Alaska
A new frontier? How Alaska’s elections could show what’s to come for Nevada’s
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Evergreens and aspens cover the luscious mountainscapes, and clouds settle heavy over Cook Inlet. The hum of float planes can be heard overhead as Alaskans travel to the remote wilderness, while locals drive to work.
Though at a smaller scale than the crowds who flock to the glittering lights and jingling slot machines of Las Vegas, tourists walk around downtown Anchorage, zipped up in light jackets in 60-degree August weather. They hop into souvenir shops that sell sweaters, hats and figurines of Alaska’s animals, and they take pictures with the bear statues set up around town.
Alaska’s soft greens and blues are a sharp contrast to Las Vegas’ rocky mountains, which burst with reds, oranges and purples at sunset, the desert landscape spotted with yucca and creosote.
Politically, though, the two states are more similar than it might appear. The states — both viewed as either a last frontier or the Wild West — have a large percentage of nonpartisan voters, many holding libertarian values. And soon, their election processes could become fraternal twins.
Alaskans are debating whether to keep in place their new election system of open primaries and ranked-choice voting. Meanwhile, Nevadans will vote on whether to try the system for themselves.
Nevada’s Ballot Question 3 was passed by state voters in 2022 by 6 percentage points. If it passes again in November, it would amend the Nevada Constitution by replacing the current closed-primary system with nonpartisan open primaries and a ranked-choice, general election voting system for statewide, congressional, U.S. Senate and state legislator elections starting in 2026.
Currently, Nevada’s nonpartisan and minor-party voters cannot participate in Democratic and Republican primaries. Under Question 3, all voters — regardless of affiliation — would participate in primaries that make all candidates from all parties go head-to-head. The top five finishers in a primary would advance to the general election.
In the general election, ranked choice kicks in. If a candidate receives more than 50 percent of the votes, that candidate wins. If not, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated, and the second-choice candidate on those ballots is counted instead. That process repeats until a single candidate reaches more than 50 percent support.
Supporters of Nevada’s Question 3 say the process will allow the state’s nonpartisans, who as of July make up 34 percent of the state’s active registered voters, to participate in the primary process and make way for more moderate, down-the-middle candidates. Opponents argue the system would cause mass confusion and disenfranchise voters.
In Alaska, the ranked-choice voting system, which passed by fewer than 4,000 votes, has its fair share of supporters and critics. A survey conducted last year by Alaskan pollster Ivan Moore showed a repeal effort narrowly passing.
Similarly in Nevada, it’s a close battle between supporters and opponents.
Alaska’s birth of ranked-choice voting
Elections attorney Scott Kendall, who wrote the 2020 ballot measure to implement Alaska’s new voting system, said ranked-choice voting never held a big appeal for him. Rather, he wanted to implement an open primary system, and he felt ranked-choice voting was the necessary pairing.
Two-thirds of Alaskan voters don’t affiliate with either of the two major parties, and in the 2022 election, more than 50 percent of voters split their ticket, Kendall said as he sat in his downtown office with a view of the bay. On some days, he can watch belugas swim in the distance.
Kendall said his “watershed moment” was when sitting GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski lost her primary in 2010 by 2,000 votes to a tea party-backed Republican. She ran as a write-in candidate and won the general election by about 10,000 votes.
It was only the second time in U.S. history that a write-in candidate won a U.S. Senate race. The first time was in 1954, when Strom Thurmond ran as a write-in for U.S. Senate in South Carolina after the sitting senator died.
That 2010 election showed that primaries produce candidates who aren’t necessarily what voters want, Kendall said. While working with the Alaska Legislature, he saw a gridlocked, partisan body that was unable to solve its perennial budget issues, while legislators would confide they wanted to support something but feared losing their primary, he said.
“I think the old system was based on the fallacy that everyone lines up for the red team or the blue team, and that everyone has a strong preference between the two teams,” Kendall said.
How Alaskans feel
At the Alaska State Fair in Palmer, around 45 miles northeast of Anchorage, people milled about the stalls, eating ice cream, crab legs and popcorn. Among the Ferris wheel and rides, festivalgoers could pay to pet dog sledding puppies and drink local Alaska beer. Both the Alaska Democratic and Republican parties had booths set up, ready to educate and talk with voters.
Justin Warren, wearing a colorful umbrella hat, said once he did the reading and watched a two-minute video on ranked-choice voting, he found the system straightforward.
“It’s a way to get the people’s voice heard a little bit more,” the Anchorage resident said. “I think it’s a way to make sure that everybody’s voice is counted for, their vote is counted, even if it’s not necessarily for the person you wanted it to be.”
Addy Ahmasuk, a resident of Nome, located in far west Alaska, about 100 miles south of the Article Circle, likes ranked-choice voting, although she has not voted under the new system yet. She said a Native voters group sent out information on what ranked-choice voting looks like. She got to practice using ranked-choice, and she didn’t find it confusing.
“It was helpful to kind of go through it,”Ahmasuk said.
Back in Anchorage, at an eclectic house with a “Mary Peltola for Congress” sign in their yard, Wendy Isbell and John Farleigh explained how they like the new election system.
Isbell, who works for the U.S. Census Bureau, said she found the process easy to understand once it was explained to her. She liked the idea that she can vote for who she wants, regardless of their party.
“It depowers the parties,” said Farleigh, a retired commercial fisherman dressed in a tie-dye T-shirt and flannel. “Republicans are against it, but they don’t know how to use it. … They don’t understand that they should campaign together.”
At the Alaska Native Heritage Center, people strolled around Lake Tiulana and studied replicas of traditional dwellings as Michelle Sparck, director of strategic initiatives for the nonpartisan voter education group Get Out the Native Vote, recited the pitch she gives to Alaskan Natives to encourage them to vote: Alaska Natives make up one of every four registered voters, but they’re not voting like it, she said.
“We’re going to have a government with or without our participation,” she said. “We might as well have a representative government.”
Sparck said the closed primary stood as a barrier for the state’s Alaska Native community, who are much more likely to split their tickets between different parties than the rest of the state.
Alaska Natives historically have struggled with voter participation. But their participation rose during the special 2022 House primary relative to 2020 and 2018, according to a report from Get Out the Native Vote. In October 2023, the Alaska Federation of Natives, representing more than 170 tribes, voted to endorse and preserve open primaries and ranked-choice voting.
“We’re just glad to see a lot more engagement and participation and a different approach to elections than we’ve experienced for decades before,” Sparck said.
Kenneth Bradshaw, however, thought his ballot was too confusing.
“I’m not a college graduate, and I’m getting older, so I don’t want to keep learning stuff,” the 84-year-old longtime Alaska resident said. “I just simply vote one time for one person that I want in there, and if he makes it, OK. If he don’t, that’s fine too.”
Bradshaw, wearing a Trump hat and a flannel while sitting in his armchair as a Steller’s jay pecked at corn outside the window of his Anchorage home, said he doesn’t see any reason why the voting system changed.
“We’ve been voting this way for 200 years. Why change now?” Bradshaw said. “I can’t see the good in ranked-choice voting.”
Repeal efforts
When Bradshaw’s grandson, Phil Izon, learned that his grandfather and other older people were confused by the new system, he worked to get it repealed with Art Mathias, an Anchorage resident who owns an insurance business and likes to fly planes, hunt and fish in his free time.
The two gathered about 42,000 signatures and fought multiple legal battles to keep their proposed repeal of ranked choice voting on the ballot. They call their effort a “David and Goliath” story; the pro-ranked-choice group raised $4.5 million in August to keep the system in place.
The Alaska Division of Elections, which did not respond to multiple interview requests, has spent $3.5 million since 2021 on the system, including education outreach. The total cost to operate the election was $11 million in the 2022 election, a sharp increase from the $3.3 million that the average election cost from 2010 to 2020, Izon said.
Izon, Mathias and other critics say ranked-choice voting decreases voter turnout, costs more money and disenfranchises voters who don’t make use of the ranking system.
They said ranked-choice voting has led to voter disenfranchisement when voters “exhaust” their ballots by only voting for one candidate instead of ranking them all. If the race goes to a second round of counting, and the candidate they chose was the lowest vote-getter, their ballot is “exhausted,” because it doesn’t include more candidates to count in the race.
“Most people don’t know you can vote wrong now. You can vote in a way that has your ballot thrown out,” said Izon, director of Alaskans for Honest Elections. “You can’t assume voters are knowledgeable election experts.”
In the 2022 Alaska Senate race, more than 9,000 ballots were exhausted after the third round of tabulating, according to data from the Alaska Division of Elections.
Marcus Moore, a 39-year-old Anchorage resident, originally voted for the system. He thought it would be faster and cheaper. But after learning more about it, he decided it wasn’t a good idea, he said, sitting in his basement, where he produces a conservative podcast called Alaskan Rants with young protégés.
In many races, there are more Republican candidates than Democrats, and those Republicans end up splitting and diluting those votes, Moore said. Republican candidates are also splitting party campaign funds, while a single Democratic candidate gets all its party’s donations, he said.
Another criticism is the increased risk of voters making mistakes on their ballots.
Data has shown a higher error rate when voting with a ranked-choice ballot. A December 2023 study from the University of Pennsylvania that looked at 3.09 million ballots in 165 races in Alaska, Maine, San Francisco and New York City found that nearly 1 in 20 voters improperly marked their ballots in at least one way.
In the special June 2022 primary in Alaska, around 7,500 ballots were rejected, representing around 4.6 percent of total ballots — double the rate in Alaska’s 2020 primary, before ranked-choice voting and open primaries began. The biggest reason was a lack of a required witness signature on ballots, according to the Alaska Division of Elections.
Alaska saw abysmal turnout in its most recent primary election, in August, when only three races, one of which was statewide, were on the ballot. Around 17.3 percent of voters participated, according to data from the Division of Elections.
Proponents say it’s difficult to get voters to pay attention to August elections, with many people using the short summer season to fish, hunt and prepare for winter. Critics, however, say the low turnout can be attributed to the confusion brought by ranked-choice voting, and they say there is less motivation for Alaska voters to turn out in primaries, knowing that the top four candidates will automatically go forward to the general election.
In the November 2022 election, 267,000 voters cast ballots, representing 44.4 percent of registered voters, according to the Division of Elections. In 2016, voter turnout was 60.8 percent.
The state’s implementation of its automatic voter registration in 2017 increased the number of registered voters from 525,000 in 2017 to 608,000 as of September 2024, affecting voter turnout statistics, according to the Division of Elections.
Alaska takes a long time to release its results, which critics point to as another disadvantage of the system. But the massive state — more than twice the size of Texas — has always taken days to release its election results, because extreme weather affects the delivery of ballots. The state allows 15 days for ballots to come in before they are counted. The tabulation under ranked-choice voting takes only seconds, Kendall said.
How the candidates feel
Alaska’s sole U.S. representative, Democrat Mary Peltola, became the first Alaska Native to serve in federal office in 2022. She ran among nearly 50 other candidates during the special nonpartisan primary and made it through to the general election as one of the top candidates.
She wouldn’t have succeeded under the old system, the congresswoman said.
Peltola said ranked-choice voting gives candidates an incentive to be less harsh with their opponents because they have to court those candidates’ supporters for their second-choice vote. The nonpartisan primary helps elect candidates who are not entrenched in ideology, she said.
“We need people who are open to compromise and consensus, and we’re only going to get that if we have a system where we don’t have to go through a party to get on the ballot,” Peltola said.
Republican State Sen. Cathy Giessel was ousted during the 2020 primary by a party loyalist, and though she originally opposed ranked-choice voting, she decided to run again in 2022 and embrace it.
She didn’t purchase the voter database that candidates use to learn voters’ addresses and party affiliation, Giessel said. Instead, she started knocking on every door in her district, not knowing any voter’s party.
“I talked to a huge diversity of people, people whose doors I had walked past previously because we had partisan primaries,” Giessel said. “It completely changed how I went door-to-door.”
She knocked on the door of one voter who was a Democrat, and they identified a long list of things they agreed on, Giessel said. She told him that she respected that he would vote for a Democrat, but she asked him if he could choose her as his second choice.
Giessel was ahead with around 33.8 percent of the vote at the end of Election Day. When the second-choice votes were reallocated from the third-place candidate, she defeated the opponent who had beat her in 2020 with 57 percent support, Giessel said.
“This gives you a chance to really hear fresh ideas from all perspectives of the political spectrum, and that is a very rich experience. You just learn so much talking to everyone,” she said. “And if you are that kind of candidate that is willing to work with everyone, you don’t have to keep worrying whether the political party is going to throw you under the bus and primary you.”
Other Alaska officeholders didn’t see benefits in campaigning under the new system. Alaska Republican Rep. Sarah Vance won her 2022 election under the new system, but her constituents felt frustrated by it. She encouraged people to get out and vote anyway and name her as their No. 1 pick, she said.
Voters feel overwhelmed with the amount of information they have to take in just to make a sound decision on a candidate, Vance said.
“This isn’t about party lines,” said Vance, who proposed a bill in the state Legislature to repeal ranked-choice voting. “This isn’t about trying to get more moderate candidates. If you are a candidate who knows your district, and you work hard to serve the people and govern well, then you can win.”
Contact Jessica Hill at jehill@reviewjournal.com. Follow @jess_hillyeah on X.
Alaska
Hawaiian, Alaska reservation systems merge: Big changes for travelers start April 22
HONOLULU (KHON2) — It’s the biggest milestone yet in the Hawaiian Airlines merger with Alaska Airlines.
Starting Wednesday, April 22, Hawaiian Airlines and Alaska will operate as one, powered by a single passenger reservation system, essentially the technology behind your entire travel experience.
“The system that connects all of the programs that our guests use, things like our websites, our app, our Atmos rewards program, our Huaka’i program, all of those systems, including employee tools, will be updated as of tomorrow to a more modern single passenger service system that will allow a more stream streamlined and seamless guest experience for all those that are traveling on either Alaska or Hawaiian that will allow a more stream streamlined and seamless guest experience for all those that are traveling on either Alaska or Hawaiian,” said Alisa Onishi, Hawaiian Airlines Marketing Manager.
By midnight tonight, the Hawaiian app goes dark, replaced by a new combined Alaska-Hawaiian platform, marking a major shift in how you book and manage your flights.
“If you download our new single Alaska-Hawaiian app, you’ll be able to manage your bookings all in one place, make changes, cancellations and a lot more self-service features that our guests have been asking us for for quite some time now that you couldn’t do on the old app,” said Onishi.
Behind the scenes, this moment has been three years in the making. Alaska announced its $1.9 billion acquisition back in 2023, with approvals and integration steps unfolding through 2024 and 2025.
At the airport, much will look the same, but the process is getting an upgrade. Travelers are encouraged to check in ahead of time, using the new app, then use updated bag tag stations to print tags and drop bags faster.
“You scan your boarding pass, prints out the bag tags. You can pay or prepay online or pay at the stations and then drop your bag, so you’ll get through the airport a lot quicker,” said Onishi.
Airline officials said the goal is a more seamless, self-service experience, something customers have been asking for.
Still, not everyone is convinced.
“Even today, when I was trying to get my boarding passes, there was a Hawaiian-Alaskan app that I went to, and then it referred me back to the Hawaiian app. So I didn’t know what application I was supposed to be using, but ultimately, it worked out to a point,” said Ethan Christensen, who was standing in line at customer service to confirm his flight for tomorrow. “But yeah, we’ll see. Hopefully, it gets better. I mean, I know these things take time, especially when you’re kind of merging two big things like this, but the outlook is positive for me because I know it’s a good airline. Hopefully it stays that way.”
The call centers are not going away, and customer service desks will remain at the airports for those who need one-on-one help.
Airline leaders acknowledge the transition so far hasn’t been perfect, but said this milestone is meant to fix many of those issues.
Alaska
Alaska’s embattled economic development agency approves $700,000 PR budget
The state agency leading some of Alaska’s most polarizing development projects has approved a new communications budget, saying it needs to do a better job telling its own story amid attacks from critics.
The state-owned Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority is run by a former chief of staff to Gov. Mike Dunleavy and is charged with promoting economic growth and expanding natural resource extraction and exports.
It is leading work to develop state-owned oil leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and also hopes to build two controversial new roads to access mining prospects in Northwest Alaska and outside of Anchorage.
Those projects have drawn sharp opposition from conservation organizations and other critics, including lawsuits, critical op-eds and campaigns that have labeled the agency “Bad AIDEA” and caricatured its leaders.
At a meeting in Ketchikan this month, board members, with no public discussion, authorized AIDEA’s staff to spend up to $700,000 a year on a new communications budget — formalizing a plan that the agency says was previously budgeted inconsistently through spending on individual projects.
The new communications plan, the agency said in its formal resolution authorizing the spending, will “ensure proper public engagement, transparency, and stewardship of the authority’s mission.” The money could go toward trade shows and conferences, responding to media inquiries and “other communications-related needs,” according to the resolution.
The agency’s executive director, Randy Ruaro, referred questions about the plan to Dave Stieren, an AIDEA employee who ran an advertising agency and hosted a conservative talk radio show before joining the Dunleavy administration.
Stieren said he could not provide exact figures on AIDEA’s past communications spending, but he acknowledged that the new plan should allow the agency to meaningfully boost its public profile.
The $700,000 a year, he added, is a limit, and the agency will set a final budget through a request for proposals process.
“Mothership AIDEA has done, frankly, little to nothing on a consistent basis to tell our story,” Stieren said in an email — particularly when it comes to its loan programs that have helped finance tourism and hospitality businesses, like the Alaska Club fitness chain and Anchorage’s Bear Tooth pizza restaurant and theater.
“We’re far more than roads,” Stieren said. “But since we’ve really not promoted or showcased our efforts in traditional finance areas, I understand the narrative or lack thereof that folks may have.”
Stieren has also personally defended AIDEA on social media, including over the weekend — when he posted a conservative news website’s positive story about an agency-owned shipyard and said that “when commie libs attack AIDEA, they attack projects like this.”
AIDEA’s board chair, Bill Kendig, declined to answer questions about approval of the new communications budget when reached by phone.
At the Ketchikan meeting, one AIDEA critic, Melis Coady, credited the agency with formalizing communications spending as a “step toward accountability.” But she said that the plan doesn’t “deliver the transparency it describes” because it gives Ruaro, the executive director, authority to approve communications spending, and only requires that he report it to the board if asked.
“The authorization is broad, the dollar amount is undefined, and expenditures are approved solely by the executive director,” said Coady, who leads a conservation group called the Susitna River Coalition.
Ruaro, in an email, said AIDEA will issue reports on communications to board members “whether requested or not.”
Nathaniel Herz is an Anchorage-based reporter. Subscribe to his newsletter, Northern Journal, at northernjournal.com.
Alaska
Inside Alaska’s craft beer scene
In exchange for living in what is perhaps the country’s most beautiful state, Alaskans sometimes have to do without: professional sports teams, Trader Joe’s and, well, sunlight for half the year. But we make up for it with the Iditarod, reindeer sausages and chasing the aurora borealis. In other words, we often have to make our own fun. And by “fun” I mean “beer.” Those words are interchangeable, right?
Beer is a big part of life for Alaskans. We hike with it, camp with it, boat with it, cook with it and pair it with foods like the stuffiest of sommeliers. We throw it monthly birthday parties like the First Tap events at Broken Tooth Brewing Co. (otherwise known as Bear Tooth Theatrepub and Moose’s Tooth Pub & Pizzeria), complete with national musical acts like Modest Mouse, Clinton Fearon, and Norah Jones. We even occasionally do yoga with it (at downtown’s Williwaw Social). In other words, we take it everywhere and we take it seriously.
Beers from the state’s biggest brewery, Alaskan Brewing Co. based in Juneau, might already be in your refrigerator if you live in one of the 25 states where it’s available. Established in 1986 by Marcy and Geoff Larson, it was the 67th independent brewery to open in the country. With a steady line of signature brews, including their most recent “Wildness” beer, it’s the most well-established of all the state’s breweries. Expect seasonal specialties that incorporate ingredients like cranberries, raspberries, locally roasted coffee, locally grown white wheat from the Matanuska-Susitna area and even Alaska spruce tips. Ubiquitous around Alaska, this is our Papa Beer, if you will (I’ll show myself out).
But Alaskan Brewing is just one out of the more-than 50 breweries, distilleries, meaderies and cideries in the state (for an excellent list visit brewersguildofalaska.org). And while almost half of them are in Anchorage or within a short drive of our state’s largest city (including the relatively populous communities of Girdwood, Eagle River, Palmer and Wasilla), some of our most remote ports of call and tiniest towns are also in on the brewing action (I’m looking at you, Cooper Landing Brewing Company in Cooper Landing, population 231).
The ever-expanding Denali Brewing Co. in Talkeetna (population 997) may be a small-town hero, but it’s anything but small. Their four signature beers — Mother Ale, Chuli Stout, Single Engine Red and the ever-popular Twister Creek IPA, as well seasonal brews like Slow Down Brown and Flag Stop Milepost #3 — are year-round mainstays of summer barbecues and winter bonfires around the state.
This brewery is also home to the more recently established Alaska Cider Works, Alaska Meadery (featuring “Razzery,” a mead made with raspberries, sour cherries and apples) and Denali Spirits (featuring vodka, gin, whiskey, and “smoke” whiskey), because when you’ve fermented one, why not ferment them all?
(Denali Spirits’ canned cocktails, especially their blueberry mojito, have been so popular in Anchorage that at one time there was a Facebook page largely dedicated to tracking them down. Luckily, supply has since caught up with demand.)
Some breweries are even more remote. Ports of call and island hopping here can be one way to get your fill of hops. Breweries can be found in Ketchikan (Bawden Street Brewing Co.), Kodiak (Kodiak Island Brewing & Still, Double Shovel Kodiak Cidery, and Olds River Inn), Homer (Homer Brewing Co. and Grace Ridge Brewing Co. for beer, and you can also check out Sweetgale Meadworks & Cider House for hard cider and locally sourced meads featuring ingredients like nagoonberry), Sitka (Harbor Mountain Brewing), Seward (Seward Brewing Co. and Stoney Creek Brewhouse), Valdez (Valdez Brewing and Growler Bay Brewing), and Skagway (Klondike Brewing Co. and Skagway Brewing Co.).
Of course, many trips to Alaska begin and end in Anchorage. And if, during your travels, you’ve foolishly left some beers untasted, you can make up for lost time in our state’s biggest city which boasts — let’s face it — a ridiculous number of exceptional craft breweries.
Downtown’s Glacier Brewhouse specializes in oak-aged English and American West Coast-style beers, 13 of them, from blondes to stouts. Beneath the floor of the Brewhouse is a “Wall of Wood” comprised of casks of special release beers that are conditioned in oak barrels once used to age wine and bourbon. The history of the oak imparts “mother tongue” flavor characteristics, like vanilla and coconut, into these limited edition brews. Opt for one of these unique beers or choose from their flagship choices like raspberry wheat, oatmeal stout, imperial blonde, Bavarian hefeweizen or a flight that includes them all.
Down the street is 49th State Brewing Co., which expanded into Anchorage from its original location in Healy, at the edge of Denali National Park and Preserve. If you are unable to visit their flagship location, where you can sip beer while playing bocce or horseshoes on the lawn, you can catch up with them here. There’s a unique selection that includes beers like Smok, a smoked lager, as well as seasonal offerings like the Tiger’s Blood Sour, an homage to shave ice described as ”ferociously fruity.” Or there’s “Apple Fritter Ale,” with hints of cinnamon, icing, caramel, and vanilla. This location also boasts some of the best views in Anchorage and an expansive outdoor rooftop patio.
Just about all of the full-service restaurants in downtown Anchorage proudly feature some variety of Alaskan beers. In the heart of downtown, Humpy’s Great Alaskan Alehouse prides itself on a huge selection of beers, both international and local. Tent City Taphouse offers a diverse and carefully curated list of 24 rotating local brews, including their house beer, Tent City Tangerine IPA brewed by Glacier Brewhouse. Tent City regularly hosts “Taste of the North” beer dinners featuring Alaskan brewers. One, in collaboration with Grace Ridge Brewing Company, featured smoked salmon canapes with Black Pepper IPA, classic beef Wellington with an Oystercatcher stout and roasted honey lamb chops with a Winter Cranberry Ale.
If you have transportation around the city, treat yourself to a brewery tasting-room tour. Found in unassuming little side streets in the more industrial areas of Anchorage, some of our best beers can be sipped and savored at the source. Finding these funky little spots can feel like being invited to a secret party. And it’s a glimpse into Anchorage’s most authentic beer culture.
In midtown, Onsite Brewing Co. has unique, small-batch brews in a funky relaxed environment. Further south, King Street Brewing Co., Turnagain Brewing, Cynosure Brewing, Magnetic North Brewing Company, Brewerks, and one of our newest, Ship Creek Brewing Company are all within a stone’s throw of one another. If you’re lucky, you might run into one of Anchorage’s popular food trucks parked outside, so you’ll have something to wash down with your flights. Depending on the day, you might find reindeer sausages, pad Thai, cheesesteaks or pupusas. On the weekends, Anchorage Brewing Company features a top-notch in-house pop-up restaurant, called Familia, with a rotating menu featuring local Alaskan ingredients.
One of the newest and furthest south breweries, while still in the Anchorage bowl, is Raven’s Ring Brewing Company, which is a brewery/winery and meadery. From a traditional IPA to a Concorde grape wine called Grape Juice to a rotating Vintner’s pour like Sweet Peach Jalapeno mead, this ambitious operation is challenging the notion that you can’t please everyone.
Other Anchorage points of interest for non-hoppy but still home-grown adult beverages include Anchorage Distillery, Zip Kombucha, Double Shovel Cidery and Hive Mind Meadery.
If your travels are over and you still haven’t had your fill, check out the Silver Gulch Brewing & Bottling Co. inside Terminal C at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport on your way out of town. An offshoot of the flagship Silver Gulch brewery in Fox, Alaska (about 10 miles north of Fairbanks), this location has a bar and restaurant, and a retail shop carrying growlers of their own brews as well as those of other Alaskan brewers and distillers. Last-minute souvenir shopping never tasted so good.
Before you start your great Northern beer safari, bear in mind that tasting rooms often have limited and varying hours, so always double-check before planning a visit.
Whether your travels take you to fine-dining restaurants, low-key alehouses or even rustic cabins in the woods, make like an Alaskan and fuel your adventures with one of our beloved, home-grown brews. When in Alaska, drink as the Alaskans do.
Mara Severin is a food writer who writes about restaurants in Southcentral Alaska for the Anchorage Daily News.
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