7 Essential Colorado Breweries

Colorado Breweries Not to Miss

Tried and true, small town or nationally known, the scene at Colorado Breweries is better than ever. The Centennial State attracts and retains some of the country’s most talented and creative brewmasters. Here’s where to sample some of the best. Craft brewing is an ever-changing environment, especially in Colorado’s resort towns. Plan on spending an afternoon working your way through any downtown area and check out the amazing variety of local beers on tap. Check out the complete Colorado Brewery Guide for more ideas.

Tour, Learn, Sample, and Sip at these Colorado Breweries.

Avery Brewing Company

This Boulder favorite opened in 1993 and is known for fun and funky experimentations. Staples runs the scale from light pale ales to sours, saisons, and stouts. Adventurists love the time-honored barleywine and bold tangerine quad. Resting on a lovely grassy plot on the outskirts of town, the ambiance is half the experience at Avery. Free-range dogs and kids, yard games, a delicious brewpub menu, and an open-air bar atmosphere round out the scene.

Steamworks Brewing Co.

Warehouse digs, memorable pizzas, and signature Southwest fare draw loyal fans to this Durango landmark. Locals belly up and catch the game on TV, and beer aficionados crave Steamworks’ classic German-style beers. They’ve been around since 1996 and have picked up over a dozen Great American Beer Festival awards. Ask about their cask beer selections—they’re a real treat.

Left Hand Brewing Company

The co-founder of Left Hand Brewing received a homebrewers kit as a Christmas present in the ‘90s; as they say, the rest is history. The Longmont brewery is named after the local Native American tribe Chief Niwot (meaning left-handed) and rests near the banks of the St. Vrain River. Their first batch of beer was Sawtooth Ale, an award-winning amber, and they pioneered the nitro bottle movement when they introduced their ever-popular Milk Stout Nitro. Take a complimentary brewery tour and set yourself up with a sampler flight—you’ll quickly see why their beer is now sold in 26 states.

breweries Coors Brewing

Coors Brewing

For traditionalists who tend to steer away from microbrews and veer towards mainstream pours, a visit to Coors in Golden is a must and a history lesson. See the malting, brewing, and packaging process behind the Rocky Mountain classic—and the nation’s largest brewery by volume—on a 30-minute, self-paced tour. Learn how 21-year-old Adolph Coors stowed away to America to realize his brewing dream in 1873 on the banks of Clear Creek and then enjoy beer samples in the Coors Hospitality Lounge.

Estes Park Brewery

After a day of hiking and exploring neighboring Rocky Mountain National Park, do like the locals do and treat yourself to refreshing pints of handcrafted microbrews. Head to the free sample bar to test some of the 12 beers brewed onsite and step into the restaurant for beer chili, juicy burgers, and elevated pub fare. Wash it all down with an Estes Park Porter, Longs Peak Raspberry Wheat, Stinger Wild Honey Wheat, or Samson Stout on the sunny deck surrounded by magnificent mountain views.

Breweries New Belgium Brewing Company

New Belgium Brewing Company

Now expanded to Denver and Ashville, N.C., this Fort Collins original played a heavy hand in Colorado’s craft beer boom. Jeff Lebesch and Kim Jordan opened the now 100 percent employee-owned brewery in 1991 following Jeff’s bike tour through Belgium. Today, the world-renowned brewery offers up award-winning IPAs, sours, seasonals and the United State’s biggest sour program. Take a tour and stay awhile in the welcoming (and dog-friendly) tasting room and sip on 1554 Enlightened Black Ale, Citradelic Exotic Lime Ale, Voodoo Ranger Imperial and many others.

Great Divide Brewery

Brian Dunn spent the late ‘80s overseeing the building of farms in developing countries. In 1994, he took his passion for beer and travel and started Denver’s Great Divide Brewery, kick-starting a burgeoning downtown beer scene. His brews are famously strong (many topping 7 percent ABV), and the growing brewery often lands on best-of lists, including RateBeer.com’s Top Brewers In the World. Year-round favorites include the Yeti Imperial Stout, Titan IPA, Colette Farmhouse Ale, and the Strawberry Rhubarb Sour Ale.

Colorado Breweries – a part of the Colorado Experience.

Spending time or an afternoon sampling some of Colorado Breweries’ crafts is a part of the Colorado experience you don’t want to miss, especially if you’re a connoisseur. Brewing beer in Colorado has become an area of artesian notoriety. With so many festivals and specialty events, it’s hard to sample all of them. Instead, the enthusiasm for brewing is something to embrace and experience as often as possible. We will never get bored of the same old beer, thanks to Colorado breweries.

 By Lisa Blake

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