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.
8/10
Happy Halloween, fellow fiends. Good lord, these guys make some rich-ass stouts. Delicious but 10oz would’ve been plenty. The sea salt prevents the maple syrup from getting cloyingly sweet... almost.
Tried
from Can
on 31 Oct 2020
at 23:58
7.4/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 8.5
Can from Tavour. Pours hazy orange tinged gold with a small white hed. Tropical aroma. Melon/papaya/slightly roasty malt. Full bodied. Quite juicy. Not all that dry. Slightly roasty malt support/melon/ papaya/arguably citrus. Seems the mosaic oerwhelmed the Citra! Maybe there's some passion fruit. It's fairly complex and really fun tasting stuff.
Tried
from Can
on 30 Oct 2020
at 00:42
9.5/10
I really needed to drink something cute and satisfying tonight. This is one of the best desserts I’ve ever had. And I’ve been to Italy, dontchaknow!
Tried
from Can
on 21 Oct 2020
at 23:21
6.9/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 7.5
16 ounce can. Pours a hazy orange hue with a large white head. A big pulp tropical fruit nose. Quite sweet, vanilla, Sunny D, earthy sweet malts. Decent. Very one sided.
Tried
from Can
on 07 Sep 2020
at 08:29
7/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 8
16 ounce can. Pours a hazy orange hue with a large white head. A big pungent fruity nose. Tropical flavors, orange peel, Sunny D, lactose perhaps. Decent. A bit much, hazy IPAs are great but this sort of stretches it far into the juice with lactose sort of area.
Tried
from Can
on 23 Aug 2020
at 06:28
7.8/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 8
Flavor 8
Texture 6
Overall 9
Can at home. Nice bright yellow slushy orange. Nose is tropical fruits some herbal tones. Tastes of mango, grapefruit, floral, herbal. Some bitterness. Pleasant bodied.
Tried
from Can
on 12 Aug 2020
at 02:14
8.2/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 8
Flavor 9
Texture 8
Overall 9
16 oz. can From Massachusetts distribution! Flavor had easy citrus, pineapple juice, sweet grapefruit, and maybe peach. Texture is incredibly juicy. Absolutely no bitterness. A very fine example of a double New England IPA!
Tried
from Can
on 10 Aug 2020
at 19:16
7.2/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 8
16 oz. Aroma is cantaloupe, Smarties, citrus peel. Pours murky orange with a one finger bone-white head with decent retention. Taste is light to moderately bitter, pretty sweet, a bit savory, with some mild juiciness. Not bad.
Tried
from Can
on 04 Aug 2020
at 03:51
Smooth, juicy, not much of a bite at 10.5%! Dangerous!
Tried
from Can
on 17 Jul 2020
at 21:22
Gonna be in a deep ditch after this heavyweight! Still green and very flavorful at two months!
Tried
from Can
on 09 Jul 2020
at 21:16