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This is a list of breweries in Ohio. As of April 2021, there were 366 breweries in operation in Ohio, producing the fifth most beer in the United States. [1] Those breweries support about 83,000 jobs, with a combined economic impact of $10 billion. Each job created in a brewery in the state is estimated to impact 45 additional jobs in ...
May 19 2024; Columbus, Ohio, USA; The Bier Stube, 1479 N High St, is threatened by apartment development in the Ohio State University off-campus area.
As of 2018, Rhinegeist was the 28th largest independent craft brewery in the United States and the 2nd largest in Ohio by sales volume. [5] Rhinegeist currently distributes its products in Ohio, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. [6] [7] [8] The brewery self-distributes in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio. [9]
Ohio City chef Parker Bosley was an early farmer's market supporter. [7] Ohio City contains the largest concentration of craft breweries in Cleveland, which includes Hansa Brewing, Market Garden Brewery, Nanobrew, Platform Beer, Saucy Brew Works, Bad Tom Smith Brewing, and the state of Ohio's oldest microbrewery, the Great Lakes Brewing Company.
The Brewery District, traditionally known as the Old German Brewing District, [1] is a neighborhood located in Columbus, Ohio.Located just south of the central business district and west of German Village, it is bounded by Interstate 70 on the north, South Pearl Street on the east, Greenlawn Avenue on the south, and the Scioto River on the west.
The three-acre (1.2 ha) site houses the East Market, a public market and food hall, as well as two bars, restaurants, a brewery, and event space, with plans for neighboring apartments. The property is located in the city's Franklin Park neighborhood and is a contributing part of the Columbus Near East Side District , listed on the National ...
The final mistake made by the company was changing its water source. In 1968, the brewery switched to using water from a well under the property from city water. Despite the spin to a beer made with, "artesian spring water" the change in taste proved to be unpopular with the public, with sales in Cincinnati dropping 14 percent.
Hudepohl Brewing Company became one of many Cincinnati breweries to thrive in the Queen City in the 1880s. Waves of German immigrants began settling in and around Cincinnati in the 1850s and '60s. These immigrants had a taste for the lager beer of their homeland and Cincinnati's German beer barons were only too willing to answer the demand.