Travel

The Country's Raddest Beer Destination Is Full of Misty Mountains and Hazy IPAs

Here are 10 of its best, most influential breweries.

Zero Gravity Craft Brewery
Zero Gravity Craft Brewery
Zero Gravity Craft Brewery

Editor’s note: We know COVID-19 is impacting travel plans right now. For a little inspiration, we’ll continue to share stories from our favorite places around the world. Be sure to check travel restrictions and protocols before you head out.The Green Mountain range runs like a curved spine through Vermont, bisecting it north to south. Along it, you’ll find places as varied and intricately intertwined as bustling Burlington and ghost towns like Buels Gore. Along Route 7, you’ll zip past farmland, maple creemee stands, and mountainside farmhouses. I-89 and serpentine Route 100 beam past ski resorts and the state-spanning Long Trail.

Along these billboard-free roads, there are a few constants. Local dairy can be found at the gas station. Three-hundred general stores operate among the 251 named towns. And beer is everywhere. 

“Vermont beer” isn’t just a geographical designation; it’s a categorical distinction fostered and defined by its home state. And to best experience one of America’s most lauded and influential brewing movements, you’ll have to immerse yourself. 

Forty years ago, bold statements about Vermont’s influence would have seemed ironic, if not implausible. Vermont was early to prohibition and late to transition out of it-some areas stayed dry for nearly 80 years. But the late blooming of Vermont brewing culture was one of its greatest advantages. Beer writer and food historian Adam Krakowski says prohibition erased most brewing traditions and heritage from the culture entirely. In other words: it wiped the slate clean. 

“By then, you have carte blanche,” Krakowski says. “There’s no rules, trends, or history to follow. You are not bound. Vermont was the total wild west.”

Today, Vermont has about 14 breweries per 100,000 people over 21, leading the country in number of craft breweries per capita. In the last decade, the number of local breweries has tripled. What started in the ’90s with breweries like Magic Hat, Long Trail, Harpoon, and Otter Creek gave way to wild innovations that took everything the state represented and distilled it -literally-into some of the country’s most respected and beloved beers.The Alchemist probed the now-iconic rise of hazy, drink-fresh New England IPA (originally called Vermont IPA) with Heady Topper. Lawson’s Finest Liquids created the aura of the small-batch beer drop. Hill Farmstead revolutionized the craft-beer canon with the normalization of the 750ml bottles. It also, as the first brewery in the world to use (and trademark) “farmstead” in its name, intentionally shifted the vocabulary around beer to a level of reverie previously reserved for wine.

Breweries like these became pilgrimage sites for beer fans, proving the viability of a contemporary craft model: can art, four packs, destination releases, and limited distribution. 

Vermont beer is what happens when you live in a small state, topographically whittled into small towns by mountains, with some of the best brewers in the world. Here, the old trope “You’re only as good as your competition” becomes “you’re only as good as your neighbors.” Brewers share equipment, materials, and help distribute each other’s beer. Sometimes, they set up shop directly across the street. Vermont beer is not only beer: it’s a signal of community, a tight-knit one where old-guard brewers adroitly cultivate the next generation’s leaders before sending them off on their own.

“I think Vermont is home to the best brewers and beer in the country due to the homegrown aspect,” says Krakowski. “[In] how many places could you go to your competition and ask for help to get better?” 

For most, visiting these breweries isn’t a current option. And though Vermont beer is best experienced in person, getting a taste of the state’s best breweries offers an extrasensory opportunity to experience what “Vermont beer” really is. The 10 essential breweries on this subjective list don’t cover the full spectrum, but they serve as a primer. Seek them out if you can, and when the time is right, go to Vermont for the full experience. It’s a place to experience in person, with the blue haze of Green Mountains holding court below the skyline.

Foam Brewers
Foam Brewers
Foam Brewers

Foam Brewers

Burlington
Brewmaster Todd Haire is both a maestro of technical precision and an innovator with Wonka-esque creativity whose creations swing from gently puckering berry sours to creamy-textured double IPAs. After 13 years as head brewer at Magic Hat and another two at Switchback, Haire opened Foam on the Lake Champlain waterfront in 2016. The same year, he co-founded House of Fermentology, a small-batch beer blendery focused on beer aging and wild fermentation with writer and homebrewing figure Bill Mares. The blendery names its delicate, startlingly intricate beers after colored dots, like the ones used to mark a Queen bee-inspired, says Haire, by the brewers’ shared love for beekeeping.
 

The Alchemist

Stowe
When Jen and John Kimmich launched their flagship Heady Topper in 2003, there was no indication that the unique, hazy, canned double IPA would change the craft landscape. Today, its impact is deep: It’s the OG of the hazy New England IPA movement, which evolved from the style of beer formerly known as “Vermont IPA.” Though Heady and newer sensations like Focal Banger are now circulated throughout the state, the best experience remains in Stowe, a town between two mountain gaps where few of the brewery’s kegs and cans make it beyond the door. There are myriad IPAs; crystal-clear kolsch; inky milk stouts; and gentle stunners like Petit Mutant, an American sour ale with cherries. 
 

Red Clover Ale Company

Brandon
In 2018 Red Clover Ale opened in Brandon’s minuscule town center under the reigns of two brothers and a brother-in-law, who brought with them the experience of managing their family’s sixth-generation dairy farm. The trio focuses on inventive ales with an eye for the classics. Cans and taps change weekly. There might be the textbook, glass-clear Bohemian pils or a burgundy-hued maple stout called Sapsucker. There is always an array of IPAs, most of them clocking refreshingly below 7%, and all as graceful as the birds they’re named for, like the American Redstart, Superb Fairywren, and Mountain Bluebird. 

Lawson's Finest Liquids
Lawson’s Finest Liquids
Lawson’s Finest Liquids

Lawson’s Finest Liquids

Waitsfield
Since opening in 2008, Lawson’s-the brewery behind a floral, fruit-sluiced, and decidedly unhazy IPA called Sip Of Sunshine-popularized the small-batch drop, and confirmed that people will travel for rare beer. Lawson’s beer crystallizes the Vermont image, with its trademark Vermont IPAs and idiosyncratic maple brews like the Maple Nipple, a former homebrew recipe for a velvety amber ale rich with Vermont maple syrup. The nanobrewery became a 7-barrel microbrewery in 2011 when founders Sean and Karen Lawson pulled the ultimate Vermont power play by moving operations into the family’s sugarhouse. In 2018, the couple opened a production facility and timber-clad, horseshoe bar-equipped taproom. These days, you can find their wares statewide, proving that the fandom has more to do with quality than exclusivity.
 

Foley Brothers Brewing

Brandon
At the foot of one circuitous dirt pathway near the Green Mountain National Forest and tucked in a clapboard barn surrounded by fields, you’ll find this 15-barrel brewery and taproom owned by brothers Pat and Dan Foley. Enormous exposed beams rest over a chalkboard tap list in what looks like a refurbished horse’s stable. The setting is iconic Vermont, with cows snorting through grasses nearby and locals arriving on bikes with backpacks brimming with empty growlers ready for refills of tangerine-hued Big Bang or Prospect, a foam-laced double IPA brewed with local grains. Foley is the kind of place where one November weekend, the brothers, on a whim, will make chili over smoldering logs outside the taproom while Reilly, their curly-headed dog, waits on a game of fetch, nosing at patrons’ feet as they drink beer surrounded by forests.
 

Lost Nation Brewing

Morrisville
The 7,000-barrel brewery, nudged between the mountains Mansfield and Elmore, seems leviathan next to operations in a sugar shack. Lost Nation, though, sets the example for expert beer brewed for scale without sacrificing quality or sense of place. The brewery specializes in Vermont-heavy interpretations of European ales and lagers: think a shatteringly crisp Vermont Pilsner and a Belgian-style saison inspired by the farms of Lamoille county. Yet Lost Nation’s national presence is likely tied to their gose, which helped ignite a renaissance of the almost-extinct German beer saline with sea salt and threaded with coriander. 

Hill Farmstead Brewery
Hill Farmstead Brewery
Hill Farmstead Brewery

Hill Farmstead

Greensboro Bend
After studying philosophy in college and brewing in Denmark, brewmaster Shaun Hill opened a brewery in his barn, a quiet sanctuary in the mountains a dozen miles from cell service. The Hill family has lived for eight generations in the belly of Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom, an enigmatic and arrestingly beautiful sweep of land where the rural US becomes something like Narnia. In the past decade, Hill Farmstead has been named the best brewery in the world for seven consecutive years; surpassed its original business goal by millions; and expanded beyond the barn to an adjacent rustic spaceship of an onsite tasting room. Glowing pours of Anna, Edward, Poetica, and more of the best beer in the world can be sipped on the porch, a picnic blanket on the grass, or alongside a small, clear pond. 
 

Von Trapp Brewery

Stowe
A glass of honey-hued lager at Von Trapp brewery often has a rich, foamy head like softly beaten cream. Enjoy it at a U-shaped bar facing the wall of windows overlooking the mountains and feel dropped into the Austrian Alps. That’s no accident: The brewery and bierhall at Trapp Family Lodge is owned by the real family of Sound of Music fame, and their devotion to lagers and only lagers in and of itself makes it essential, lonely goatherds notwithstanding. Here, you’ll always find pilsner, Helles, Vienna-style lager, Trosten, and Berliner Weisse on the roster. In the summer, the hills are alive (couldn’t help it) with the crushing green of Vermont summer; hiking trails and swimming holes snake around the base of the mountain, which in the distance, under the sky, look almost blue. 
 

Zero Gravity Craft Brewery

Burlington
Originally attached to beloved Onion City pizza spot American Flatbread in 2004, Zero Gravity cut the ribbon on its 30-barrel brewery on Burlington’s Pine Street in 2015, complete with a canning line, bottle-conditioning, barrel-aging, a tasting room, and a sunny patio. Zero Gravity exemplifies how to scale in size without sacrificing creativity, technique and unfailing quality. The brewpub at American Flatbread carries on under head brewer Destiny Saxon, while the Pine Street brewery sits beside The Great Northern, a restaurant with bold, unique takes on Vermont’s local food chain, meaning in-house eating includes dirty fries with smoked Vermont pork and spicy pickles; bratwursts made by hand; and deep grain bowls with sorghum and vegetables from farmers nearby.
 

Wunderkammer Bier

Albany
In late May, brewer Vasilios Gletsos was setting up a fixed brewing space in a defunct dairy barn in Albany, a town just shy of 900 people in the Northeast Kingdom. The former creamery and subterranean cheese cave were being readied for brewing, fermenting, and aging. In the era of pastry beers and shiny cans, says Gletsos, “We have lost the connection to the fact that beer is food and it comes from farms. Brewing was a way of preserving the harvest. It is an expression of landscape.” With Wunderkammer-named for a 16th-century German term for a collection of curiosities and extraordinary phenomena-Gletsos seeks to deepen the connection between beer and nature, using foraged ingredients and natural methods to create a bridge between craft and artistic process. Wunderkammer evokes what it’s meant to, even as a paradox: it succeeds, somehow, in transporting the drinker another world while rooting them to a single place of origin. Sign up here for our daily Thrillist email, get Next Flight Out for more travel coverage, and subscribe here for our YouTube channel to get your fix of the best in food/drink/fun.

Beyond working in restaurants, on working farms, and as the lead recipe developer of a national food magazine, Julia Clancy writes about people and place through the lens of food and drink. She was the restaurant critic at Boston Magazine, and currently writes freelance for publications like the Washington Post, the San Francisco ChronicleFood 52 and Craft Beer, among others.  She splits her time between Boston, Los Angeles and her lodestar for beer: Vermont. Follow her on Instagram

Travel

Ditch your Phone for ‘Dome Life’ in this Pastoral Paradise Outside Port Macquarie 

A responsible, sustainable travel choice for escaping big city life for a few days.

nature domes port macquarie
Photo: Nature Domes

The urge to get as far away as possible from the incessant noise and pressures of ‘big city life’ has witnessed increasingly more of us turn to off-grid adventures for our holidays: Booking.com polled travellers at the start of 2023 and 55% of us wanted to spend our holidays ‘off-grid’.  Achieving total disconnection from the unyielding demands of our digitised lives via some kind of off-grid nature time—soft or adventurous—is positioned not only as a holiday but, indeed, a necessity for our mental health. 

Tom’s Creek Nature Domes, an accommodation collection of geodesic domes dotted across a lush rural property in Greater Port Macquarie (a few hours’ drive from Sydney, NSW), offers a travel experience that is truly ‘off-grid’. In the figurative ‘wellness travel’ sense of the word, and literally, they run on their own independent power supply—bolstered by solar—and rely not on the town grid. 

Ten minutes before you arrive at the gates for a stay at Tom’s Creek Nature Domes, your phone goes into ‘SOS ONLY’. Apple Maps gives up, and you’re pushed out of your comfort zone, driving down unsealed roads in the dark, dodging dozens of dozing cows. Then, you must ditch your car altogether and hoist yourself into an open-air, all-terrain 4WD with gargantuan wheels. It’s great fun being driven through muddy gullies in this buggy; you feel like Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum in Jurassic Park.  As your buggy pulls in front of your personal Nature Dome, it’s not far off that “Welcome…to Jurassic Park” jaw-dropping moment—your futuristic-looking home is completely engulfed by thriving native bushland; beyond the outdoor campfire lie expansive hills and valleys of green farmland, dotted with sheep and trees. You’re almost waiting to see a roaming brachiosaurus glide past, munching on a towering gum tree…instead, a few inquisitive llamas trot past your Dome to check out their new visitor. 

To fully capture the awe of inhabiting a geodesic dome for a few days, a little history of these futuristic-looking spherical structures helps. Consisting of interlocking triangular skeletal struts supported by (often transparent) light walls, geodesic domes were developed in the 20th century by American engineer and architect R. Buckminster Fuller, and were used for arenas. Smaller incarnations have evolved into a ‘future-proof’ form of modern housing: domes are able to withstand harsh elements due to the stability provided by the durable materials of their construction and their large surface area to volume ratio (which helps minimize wind impact and prevents the structure from collapsing). As housing, they’re also hugely energy efficient – their curved shape helps to conserve heat and reduce energy costs, making them less susceptible to temperature changes outside. The ample light let in by their panels further reduces the need for artificial power. 

Due to their low environmental impact, they’re an ideal sustainable travel choice. Of course, Tom’s Creek Nature Domes’ owner-operators, Cardia and Lee Forsyth, know all this, which is why they have set up their one-of-a-kind Nature Domes experience for the modern traveller. It’s also no surprise to learn that owner Lee is an electrical engineer—experienced in renewable energy—and that he designed the whole set-up. As well as the off-grid power supply, rainwater tanks are used, and the outdoor hot tub is heated by a wood fire—your campfire heats up your tub water via a large metal coil. Like most places in regional Australia, the nights get cold – but rather than blast a heater, the Domes provide you with hot water bottles, warm blankets, lush robes and heavy curtains to ward off the chill.

nature domes port macquarie
Photo: Nature Domes

You’ll need to be self-sufficient during your stay at the Domes, bringing your own food. Support local businesses and stock up in the town of Wauchope on your drive-in (and grab some pastries and coffee at Baked Culture while you’re at it). There’s a stovetop, fridge (stocked as per a mini bar), BBQs, lanterns and mozzie coils, and you can even order DIY S’More packs for fireside fun. The interiors of the Domes have a cosy, stylish fit-out, with a modern bathroom (and a proper flushing toilet—none of that drop bush toilet stuff). As there’s no mobile reception, pack a good book or make the most of treasures that lie waiting to be discovered at every turn: a bed chest full of board games, a cupboard crammed with retro DVDs, a stargazing telescope (the skies are ablaze come night time). Many of these activities are ideal for couples, but there’s plenty on offer for solo travellers, such as yoga mats, locally-made face masks and bath bombs for hot tub soaks. 

It’s these thoughtful human touches that reinforce the benefit of making a responsible travel choice by booking local and giving your money to a tourism operator in the Greater Port Macquarie Region, such as Tom’s Creek Nature Domes. The owners are still working on the property following the setbacks of COVID-19, and flooding in the region —a new series of Domes designed with families and groups in mind is under construction, along with an open-air, barn-style dining hall and garden stage. Once ready, the venue will be ideal for wedding celebrations, with wedding parties able to book out the property. They’ve already got one couple—who honeymooned at the Domes—ready and waiting. Just need to train up the llamas for ring-bearer duties! 

An abundance of favourite moments come to mind from my two-night stay at Tom’s Creek: sipping champagne and gourmet picnicking at the top of a hill on a giant swing under a tree, with a bird’s eye view of the entire property (the ‘Mountain Top picnic’ is a must-do activity add on during your stay), lying on a deckchair at night wrapped in a blanket gazing up at starry constellations and eating hot melted marshmallows, to revelling in the joys of travellers before me, scrawled on notes in a jar of wishes left by the telescope (you’re encouraged to write your own to add to the jar). But I’ll leave you with a gratitude journal entry I made while staying there. I will preface this by saying that I don’t actually keep a gratitude journal, but Tom’s Creek Nature Domes is just the kind of place that makes you want to start one. And so, waking up on my second morning at Tom’s —lacking any 4G bars to facilitate my bad habit of a morning Instagram scroll—I finally opened up a notebook and made my first journal entry:

‘I am grateful to wake up after a deep sleep and breathe in the biggest breaths of this clean air, purified by nature and scented with eucalyptus and rain. I am grateful for this steaming hot coffee brewed on a fire. I feel accomplished at having made myself. I am grateful for the skittish sheep that made me laugh as I enjoyed a long nature walk at dawn and the animated billy goats and friendly llamas overlooking my shoulder as I write this: agreeable company for any solo traveller. I’m grateful for total peace, absolute stillness.” 

Off-grid holiday status: unlocked.

Where: Tom’s Creek Nature Domes, Port Macquarie, 2001 Toms Creek Rd
Price: $450 per night, book at the Natura Domes website.

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