Before Louisiana changed their laws the Abita tour was free and at the end you poured your own beers from the tap wall, as much as you wanted for an hour or so. Good times.
Jock 07 said:Diggity said:
I remember the old days of St. Arnold's. You would pay like 8 bucks for the tour, then get a few wooden tokens to "sample" the beer. It was all volunteer run so you could basically drink for hours on those tokens.
Guess those days are long gone.
Goin into the way back machine to the OG Dacoma location, so many good times there.
jetch17 said:
For OG Petrol patrons of yesteryear - Rancor returns!
jetch17 said:
Urban South closing Houston taproom & operation - thier chewy beers sucked anyway
redag06 said:
They sucked. The Houston beer scene needed a good cleansing of bad beers.
jetch17 said:
Yeah but theyve got distribution now into all specs & a lot of bars are picking up the Howdy & Lil Bit on tap
I'm betting they phase out the beer and focus on the cannabis since they got bought
Sounds like they are going for a less industrial-feel version of No Label. My kids no longer care about the playground but would rather jump off the concrete loading dock and chunk rocks at the abandoned storage buildings.Booma94 said:
Went to a couple of Grand Openings at new breweries this weekend. Tejas in the old Buffalo Bayou Brewing builidng and Talyard in Sugar Land.
Tejas has removed the orange exterior and all of the orange BB branding and replaced it with their own logo, but has done little else in the name of renovations anywhere, which isn't necessarily a bad thing considering the skyline view they have. Some more permanent seating on the 3rd floor would be an improvement. They have 6 beers on tap, but the taps on the 3rd floor are only slightly above room temp. I thought both the Clara and the Negro were both decent, but with them both being warm I declined to try anything else.
Talyard is brand spanking new, but for the life of me I cannot figure out their desired demographic. They had 5 beers on tap and a number of wines and canned cocktails available, but by 4:30 on Saturday they were out of half of the cocktails. They are very IPA heavy (3 of 5 are IPAs). The food menu is limited, there is very limited indoor seating, and the playground is the biggest feature of their "yard". It's like they decided to make beer at a city park. They have a stage, but not enough seating or space in front of it for it to be considered a concert venue of any sort. The big screen is behind the stage, so if you want to watch a game and they have entertainment, forget it- you're stuck watching the wall mounted tv's by the ordering area. The beer is meh, the food selection is minimal, there's no climate controlled area to congregate, and there are kids running around everywhere- not like any brewery I've ever been to. They have obviously invested a ton of money into the place, but if it's still open in a year, I'll be amazed.
Of the two, Tejas has potential. Talyard is not a place I plan on visiting again.
When you read the bios of the owners, you can see that is definitely the market they are going for -- a family-oriented place that also serves beer.cajunaggie08 said:
I'd say there definitely is a market for a family-hang-out brewery. If I have to take the kids with me, I'd rather not go ato a brewery unless there is space for them to run wild without them being at the table saying they're bored every 5 seconds. Talyard may also be banking on being a hangout spot for pre-game for Space Cowboys games.
I'm not surprised their menu is IPA heavy. Its the easiest style of beer to start out on for brewing. Also, consider what neighborhoods its closest to.
It perfectly fits the bill for this, but it's a large facility that was probably pretty expensive to build and I don't see where they're going to generate the revenue to keep the doors open. They aren't enough of a restaurant to generate revenue selling food, and they aren't enough of a brewery to generate revenue selling beer.EclipseAg said:
When you read the bios of the owners, you can see that is definitely the market they are going for -- a family-oriented place that also serves beer.
When we visited, a couple of employees mentioned their beer menu was a little small due to delays in building out and testing equipment and getting permitted. They definitely have plans to add several more beers over the next few months.
One of the owners told me there are plans for more indoor seating on the second floor of the brewhouse, which isn't built out yet. Not sure if that will be for special events or just general seating, though.
I'm not a craft beer expert so I can't really judge the quality of the beer other than I liked what I had. But I definitely feel there is a market for a hangout in Sugar Land that doesn't involve boba tea.