Hop Butcher For the World
Microbrewery
in
Chicago,
Illinois,
United States 🇺🇸
Associated Venue: Hop Butcher For The World
Established in 2014
Contact
Description
In his poem "Chicago," Carl Sandburg first refers to this great city as "Hog Butcher For the World." And while the literal meaning behind that moniker has faded since the mid-twentieth century closing of the Union Stock Yards, it anchors and inspires our ethos in three meaningful ways:
For starters, we love hops. The variety of ways they can be used in brewing and the range of flavors and aromas that they bring to beer are vast and areas in which we enjoy experimenting heavily. No surprise then that the word "hop" appears in our name and that the majority of our recipes begin with a specific variety or intuitive blend of hops in mind.
How we are inspired by the "Butcher" portion of our namesake is thankfully less bloody than the history behind it, but there are a lot of butcher-esque traits that we do draw inspiration from. All of the ones we grew up around were approachable, dependable and visibly and vocally passionate about their craft. They'd take the time to get to know you, get technical when necessary and if you wanted it, help you find something or make a recommendation. That's who we aim to be, except with hops, yeast, water and grain in a brewery instead of a butcher shop and a meat-filled counter.
Finally, at some point, you'll refer to us simply as "Hop Butcher" (and we're cool with that), but the "For The World" part is an important and meaningful element of our name. It inspires the ingredients we use and the personality behind the beers we brew: unique enough for the beer geeks, approachable enough for the newcomers. It guides who we work with and where our cans and kegs are distributed...and where they might someday be distributed.
For starters, we love hops. The variety of ways they can be used in brewing and the range of flavors and aromas that they bring to beer are vast and areas in which we enjoy experimenting heavily. No surprise then that the word "hop" appears in our name and that the majority of our recipes begin with a specific variety or intuitive blend of hops in mind.
How we are inspired by the "Butcher" portion of our namesake is thankfully less bloody than the history behind it, but there are a lot of butcher-esque traits that we do draw inspiration from. All of the ones we grew up around were approachable, dependable and visibly and vocally passionate about their craft. They'd take the time to get to know you, get technical when necessary and if you wanted it, help you find something or make a recommendation. That's who we aim to be, except with hops, yeast, water and grain in a brewery instead of a butcher shop and a meat-filled counter.
Finally, at some point, you'll refer to us simply as "Hop Butcher" (and we're cool with that), but the "For The World" part is an important and meaningful element of our name. It inspires the ingredients we use and the personality behind the beers we brew: unique enough for the beer geeks, approachable enough for the newcomers. It guides who we work with and where our cans and kegs are distributed...and where they might someday be distributed.
🐻 walloping the Flyers. At least the scenery is fantastic, beer too. Juicy, creamy, green. Love Hop Butcher Fuck The World.
Tried
from Can
on 21 Feb 2021
at 21:39
8.2/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 8
Flavor 8
Texture 10
Overall 8
Big nose of pineapple and pine reason as soon as I let my mask. Dense like orange juice, with a thin layer of persistent foam. Sharp bitterness on the palate before pineapple and orange impressions take over. Sharp hop bitterness and effervescence. Light toasty malts separate from the subtle but noticable alcohol.
Tried
on 20 Feb 2021
at 21:54
7/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 7
Pint can from Woodman's Appleton, 2/1/21. Hazy orange, large creamy tan head, good retention. Weak aroma. What's there is pale malt with some resin. Taste is pale malt, mango, pineapple, melon. Medium bodied, low bitterness.
Tried
from Can
on 02 Feb 2021
at 00:40
6.4/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 6.5
Pours a dark, iced tea color (about that consistency, too), with minimal head. Sweet aroma dominated by artificial pistachio, some chocolate. Flavor follows, along with some bitter chocolate. Very thin mouthfeel (this stuff should be oily and thick). Could use a bit of fine-tuning.
Tried
on 29 Jan 2021
at 22:16
7.9/10
—
Appearance 10
Aroma 7
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7.5
Pours a hazy, orange-peach color, with mid-sized head. Aroma is citrus and tropical fruit. Flavor is citrus and tropical fruit, with some mid-level sweetness and a fairly bitter, hoppy finish. More balanced than the last beer of theirs I tried.
Tried
on 24 Jan 2021
at 20:52
7.1/10
—
Appearance 10
Aroma 7
Flavor 6
Texture 8
Overall 6.5
Pours a very hazy, mustard yellow, with big head that mostly stays intact. Aroma is fruity citrus and tropical fruit. Flavor is similar, but with a strain of bitterness running through things that is a bit Brett-like in taste (not my thing). Finish is extra bitter. Could use a touch-up and a bit more balance?
Tried
on 24 Jan 2021
at 20:02
7.6/10
—
Appearance 10
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 7.5
Pours a hazy, golden pineapple, with mid-sized head. Aroma is dank, a bit on the rotting tropical fruit side. Flavor is tropical fruit, with some citrus, but a fairly strong bite of pine/spruce hop bitterness that kind of overtakes things.
Tried
on 20 Jan 2021
at 20:18
7.6/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7.5
From a pint can. Pours a cloudy straw with an off white head. Aromas of green onions and dank hay. Flavors are moderately bitter citrus.
Tried
from Can
on 25 Dec 2020
at 19:06
7.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 8
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7.5
16oz can from Tavour. Thick orange, gold n pour, small bubbly head. Aroma is citrus peel, grapefruit. Taste continues with more citrus, which finishes with a nice acidic sting. Thick, creamy, full, juicy.
Tried
from Can
on 21 Dec 2020
at 02:50
5.8/10
—
Appearance 10
Aroma 5
Flavor 5
Texture 6
Overall 5
Very sweet; lots of residual sugar clunking up the back end. Vegetal funkiness on the nose. Taste offers up strong notes of pineapple, stone fruit, minerals, chive, and a surprising bit of alcohol. Finishes cloy and abrasive.
Tried
on 16 Dec 2020
at 23:14