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Resident Brewing - Downtown; Rip Current Brewing – North Park [30] Rough Draft Brewing Company [31] Saint Archer Brewing [32] San Diego Brewing Company; Savagewood Brewing Company (formerly O'Sullivan Bros Brewing Co.) - Scripps Ranch [33] Second Chance Beer Company- North Park; Carmel Mountain; Societe Brewing Company - Kearny Mesa [34]
From pumpkin-flavored ales to dark lagers, we have rounded up a few of the following local taprooms and breweries offering fall flavors as San Diego embraces the shorter days of autumn.
Ballast Point Brewing Company is an American brewery founded in 1996 by Jack White in San Diego, California. Ballast Point Brewing Co. started in the back of Home Brew Mart, a homebrew supply store White founded in 1992. [ 1 ]
Calistoga Inn, Restaurant and Brewing in Calistoga [119] Downtown Joe's Brewery in Napa [120] Mad Fritz in St. Helena [121] Napa Smith Brewery in Napa [122] St. Clair Brown in Napa [123] Stone Brewing in Napa [124] Tannery Bend Beerworks in Napa [121] Trade Brewing in Napa [125]
Karl Strauss Brewing Company was the first brewery in San Diego since 1953 and launched the current wave of breweries. It is now the third largest brewery in San Diego County. [58] It operates a production brewery in San Diego's Pacific Beach neighborhood as well as eight brewery restaurants in San Diego, Orange, Los Angeles and Riverside ...
The original brewery is located at 9366 Cabot Drive in San Diego's Miramar area. In 2015 the company added a larger brewery and tasting room, also in Miramar, at 9990 AleSmith Court. At 25,000 square feet, the tasting room is billed as the largest beer tasting room in San Diego County. Brewing operations at the new facility will eventually ...
30th Street is a major north–south road in San Diego, California, on the east side of Balboa Park. It connects several of the densest urban communities of downtown San Diego and has a high rate of pedestrian activity. In recent years, 30th Street has become known nationally for its prominent craft beer culture. [1]
In the 1860s, the first Chinese people moved to the downtown area. [19] In the 1870s, the Chinese were the primary fishermen in the area. [20] Beginning in the 1880s, a large number of Chinese began to move to San Diego, establishing a concentration; with up to 200 Chinese making up a minority of the 8,600 who lived in all of San Diego. [21]