Crown City Pasadena - A Disappearing Beer Landmark
Monday, May 12, 2008 16:40I moved to Los Angeles straight from college and landed here a naive 22 year with a freshly printed engineering degree and a knowledge of the city built from Raymond Chandler novels. Contrasting with the cozy comforts of my collegiate Boston existence, LA was a cold distant mistress. Everywhere I turned, the rule was detachment and distant. As standoffish as New Englanders and Bostonians are reputed to be, Angelenos take the cake.
That changed when a college buddy arrived for a month of working at Mount Wilson. It marked my first time spending any appreciable time in Pasadena. Looking for places to eat and drink, we stumbled on an ad for Crown City Brewing Company. My buddy, now an executive chef in Manhattan, and I clocked endless stool hours at Cambridge Brewing, so score!
Walking in to the pub felt like turning the corner into a home away from home. The first night there was great, chatting with the bartenders (and one of the owners), enjoying a pint and the above
average pub grub. Shockingly on my next visit, the staff greeted us warmly, as if we were visiting friends. Wha? No surprise folks always mention Cheers when trying to describe the place.
Wasn’t long after those first visits that I became a regular. Every week, Wednesday night, Drew night. Even in the midst of 100-hour workweek projects, I still found my way to my stool for a few pints
and worked my way through several “100 Mug Club” cards on my way to a serious case of brew knowledge. The staff kindly critiqued and encouraged my first attempts at brewing. I don’t think they knew what a beer monster they were creating.
Founded by four friends and inspired by San Diego’s new born brew scene, Crown opened in 1988 just south of Pasadena’s Central Park and began serving their Arroyo Amber and Mount Wilson Wheat to the masses. On top of their house beers, the pub stocks over a hundred bottled beers and 30 more draft beers, an astonishing selection for our burg. Until the brewery finally broke down in 2002, Crown held the distinction of being Los Angeles’ oldest operating brewpub. Pasadena’s Craftsman Brewing picked up the slack and provides the pub with its flagship brews.
With the recent opening of the Del Mar Station apartments, things are changing on the south side of Old Town, starting with the Crown’s closing. A combination of inadequate parking, tough competition and their landlord’s refusal to grant a new long-term lease is forcing the boys out. The remaining partners are searching for space to open the “Crown 2″, but there are no firm plans yet.
Now as the brewery prepares to close on May 31st, the beer list is winding down and customers with their names on the wall can fetch
their plaques. I have four waiting for me! Stop in, grab a pint and a
lavosh and say goodbye to a piece of LA brewing history and the great
folks that made it happen.
Crown City Brewing Company (until May 31st)
300 S Raymond (at Del Mar)
Pasadena, CA 91105
626-577-5548
When Drew's not eating or cooking, he's probably busy contemplating fine malted beverages and the best way to enjoy them. In fact, you can usually catch him writing a column for BeerAdvocate, the Magazine.
Ken Dubya says:
June 2nd, 2008 at 7:30 pm
It was great going to crown for a last time, seeing some familiar faces, and retrieving my plaque from the wall. I can’t believe it was 1993 when I first broke into the 100 beer club. Thanks for the nice write up Drew.