Server Hanna Jones and manager/bartender Sarah Russell behind one of the two bars in Brasserie Saint James.
Server Hanna Jones and manager/bartender Sarah Russell behind one of the two bars in Brasserie Saint James.

The final Saturday of 2017 gave me a chance to take my family out to lunch and get some beers at a place that had sort of fallen off my radar lately. I was awed in 2012, seeing the historic Crystal Springs Ice Company building on Center Street transformed into a rustic, old world-style brasserie. (โ€œBrasserieโ€ actually means โ€œbreweryโ€ in French.) I was amazed and impressed in 2014 when Brasserie Saint James was awarded Midsize Brewpub of the Year and a gold medal for their saison, Daily Wages, at the Great American Beer Festival. Iโ€™ve enjoyed happy hour and shot pool there on a few occasions.

I donโ€™t hear much about Brasserie Saint James these daysโ€”no new bottles at local stores, no social media about new beers on draftโ€”and places can easily be forgotten when weโ€™re always looking for something new and exciting. I think Iโ€™d started to consider it more restaurant than brewery, and one thatโ€™s a little out of my price range. Going occasionally turned into never going.

I dusted those thoughts aside and looked forward to revisiting the place I was once so excited byโ€”a brewery focused on classic European styles of beer with little concern for whatever trend other craft breweries were clamoring to follow.

We found Brasserie Saint James still a charming placeโ€”antiques, breweriana, and a sense of old Europe felt inviting before Iโ€™d even taken a seat. We were seated promptly in the dining room at one of the slightly uncomfortable wooden booths. A central bar serves this room as well as the opposite, more pub-like side of the main hall. A game room and rooftop deck complete the grand facility. The food appeals to my inner Frenchman, a mix of slightly foreign and universal comfort food like roasted tomato soup or a house burger.

Grumpy, indecisive kids struggled with the food options while I wrestled with beer choices. The eight year-round beersโ€”four of them noted as gold medal winnersโ€”were familiar, and I enjoy most of them. All are well made, I just donโ€™t love all of the styles. Turning to the chalkboard of seasonal releases, another seven or eight choices made things challenging. I wish a detailed beer menu was available, as a name on the chalkboard is meaningless sometimes, and I hate to be that guy asking the server about each one to decide on six choices for a flight. My wife went for her easy choice, a Hopalong Cassidy, Brasserieโ€™s only current nod to IPAโ€™s popularity. I chose five unfamiliar seasonals and one style I enjoy, a Belgian style tripel. The first three choices were my favorites of the dayโ€”the Fall Saison, the annual holiday release, Noel, and a pineapple version of the funky 1904, fermented with the provocative Brettanomyces yeast strain. I didnโ€™t care for the London Lager, but the Oktoberfest was decent. Overall, it was a nice variety of beers.

Aside from the impressive beer selection, thereโ€™s a great wine list and handcrafted house cocktails, but at $11 each (โ€œkeg wineโ€ is $9), Iโ€™ll happily stick with beer. I imagine pricing doesnโ€™t raise an eyebrow at Brasserieโ€™s San Francisco location, but it remains among the higher end for midtown Reno and my budget.

We enjoyed lunch, and I was reminded of how much I used to enjoy the beers and Brasserie itself. Too many local breweries is a good problem to have, but I need to put Brasserie back into my rotation.

Marc Tiar has lived in Reno for most of his life. He is a semi-retired librarian, a family man and an occasional freelance writer. While practicing his beer geekiness, he enjoys home brewing, beer judging,...

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