By: Patrick W. Zimmerman
Big cities are giant interdependent conglomerations of chaotically organized, semi-autonomous groups, bound together in a state of (more or less) stable equilibrium by one, and only one, glorious social lubricant: beer.
The invention of intentional fermentation predates the rise of cities. Therefore, logic dictates that it clearly was a necessary and prior development to the development of mass civilization. History agrees. There.
So, now that the function and importance of cereal grains and sedentary agricultrue in the development has been established, let’s get down to what the Internet thinks really matters: Makin’ lists and startin’ arguments.
The question
If you’re a fan of metropolises (and odds are that you are), how does your city’s local brewery scene stack up?
Is the grass greener in a different wretched hive? If so, where should you move for a more satisfying, happier hour?
This is part three of our look at city brew scenes. This week, we’re looking at at the biggest of the big, the large American metropoli (greater than 4 million people, using the US Census definition of Combined Statistical Area). You can find small cities and medium metro areas, as well. Within that category, we considered all highly-rated breweries (averaging 3.5/5 or better on Beer Advocate and Untappd) within 50mi of the city center, attempting to balance quality and quantity.
Short-short version
“San Francisco, open your Golden Gate. You’ll let no (thirsty) stranger wait outside your (bar)” The top of the big-city brewery heap is pretty close, with the SF Bay Area just edging out Boston and Chicago for the #1 spot (helped, almost certainly, by Santa Rosa’s Russian River Brewing being juuuuuuuust inside the 50mi radius from SF City Hall at 48.46mi.).
Following that, Seattle stands out, having lots of breweries but only a couple outstanding ones, followed by Philly and then the two megalopolises, LA and New York (in that order). One surprising result was that the top 4 major metro areas (and 7 of the top 8) lost a significant portion of the territory in its 50mi radius to a large body of water. Only Philly at #5 sneaks in there. Land-locked big cities = mediocre beer?
On the other end of the spectrum…Texas. ::facepalm::. Austin and San Antonio are fine, but woof, Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth.
How do we quantify brewery scenes?
In plain English, Brewery score = quantity of breweries/person X quality of breweries X 100,000.
Methodology is detailed in the Small Cities chapter of this project.
Note: Our methodlogy, calcuated on a per-capita basis, tends to penalize large metro areas, so they populated the bottom of the overall list. This is one of the reasons that we ended up comparing like-to-like in separate articles, rather than focusing on one big list. That, and the likelihood of anyone finishing a 10,000 word treatise on breweries.
For those of you who prefer graphs to words, here’s our handy graph of beer enjoyment graphed onto beer ratings.
Because it’s in a graph with magical number dust, you now know with 100% false confidence that beer enjoyment objectively follows the trinomial function f(x)=(x-1)(x-2)(x-3).
The top 5
1 – San Francisco Bay Area, California (#20 overall) – Brewery score: 1.135
San Francisco seems to hit pretty much the sweet spot in our rankings, as far as major metro areas go. It’s dense enough that a 50mi radius from SF City Hall still encapsulates some productive brewing areas (in particular, Santa Rosa and most of Sonoma County), as well as as far South as San José. The Bay Area has a good number of quality breweries, but what puts it over the top is the 6 superlative ones.
- Number of good (3.5+) breweries: 71 (0.00000811/person)
- Superlative breweries: 6
- Highest-rated brewery: The Rare Barrel (Berkeley, CA) – 4.325 metarating
- Highest-rated beer: Home, Sour Home (Wild Ale Sour)
2 – Boston, Massachusetts (#22 overall) – Brewery score: 1.085
Boston ranking pretty high on this list was no great surprise, as New England has some of the densest concentration of high-quality breweries in the country (see our small cities article for details on Portland, Burlington, Hartford, et. al).
The difference between SF and Boston is close enough that year-to-year fluctuations in ratings will likely cause them to leapfrog each other several times in the rankings over the next several years.
- Number of good (3.5+) breweries: 66 (0.00000807/person)
- Superlative breweries: 5
- Highest-rated brewery: Trillium (Boston, MA) – 4.285 metarating
- Highest-rated beer: Headroom (Imperial IPA)
3 – Chicago, Illinois (#23 overall) – Brewery score: 1.050
Chicagoland does very well for itself here, in spite of having a larger population to account for. The beer is good, the beer is plentiful (more than just Goose Island and Old Style, peoples). I’m probably going to start another flame war here, but that’s two gastronomic categories in which Chicago beats New York.
- Number of good (3.5+) breweries: 104 (0.00001052/person)
- Superlative breweries: 5
- Highest-rated brewery: Mikerphone (Elk Grove Village, IL) – 4.08 metarating
- Highest-rated beer: Imperial Smells Like Bean Spirit (Imperial Stout)
4– Seattle, Washington (#26 overall) – Brewery score: 0.826
The other obvious, hop-centric metropolis in the Pacific Northwest that was, of course, going to show up on any beer list. Seattle doesn’t have that many great breweries, but it’s got a whole lot of very good ones, particularly for a metropolitan area that is barely big enough to qualify for our big city list.
Hoppy beer goes very well with flying fish.
- Number of good (3.5+) breweries: 93 (0.00001985/person)
- Superlative breweries: 2
- Highest-rated brewery: Holy Mountain (Seattle, WA) – 4.12 metarating
- Highest-rated beer: Guava Table (Sour)
5– Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (#28 overall) – Brewery score: 0.743
Birthplace of America, brotherly abuse of its own sports teams, and land of delicious unhealthy meat and cheese sandwiches (American, with, hots and sweets. At Pudge’s in Blue Bell.). Also, a sneakily underrated beer scene that’s pretty easy to tap into in Center City (see what we did there?). No, Yuengling didn’t make the “good brewery” cut with a 3.30 metarating).
- Number of good (3.5+) breweries: 66 (0.00000919/person)
- Superlative breweries: 3
- Highest-rated brewery: Conclave (Flemington, NJ) – 4.14 metarating
- Highest-rated beer: Barrel Aged Mexican Morning (BAMM!) (Milk Stout)
The big big-city beer table
All 14 Combined Statistical Areas in the US that have more than 4 million people, ranked by Brewery Score.
Major US metro area brewery scenes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rank (overall) | Metro area | Brewery score | Breweries | Superlative | Highest rated brewery |
1 (21) | San Francisco Bay Area | 1.135 | 71 | 6 | The Rare Barrel |
2 (22) | Boston | 1.085 | 66 | 5 | Trillium |
3 (23) | Chicago | 1.050 | 105 | 5 | Mikerphone |
4 (26) | Seattle | 0.826 | 93 | 2 | Holy Mountain |
5 (28) | Philadelphia | 0.743 | 66 | 3 | Conclave |
6 (29) | Los Angeles | 0.671 | 69 | 7 | Monkish |
7 (30) | New York | 0.646 | 79 | 9 | Other Half and Sand City (tie) |
8 (34) | Atlanta | 0.354 | 24 | 1 | Burnt Hickory |
9 (37) | DC-Baltimore | 0.311 | 63 | 2 | Aslin |
10 (39) | Miami | 0.298 | 15 | 1 | J. Wakefield |
11 (43) | Phoenix | 0.151 | 17 | 0 | Wren House |
12 (46) | Houston | 0.102 | 18 | 0 | Copperhead |
13 (50) | Detroit | 0.068 | 40 | 0 | River Rouge |
14 (54) | Dallas-Fort Worth | -0.117 | 28 | 0 | The Collective Brewing Project |
The complete metro area table
For those of you who want all the info, all the time, in handy table-like form, including all 54 primary statistical areas, brewery rating, and highest-rated brewery.
Rank | Metro area | Brewery score | Breweries | Superlative | Highest rated brewery |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Burlington, VT | 73.609 | 32 | 9 | The Alchemist |
2 | Portland, ME | 20.316 | 37 | 6 | Bissel Brothers |
3 | Bend, OR | 20.184 | 15 | 2 | The Ale Apothecary |
4 | Hartford, CT | 8.694 | 56 | 6 | Tree House |
5 | Fort Collins, CO | 8.057 | 58 | 1 | WeldWerks |
6 | Asheville, NC | 8.030 | 34 | 2 | Zebulon Artisan Ales |
7 | Charleston, SC | 4.758 | 10 | 2 | Westbrook |
8 | Tampa – St. Petersburg, FL | 3.096 | 34 | 5 | Escape |
9 | Richmond, VA | 3.027 | 18 | 2 | The Answer Brewpub |
10 | Columbus, OH | 2.780 | 23 | 4 | Ill Mannered |
11 | Anchorage, AK (credit for state) | 2.732 | 21 | 1 | Anchorage Brewing Company |
12 | San Diego, CA | 2.654 | 65 | 5 | AleSmith |
13 | Austin, TX | 1.932 | 35 | 2 | Jester King |
14 | Portland, OR | 1.723 | 60 | 4 | de Garde |
15 | St. Louis, MO | 1.697 | 24 | 3 | Side Project |
16 | Nashville, TN | 1.686 | 18 | 2 | Southern Grist |
17 | Omaha, NE | 1.654 | 11 | 1 | Boiler |
18 | Denver, CO | 1.347 | 118 | 2 | Black Project Spontaneous & Wild Ales |
19 | Cincinnati, OH | 1.341 | 29 | 1 | Triple Digit |
20 | Raleigh, NC | 1.187 | 29 | 1 | Bond Brothers |
21 | San Francisco Bay Area, CA | 1.135 | 71 | 6 | The Rare Barrel |
21 | Boston, MA | 1.085 | 66 | 5 | Trillium |
23 | Chicago, IL | 1.050 | 105 | 5 | Mikerphone |
24 | Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN | 1.046 | 60 | 0 | Lupulin |
25 | Pittsburgh, PA | 0.860 | 23 | 1 | Brew Gentlemen |
26 | Seattle, WA | 0.826 | 93 | 2 | Holy Mountain |
27 | San Antonio, TX | 0.772 | 15 | 1 | Oddwood Ales |
28 | Philadelphia, PA | 0.746 | 66 | 3 | Conclave |
29 | Los Angeles, CA | 0.671 | 69 | 7 | Monkish |
30 | New York, NY | 0.646 | 79 | 9 | Other Half and Sand City (tie) |
31 | Sacramento, CA | 0.635 | 28 | 1 | Device |
32 | Grand Rapids, MI | 0.537 | 38 | 0 | Bell’s |
33 | Albuquerque, NM | 0.514 | 18 | 0 | La Cumbre |
34 | Atlanta, GA | 0.354 | 24 | 1 | Burnt Hickory |
35 | Madison, WI | 0.339 | 23 | 0 | New Glarus |
36 | Indianapolis, IN | 0.317 | 40 | 0 | Black Acre |
37 | DC-Baltimore, MD | 0.311 | 63 | 2 | Aslin |
38 | New Orleans, LA | 0.299 | 11 | 0 | Second Line |
39 | Miami, FL | 0.298 | 15 | 1 | J. Wakefield |
40 | Charlotte, NC | 0.270 | 19 | 0 | Wooden Robot |
41 | Cleveland, OH | 0.180 | 20 | 0 | The BottleHouse |
42 | Oklahoma City, OK | 0.151 | 7 | 0 | Roughtail |
43 | Phoenix, AZ | 0.151 | 17 | 0 | Wren House |
44 | Milwaukee, WI | 0.149 | 22 | 0 | Raised Grain |
45 | Jacksonville, FL | 0.139 | 12 | 0 | Aardwolf |
46 | Houston, TX | 0.102 | 18 | 0 | Copperhead |
47 | Orlando, FL | 0.100 | 14 | 0 | Ocean Sun |
48 | Kansas City, MO | 0.095 | 13 | 0 | Crane |
49 | Las Vegas, NV | 0.070 | 9 | 0 | Lovelady |
50 | Detroit, MI | 0.068 | 40 | 0 | River Rouge |
51 | Virginia Beach / Norfolk, VA | 0.044 | 17 | 0 | Virginia Beer Company |
52 | Honolulu, HI (credit for state) | 0.025 | 8 | 0 | Lanikai |
53 | Salt Lake City, UT | -0.029 | 10 | 0 | 2 Row |
54 | Dallas-Fort Worth, TX | -0.111 | 28 | 0 | The Collective Brewing Project |
Click the title bar to expand or collapse.
What’s next?
That’s a wrap for this edition of the rankings! Only thing left to do is more in-person research. LOTS more research. Also, finish writing the script to update these rankings every 6 months or so.
Coming soon, keep an eye out for downloadable and prints of City Beer maps, with brewery names, ratings, and addresses. Basically, The Beer Gazetteer made into an actual, you know, gazetteer.
Table updated to include Omaha, Nebraska (Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan statistical area). Thanks to Brady Cox for pointing out that we missed it when building the small cities database.
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