This Week in Beer: Denver Beer Company Opens a New Location and More
Catch up on the local brewery news, events and new releases you need to know about.
Catch up on the local brewery news, events and new releases you need to know about.
B Corp Certification is expensive and time-consuming, but Chook Chicken has worked hard to earn the designation.
The Gallery and its on-site restaurant and bar, The Barrel Room, have been open in Lakewood since April 2022.
It was operated by the former owners of Beast + Bottle, who will continue to dish up delicious eats at their Italian eatery Coperta.
The food scene in the Mile High is hot, but sandwich options for downtown workers are lacking.
Justin Freeman recently left the Greenwich in RiNo and is working toward opening his own eatery called Monarch with business partner Daniel Matthews.
These thick latkes with a crispy exterior and a fluffy inside are especially popular during Hanukkah.
There’s also a new brunch to try, and Blue Pan has launched a pizza of the month in honor of the employee that was recently killed in a hit-and-run.
El Tepehuan just announced that it will close on December 31.
We reported over two dozen additions to the scene last month.
A team of longtime restaurant pros are behind the refresh, which will include a new deli counter and sandwich menu.
It has also hired Matt Husted, the former director of hospitality and partner at Id Est Hospitality, the group behind Michelin-starred Brutø and the Wolf’s Tailor, to oversee all brewpubs.
The original Brewery Bar opened in the old Tivoli Brewery in 1954 and moved to Kalamath in 1974, while the Lone Tree outpost debuted in 2003.
The cannabidiol-infused coffee provides the benefits of caffeine without the jittery side effects.
The business was founded in Vermont in 2010, but it moved its operation to Denver two years ago.
The owner of Decadent Dough has decorated cookies for the likes of Dua Lipa, Demi Lavato, Travis Scott and Lizzo.
“I think a little brewery in Denver winning best sour beer in Europe is pretty cool.”
“They’ve made their moms proud,” the publication writes.
Diane Schaefer (now Lomonaco) was 24, pregnant, and driving a school bus when she opened Café Nepenthes in 1976 with her husband, Stan Schaefer, and two other business partners.
Jose Corral founded the business in 1978 and it has been run by his wife, Graciela, since 1987, after he tragically passed away in a car accident.
“Customers are having a lot of fun with it. The number-one print so far is people’s dogs.”
Tom kha wontons and duck rolls are among the highlights from our recent dining adventures.