work being done up and down the East Coast. But unless you have an extra couple week’s of vacation, it’s nearly impossible to get to every worthwhile stop in New England, especially when breweries like the Alchemist and Hill Farmstead are up in the hinterlands of Vermont near the Canadian border. Here, an easier beer trail—a brewery road trip you can make on a long weekend that’s mostly one easy shot up highway 95 with just a couple brief detours.
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More Breweries

A Craft Beer Crawl Down the Pacific Coast Highway
Also known as Highway 1, the Pacific Coast Highway route runs along most of California’s coast. Over 650 miles in length, it stretches from the north in Mendocino County all the way to the south in Orange County. It’s surely the country’s most scenic road trip route, but you’ll want to keep your eyes on the road and hands on the wheel—the PCH is often single-lane and usually twisting and turning right on the edge of a cliff. One false move, or one strong beer, and you could soon be swimming. That makes it all the more vexing that traversing the PCH, top to bottom, is one heckuva trip for the beer traveler. Here are the craft beer stops you should make (with plenty of time in between, obviously). – Aaron Goldfarb
The Quintessential Midwest Brewery Roadtrip
Maybe it’s all the grain, or the football, or the wholesome appreciation for life’s best things—whatever the reason, the Midwest is home to some of America’s best breweries. This is not news; beer lovers drool over many of the region’s ales, even if they’ve never made the trek to the area. But hey: modern roadways allow for easy weekend trips to these brewpubs (provided you buckle up and designate a driver.) Below, check out some of the greatest breweries east of the Mississippi. —Claire Luchette
A Craft Beer Lover's Guide to America

With Portland, Oregon, as their epicenter, America’s genius brewers are opening new tasting rooms, taprooms and massive beer gardens. Here, exciting updates in the craft-beer movement.