Potosi Brewing Company
Microbrewery
in
Potosi,
Wisconsin,
United States 🇺🇸
Associated Venue: Potosi Brewing Company
Established in 2008
Contact
Description
One of the oldest breweries in Wisconsin, Potosi started in 1852 to quench the thirsts of local miners. Ownership of the brewery changed hands several times and Potosi was fortunate to survive the Prohibition era. The Brewery eventually closed in 1972 due to swiftly changing market conditions.
In 1980, the brewery buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1995 local artist and woodworker Gary David and his cousin Denis David bought the brewery buildings for the cost of back taxes with the goal of restoring them.
Five years later in 2000, renovation efforts expanded to involve the entire community with the establishment of the 501(c)(3) non-profit Potosi Brewery Foundation, modeled after the philanthropic Newman’s Own Foundation.
In 2004, the Potosi Brewery Foundation received a major boost to its redevelopment efforts when the brewery was chosen by the American Breweriana Association (ABA), an organization of beer historians, collectors, and preservationists, to be the home of the National Brewery Museum.
2008 was the year the beer started flowing again largely in part to the local volunteers supporting the brewery’s business model, noting that “the organization is volunteer-driven and it would not likely have the impact it has had without those efforts.”
In 2015 Potosi opened its new state-of-the-art production facility and unveiled its new branding that both celebrates Potosi's past and looks boldly towards the future.
In 1980, the brewery buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1995 local artist and woodworker Gary David and his cousin Denis David bought the brewery buildings for the cost of back taxes with the goal of restoring them.
Five years later in 2000, renovation efforts expanded to involve the entire community with the establishment of the 501(c)(3) non-profit Potosi Brewery Foundation, modeled after the philanthropic Newman’s Own Foundation.
In 2004, the Potosi Brewery Foundation received a major boost to its redevelopment efforts when the brewery was chosen by the American Breweriana Association (ABA), an organization of beer historians, collectors, and preservationists, to be the home of the National Brewery Museum.
2008 was the year the beer started flowing again largely in part to the local volunteers supporting the brewery’s business model, noting that “the organization is volunteer-driven and it would not likely have the impact it has had without those efforts.”
In 2015 Potosi opened its new state-of-the-art production facility and unveiled its new branding that both celebrates Potosi's past and looks boldly towards the future.
7/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7
12 ounce can, 8/4/24. Black, medium tan head, average retention. Aroma of chocolate, nuts, caramel, vanilla. Taste is roast, caramel, nuts, chocolate. Well balanced.
Tried
from Can
on 02 Jan 2025
at 02:19
6.3/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 6
Aromas are malt, dry grain and damp basement. Flavors are really basic and kind of bland. Bittersweet start with okay carbonation and a slightly sweet finish. Very generic. Drinkable if there's nothing better.
Tried
from Can
from
La Crosse People's Food Co-op
on 20 Aug 2024
at 17:17
7.4/10
Light on spices but full on malt
Tried
on 10 Aug 2024
at 13:41
7/10
Tried
on 10 Aug 2024
at 13:17
6.5/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 8
Overall 6
Can (3002, whatever that means) pour from Friar Tuck, Crestwood. Hazy gold with light sparkle, thin head with fair retention and nice lacing. Aroma is strong pale malts. Taste is pale malts, corn. Smooth, frothy texture with soft carbonation and crisp finish. Not much to it. Pretty ho hum lager. Glad to support the Reisch Charities.
Tried
from Can
on 23 Jun 2024
at 03:51
5.5/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 5
12oz can. Old school. Grainy, bland malt tone. Some bitterness, sort of an odd tone there. Not really impressive at all, perhaps another one of those if only we could reach BMC drinkers beers. Not that good on any level.
Tried
from Can
on 22 Jun 2024
at 03:33
6.8/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 7
Can from Woodman's.Pours a nearly red amber with a tinge of blue. Blueberry nose is prominent as a first impression. Maybe I catch a bit of honey in the nose. Taste is kind of standard, though. The fruit fades away on the tongue, then sneaks up again in the afterbite. Light hop bitterness redeems this from being ordinary.
Tried
from Can
on 07 May 2024
at 03:46
5.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 5.5
12oz can. I get a little of all the added flavors, so it sort of works in that respect. Seems like a reasonable enough Milk Stout underneath it all. Aroma is rather unappetizing, and really drags it down. Not that good.
Tried
from Can
on 08 Jan 2024
at 01:12
6.6/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 6.5
Aromas are heavy caramel with a little dark malt. Flavors are somewhat similar to nose with carbonation bringing the sweet down a bit. Other than that, not a lot else going on.
Tried
from Can
from
Woodman's Foods - Onalaska
on 21 Dec 2023
at 22:16
6.5/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 7
12oz can. Not so bad, no so great, pretty much a Potosi beer through and through. Pleasant malts, but a little bit of a cheap, grainy edge. Nice balance, pleasant bitterness before a robust sweet malt finish. Aroma is muted, lackluster, but the beer itself is very sessionable. OK.
Tried
from Can
on 08 Oct 2023
at 05:18