Latest news with #Brewery


Business Journals
20-05-2025
- Business Journals
Brewery District to begin underground tours of historic South Cumminsville tunnels: PHOTOS
The nonprofit behind Cincinnati's Brewery District and Bockfest will open its first underground tours outside Over-the-Rhine in June, when it debuts the lagering vaults beneath a historic complex in South Cumminsville.


Axios
03-03-2025
- Business
- Axios
15 Denver happy hours for cheap eats and crave-worthy cocktails
Denver's dining scene isn't getting any cheaper, but there are plenty of places to score a deal — if you know when to show up. Zoom in: Here are 15 happy hours offering some of the city's best discounts on drinks and eats: 🌮 La Diabla — Thursday, 11am-6pm; Friday, all day; Saturday-Sunday, 10am-6pm The move: Wednesday specials are unbeatable: Two al pastor tacos and one margarita for $5; two fish tacos and one margarita for $7; or buy any cocktail and get two free tacos 🍺 Vine Street Pub & Brewery — Wednesday-Friday, 3pm-5pm; Every day, 8pm-close The move: $6 pitchers of house beer; $6 wine or margarita; $10 burger and fries; $10 cheese or Margherita pizza 🍸 Point Easy — Tuesday-Saturday, 5-6pm The move: $14 for fries and a martini 🍝 Dio Mio — Monday-Thursday, 4-6pm The move: $11 for two glasses of wine; $6 apps like the stracciatella-prosciutto toast and gorgonzola arancini; $12 for a bowl of cacio e pepe or spaghetti 🍗 FlyteCo Tower — Tuesday-Thursday, 7pm-kitchen close/last call; Friday-Saturday, 8pm-kitchen close/last call; Sunday, 6pm-kitchen close/last call The move: $5 Jameson; $2.50 Hamm's; $7 cheese pizza; $8 wings 🍕 Redeemer Pizza — Weekdays, 4-6pm The move: $6 for a slice and beer; $9 for a slice and wine; $12 cheese pizza 🍷 America Elm — Monday-Thursday, 5-6pm; Friday 4-6pm; Sunday 5-9pm The move: $7 wine; $9 classic cocktails; $7 deviled eggs with pork belly; $9 whipped ricotta with fermented garlic honey; $12 mussels and fries 🥟 ChoLon — Daily, 3-5pm The move: $6 dim sum, including dumplings, wontons and bao buns; $5 lager; $7 well drinks; $7 house wine 🥃 The Greenwich — Monday-Friday, 5-6 p.m.; Tuesday, all night The move: $8 mini negroni; $8 wine; $8 beer and shot; $4 select beer; $5 meatballs; $6 Sicilian sesame rolls; $8 fries 🍹 The Block Distilling Co. — Monday-Thursday, 3-6pm; Friday, noon-6pm The move: $8 old fashioned, martini, negroni, or gin and tonic 🦪 Blue Island Oyster Bar — Monday-Saturday, 2-6pm; Sunday, open-6pm The move: $1.31 premium oysters all day Monday; $7.55 tacos and sliders; 30% off wine by the glass 🍔 Steuben's — Daily, 2-6pm and 9pm-close The move: $13 burger, fries and PBR; $3 PBR; $8 house wine, gin and tonic, Moscow mule or old fashioned 🥢 MAKfam — Daily, 2-5pm The move: $6.50 beer and well shot; $6 house wine; $4.5 bao buns; $2 off small bites 🦪 Angelo's Taverna — Daily, 3-6pm and 9pm to close The move: $1.25 oysters; $8 for a personal pizza; $6 well drinks 🍕 Cart-Driver RiNo — Daily, 3-5pm and 10pm-midnight The move: $8 pizza; $3 Genesse beer; $8 negroni or Prosecco
Yahoo
16-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Ask Chris: Were the artists' lofts at the Brewery the first in L.A.?
A: LIKE, WHAT IS AN ARTIST? What is a loft? In Beat-era Venice, poets and painters slept in an abandoned bingo parlor-turned-coffee house. Soon after the moon landing, a gym in Inglewood and a piano factory in Pasadena were commandeered in the name of art. Creativity revived neighborhoods and artists started trickling towards Downtown. 'In 1975, studio space was a nickel a foot,' says pioneering developer and filmmaker Stephen Seemayer. 'We had buildings with artists in them, but they were essentially illegal. It was the Wild West.' Vast playgrounds for experimental music, theater and visual arts sprang up from Broadway to the L.A. River before the Brewery's 1981 debut. 'I always believed that artists would be critical to the revitalization of Downtown,' says former councilman Joel Wachs, who sponsored the live/work law that same year. 'They were often hassled by Building and Safety, Fire and Planning Department officials, but expressed a desire to work together to legalize.' Rents skyrocketed once the lofts became legal and the population changed from full-time creatives who could recycle bottles to make the rent to fashion designers, photographers and film folk. 'They work in the arts,' developer and musician Drew Lesso says. 'But they're not fine artists.' Soon after the loft legalization ordinance was passed, some from that first generation of artists started moving out. The alternative newspaper L.A. Reader declared 'The loft scene is dead,' in July of 1983. The Brewery grew from an abandoned Pabst Blue Ribbon plant into what has been called the largest artists' colony in the world. A rental unit on Moulton Avenue was recently listed for $5,250 a month. The next bi-annual Brewery Art Walk is May 3rd and 4th. A few pre-code buildings remain in use by creatives, including Hunter Street Studios and the former LACE space on Industrial Street. "At present, we do not have any visual artists," says the building's owner, avant-garde architect Mary-Ann Ray. "But we have two musicians, a chef, a social club owner, and a builder/leathercrafts person." Seemayer, whose documentary The Young Turks explores the early downtown loft scene released another called Tales of the American. 'This was the Chelsea Hotel and CBGB's West,' musician Jesse Easter says of the American Hotel (now fancified boutique lodging) above Al's Bar, where he's lived for more than 40 years. 'I'm the last dog standing.'
Yahoo
13-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
You can get married at Milwaukee's Lakefront Brewery on Valentine's Day. Here's how
Valentine's Day is just one day away, and love is in the air — along with some wedding bells — at Milwaukee's Lakefront Brewery. The historic Milwaukee brewery is marrying couples on Valentine's Day for the 10th year in a row for only $30. All you need to reserve a ceremony is have a valid marriage license and be at least 21. During its annual event, couples are married in five to 10 minute ceremonies in the Lakefront Chapel. There are also several optional upgrades available, including bouquets and mini wedding cakes. Reservations are no longer being accepted for 2025, but the brewery has a slew of other Valentine's Day-themed events even if you missed the deadline. More: Here's your guide to heart-shaped treats in Wisconsin for Valentine's Day 2025 Owner Russ Klisch will perform two mass vow renewals at noon and 6 p.m., no ticket or reservation required. You can also get a free beer to commemorate the occasion. The brewery will also be offering a "first dance" to all couples during its Friday night fish fry at 5 p.m., 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. — accompanied by tunes from the Brewhaus Polka Kings. More: Photos: Couples say vows at Brewery You can visit the brewery's website here. More: What's the most romantic place in Wisconsin? We rounded up eight spots This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: How to get married at Lakefront Brewery on Valentine's Day


BBC News
09-02-2025
- Business
- BBC News
Jennings Brewery to bring back discontinued cask and keg beer
A brewery has been flooded with requests to bring back discontinued beer after announcing its Brewery in Cockermouth, Cumbria, was closed in November 2022 by the then-owners Carlsberg Marston's Brewing Company (CMBC).However, the site has now been bought by local couple Kurt and Rebecca Canfield who said the brewery could start producing beer again by the summer under the Jennings France, the firm's new managing director, said he had recipes for about 100 beers and planned to "definitely" bring back Cumberland Ale and Bitter. In November 2024, CMBC announced it would stop selling Jennings Cumberland Ale, moving production to Staffordshire, in cask or keg France said CMBC stopped brewing Jennings beers as cask beers but he was "absolutely" bringing them back. "That's the best format for our beer and the most traditional format," he said. Bottled versions of Jennings beer will continue to be sold by Carlsberg until March, when the rights to the brand will be transferred to the new Walker, of the Campaign for Real Ale's (Camra), said he hoped Jennings would bring back old beers, but also develop the brand."They had some excellent beers, but I hope they won't just live in the past, that they'll progress and do new stuff - I'm sure they will."Mr France said two beers, Sneck Lifter and Cocker Hoop, were the "overriding favourites to come back". Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram. Send your story ideas here.