Guy’s Guide: The best craft beer in Asia

Ahhh craft beer – the perfect accompaniment to sailor tattoos, a munand that stringy, overgrown beard. Just kidding! It’s about time this American trend made its way across the Pacific. The craft beer revolution has arrived, and with it some distinctly Asian beer profiles and locales. With many places having only opened up in the past two years, we’re predicting that this trend is just the beginning. For now, here’s the round up:

The Roundhouse

The Roundhouse Taproom
The first, and arguably best taproom in HK

Where: Hong Kong

What: This Central watering hole features 25 taps with rotating local and international craft beers. A standout: It’s one of the few (if only) places you can try Guangzhou based Drunken Cat Brewery outside the mainland. With special tap takeovers, and a Texas-style BBQ grub menu (try the smoked beef short ribs!), it’s doing its dang best – and succeeding, in bringing a little southern Austin, TX attitude to the big HK.

Great Leap Brewing

Screen Shot 2015-10-21 at 7.06.55 PM
A true great leap forward – get it? get a beer.

Where: Beijing

What: Serving their own IPA’s, Lagers, Stouts and a pretty tasty Honey Ma Blonde at 3 locations around town, head to Hutong #6 in Dongcheng and quaff a cold one in the classic courtyard – if you can find it. Quiet, authentic, and near many a tourist site, a beer here makes for a refreshing break from the mass tourist trail (and watery Tsingtao). Nomad tip – while their other two locations serve up western style burgers and bar snacks, you’ll have to BYO at#6 if you’re hungry.

LeVeL 33

Screen Shot 2015-10-21 at 6.57.07 PM
Wait till you see the other view

Where: Singapore

What: This one makes the list, not so much for their beers (which are decent) but for the panoramic views of Marina Bay. Head on up to the penthouse of Marina Bay Financial Centre and down a cold one at the ‘highest urban craft brewery in the world’. The space is as swanky as the views and makes for a great perch to sample some of their house-made bubbles. If you like your breakfast boozy, they also do a great weekend brunch.

Hitachino Brewing Lab

hitachino1
Great graphic design and award winning beer

Where: Tokyo

What: Having been in the beer business since 1823, the Kiuchi Brewery has been hitting home runs in their craft beer department with their Hitachino Nest Beer , especially the White Ale – a hopped Belgian-style beer with flavours of coriander, orange peel and nutmeg. But, if just sampling another award-winning beer isn’t enough, visit the Lab where you can make your own – choosing your own ingredients and flavour profile all under the guidance of Hitachino brewers. With 10 Hitachino Nest Beers on tap and Mr. Sugie – a classically French-trained chef helming the kitchen, you’ll also be just fine leaving everything to the masters.

Galmegi Brewing Company

Galmegi-growlers
Grab a growler at Galmegi

Where: Busan

What: Three locations, six tap year-rounders, a rotating roster of seasonals (hello ‘I’m Pine IPA’ with pine and juniper) and brew collaborations with the likes of The Booth, Four Sesasons Craft Brew Pub, and the Magpie Brewing Co., these Busan boys have been busy. They’ve also recently launched some pretty handsome refillable growlers, which we hope, is a step in the right direction for other Asian breweries to offer these environmental convenient beer takeaways that has already swept American craft-brew bars. And Seoul, you havn’t been left out – you can find all the Galmegi beers at Neighborhood in Sinchon.

Pasteur Street Brewing Company

pasteurbeer
Great guy, great street, great brew

Where: Ho Chi Minh

What: A unique (and welcome) standout in the craft beer game, these guys are perfecting the whole local ingredient angle with some experimental flair. Whether it be a Vietnamese Wit brewed with basil, lemongrass, ginger, black pepper and lemon peel, an Imperial Stout infused with fresh cacao nibs, or the jasmine infused IPA, their rotating taps are uniquely palatable – yet distinctively local. With future plans for world domination, for now, the only place to knock a few is to visit their hip tasting room in the alley at 144 Pasteur – a definite must on your next Saigon hit list.

Got a great one we should know about? Let us know in the comments section.

You know what comes after Beer o’clock?

Photo Credits: Main, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

Alexander Doerr

Adding a little Yang to the Wanderluxe Yin, this nomad can often be found riding his 1978 Vespa through the streets of the Big Durian. A lover of Javanese vintage, running, strange tropical flowers and brutalist architecture, he hates papayas, but is working on it.

No Comments Yet

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.