I'm the brewmaster at Endeavor Brewing and Spirits. https://endeavorbrewing.com/the-team/ Sorry to most of you, but we're only available in Columbus, OH.
So, I could expand at great length about all the beers I drink fairly regularly. I'm most proud of our flagship beers. That's really where I've poured the effort into my philosophy that "The best beers reward attention, but don't demand it."
Altura, Latin Lager (5%abv)
Just canned out another batch on Tuesday. This is my all-around favorite. It's the beer I'd been wanting to create since leaving Germany. Super drinkable hybrid pilsner style. Flavor profile is sort of more-flavorful Mexican lager with a twist of lime. Except that the lime is citrusy hops.
It's understated and nerdy, and is totally me flexing as a brewer. One of those beers that seems simpler than it is. If you know brewing, you realize how distinct and difficult to execute a beer this is. If not, it just reminds you of your favorite beer, but somehow how a bit better. I totally talk about it like that obnoxious musician who's all, "I could tell you about my influences, but you've never heard of them." It's sort of a hybrid of Modelo Especial, Schell's Deer Brand (classic American corn adjunct lager), Schell's Pilsner, and a bunch of small craft Pilsners from Berlin, with my own personal twist and flair.
Our latest wowwing beer that turned out so surprisingly good that it became a core beer:
Saga, Icelandic style ale (4.7% abv)
This beer has almost no hops (a token amount of bittering hops primarily as a preservative). Instead, it's flavored with sage and star anise. Which sounds like it should be weird or horrible, but is really really really good. The star anise isn't so much licorice as a subtle menthol-like cooling at the very end. This beer is stupidly good paired with steak.
We genuinely don't know how to describe this beer in any kind of concise manner. It literally tastes like nothing else any of us has ever had. To me, it tastes like chilling on the patio in early fall.
Story behind it is that the owner and his wife took a trip to Iceland. They tried some of the regional beers there. Hops are tough to get in Iceland, so they primarily used herbs instead. He wanted a pilot batch of a version of those beers. So I made my best attempt and we released it to coincide with an REI partnership event. It disappeared FAST. We made more. We blow people away whenever we bring it to local festivals. Everyone loves it but doesn't know what to make of it.
P.S. We hide a sasquatch on every can, because we're nerdy like that.