The most surprising thing about New York’s craft beer come-up isn’t that it finally happened — we’re talking about the most diverse food and drink city in America, after all — but how long it took. When I first moved here in 2010, there were pretty much three options for local suds: Brooklyn Brewery, KelSo Beer Co. and Sixpoint Brewery. Don’t get me wrong; I’ll drink a Brooklyn Lager any night of the week. But I won’t be the last New Yorker to admit that, until fairly recently, the best beers in New York came from elsewhere.
Fortunately, times have changed. According to this year’s RateBeer Best results, two of the world’s top ten brewers are based in the city: Other Half and Evil Twin (a gypsy brewery with plans open a brick-and-mortar in Ridgewood, Queens, sometime in the near future). Beyond those, a handful of city breweries are making beer on par with what one might find in places like Portland, Maine, or Denver, or the entire state of Vermont. Together they’ve made New York a major player in the world of American craft beer. One a Vermonter might even deem a “destination.”
Other Half Brewing Co.

Samuel Richardson and Matt Monahan opened Other Half in early 2014. Located on southern edge of Carroll Gardens, the beers produced here — most of which classify as big, juicy, New England–style IPAs — have become New York’s hottest commodity on trader forums, eventually making their way across the country. Though Other Half has ramped up production, increasing the frequency of its can releases from twice a month to every Saturday, this has done little to curb the hours-long wait it takes to land your hands cans of its single, double or even triple IPAs.