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Cleveland, OH

All Ohio! Our February review covers 5 beers from the Buckeye state

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All Ohio! Our February review covers 5 beers from the Buckeye state


CLEVELAND, Ohio – We sipped five beers from four breweries throughout Ohio for our review this month.

The range of styles crosses a pretty wide palate, from a hot peppery amber ale to a Double India Pale Ale.

As usual, all should be available on local store shelves. Our photos show what the beers look like, and we note our favorite at the end.

Cheers!

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Old OhioMarc Bona, cleveland.com

Old Ohio

Twin Oast Brewing, Port Clinton, Blonde Ale, 4.7%

Clean tasting, refreshing beer. Slight lemon and a smidgen yeastiness. Does not have the tanginess that Blonde Ales sometimes do. Would be a solid summer supper. Decent body, with alcohol under 5. “Oast” refers to a kiln used for drying hops.

Our February beer review focuses on five beers, all from Ohio. Plus we offer a lot of beer and brewery news from Northeast Ohio and throughout the country.
Cryo Cold BuddedMarc Bona, cleveland.com

Cryo Cold Budded

Columbus Brewing Co., Columbus, Double India Pale Ale, 8.5%

You know you are drinking a DIPA with this one. Orange is among the citrus flavors coming through. Alcohol does seep in on a lingering finish, but it’s not overwhelming.

Our February beer review focuses on five beers, all from Ohio. Plus we offer a lot of beer and brewery news from Northeast Ohio and throughout the country.
Original Pale AleMarc Bona, cleveland.com

Original Pale Ale

Columbus Brewing Co., Columbus, Pale Ale, 5.6%

Orange pith inches its way through in this smooth-tasting ale. Pale Ale is a style that seems to be a forgotten stepchild at times, and it’s nice to see these land on store shelves.

Our February beer review focuses on five beers, all from Ohio. Plus we offer a lot of beer and brewery news from Northeast Ohio and throughout the country.
Hot Honey StringsMarc Bona, cleveland.com

Hot Honey Strings

Heart State Brewing, Carroll, Amber Ale, 5.4%

This is like drinking two beers in one. A malty brew hits your palate immediately, and then. … after a couple of seconds delay … heat. A fiery burn gets you in the back of the throat. Not for the faint of heart. Sweetness is pretty nominal in this ale, which the brewery describes as “malty, crisp, spicy, sweet.” The brewery is near Columbus.

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Our February beer review focuses on five beers, all from Ohio. Plus we offer a lot of beer and brewery news from Northeast Ohio and throughout the country.
Seeing ColorsMarc Bona, cleveland.com

Seeing Colors

MadTree Brewing, Cincinnati, Hazy India Pale Ale, 6.5%

Really balanced. Hazy for sure but more than that. Some orange and a bit of pine seeps in. Long finish.

This month’s favorite: Some very different beers in this lot. We’ll give a hat tip to Cryo Cold Budded.

A 12-pack of brewery news

Great Lakes Brewing Co. is launching The Float Shoppe, its first full line of THC-infused beverages. It’s set for release in late February.

• Gandalf’s Pub & Restaurant in Valley City is having its annual wild game dinner featuring beers from Great Lakes Brewing Co. on Monday, Feb. 23.

Winking Lizard has scheduled Beer Bottle Tuesdays for those who are signed up for the 2026 Tour of Beers. Tourists will receive two points for select bottles on Tuesdays.

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• The Cleveland Brewery Passport is open with 42 breweries, all within a 30-mile radius from downtown Cleveland.

Terrestrial Brewing Co. is moving ahead with plans for its deck, patio and event-center space.

HiHO Brewing in Cuyahoga Falls is selling $5 pints of Touchdown Brown, an American Brown Ale at 5.6% alcohol, today – Sunday, Feb. 1.

Blue Monkey Brewing Co. has released Mooks Chocolate Milk Stout, billed as a smooth, balanced stout to support the Ohio Craft Brewers Association. The brewery is in North Royalton.

Tröegs Independent Brewing in Hershey, Pennsylvania, has released Daylight Chaser, a dark IPA that joins the brewery’s lineup of seasonally rotating beers alongside Field Study, Leaf Seeker and Blizzard of Hops. It has Simcoe, Mosaic and Citra hops and is 6.3% alcohol. It’s available on draft and in 12-ounce bottles and cans.

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Stone Brewing of Escondido, California, is marking 30 years in business with sweepstakes, fan-favorite throwbacks, collaborations and limited-time packaging. The brewery kicked off the year by spotlighting its flagship Stone IPA with limited-time gold packaging.

Von Ebert Brewing of Portland, Oregon, has launched non-beer offerings. The three non-alcoholic sparkling hop waters are called Boost, Flow and Chill. Also, hard teas, hard fruit punch and hard seltzer are in the works.

• New offerings from nitro-focused Left Hand Brewing Co. of Longmont, Colorado, include the brewery’s first new nitro seasonal, Chocolate Orange Nitro, a Milk Stout variant. Later in the year Left Hand plans to release Ginger Snap Nitro, a winter warmer featuring ginger spice.

Coronado Brewing Co. has released Hazy Weekend IPA, the newest year-round addition to its Weekend Brand Family. It joins flagship Weekend Vibes IPA and its counterpart BIG Weekend Double IPA.

Our reviews: Most of the beers we buy come from Northeast Ohio retail shops and stores. We choose from Heinen’s, Red, Wine & Brew; Acme, Giant Eagle, Mustard Seed Market, Whole Foods and others.

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Cleveland, OH

Ohio candidate Nicole Sigurdson apologies for antisemitic remark

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Ohio candidate Nicole Sigurdson apologies for antisemitic remark


Among the Democratic Party primary races Signal Cleveland is following is the one for Ohio House District 19, which has drawn three major candidates to the open seat. (Incumbent Phillip Robinson Jr., of Solon, is term-limited.) The district includes Cleveland’s Old Brooklyn neighborhood and all or portions of a string of eastern and southeastern suburbs. 

The Cuyahoga County Democratic Party’s endorsed candidate is Nicole Sigurdson, a Cleveland resident and union organizer with SEIU District 1199 who narrowly won enough support to secure the party’s influential backing. 

But Sigurdson has been under fire from fellow party members and others for a comment she made on social media in 2025 about the Israel-Hamas war. Her comment – which she has since deleted – especially stood out because her district includes communities with sizable Jewish populations, including Solon and Pepper Pike. 

In the post, Sigurdson shared an image of the Palestinian flag that read, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” It was a phrase used by protesters against the war. Prior, it was used for years by some advocating for the elimination of the state of Israel. And it’s been a slogan used by terrorist groups. 

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She posted a video earlier this year apologizing for the post. 

“The post contained an image with an antisemitic slogan of which I failed to grasp the full significance of,” she said. “At the time, several people reached out to me expressing their hurt and sharing the full context of the phrase. After listening carefully to their concerns, I immediately deleted the post, but I should have known not to post it at all.”

Signal asked Sigurdson what motivated her original post. She said it was made in reaction to seeing a lot of coverage of Palestinian civilian deaths in Gaza during the war. (The Hamas terrorist attack in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killed 1,200 civilians and Hamas took 250 people hostage. Israeli’s military response left tens of thousands of civilians in Gaza dead.)

“I made them out of humanitarian concern, wanting autonomy for all people, wanting safety for all people,” Sigurdson said. “And part of what has driven me to politics is I never want to shy away from controversial topics.” 

Fliers were recently mailed to residents in Solon attacking Sigurdson for her antisemitic comments. One flyer featured the headlines from a Cleveland Jewish News story about the comments. “Nicole Sigurdson is wrong for Ohio,” it read.

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Sigurdson is campaigning around workers’ rights, including increasing the minimum wage, protecting the environment and the need to be more “caring about people.”

She faces two candidates in the primary: Dionne M. Gore of Solon, who works for Medical Mutual and is backed by Robinson; and Cheryl Perez, a small business owner from Brecksville, who was endorsed by Cleveland.com/The Plain Dealer. 

(There was only one Republican primary candidate, but he recently died unexpectedly.)





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Cleveland, OH

April 27, 2026 Road Trip: Lessons In History

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April 27, 2026 Road Trip: Lessons In History


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7z8VhvUcaGo

My Cleveland History
https://myclevelandhistory.com/

Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Library & Museums
Spiegel Grove, Fremont, OH 43420
https://www.rbhayes.org

Underground Railroad Museum 
121 High St, Flushing, OH 43977
https://www.ugrrm.org

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Fort Laurens Museum
11067 Fort Laurens Rd.
Bolivar, Ohio 44697
https://www.fortlaurensmuseum.org

WACO Air Museum
1865 South County Road 25A Troy, OH 45373
https://www.wacoairmuseum.org

Millbury Classic Cars and Trucks Museum
26929 Cummings, Millbury, OH, United States, Ohio
https://www.facebook.com/people/Millbury-Classics/61557016196078/?sk=about

McKinley Presidential Library and Museum
800 McKinley Monument Drive NW
Canton, OH 44708
https://mckinleymuseum.org

Blennerhassett Island Historical State Park
137 Juliana Street, Parkersburg, WV 26101
https://wvstateparks.com/park/blennerhassett-island-historical-state-park/

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Anne Frank Haus  
Westermarkt 20
1016 DK Amsterdam
https://www.annefrank.org/en

D-Day Ohio WWII Museum
851 Harbor St., Conneaut, OH
https://ddayohio.us

William G. Mather Steamship
601 Erieside Ave, 
Cleveland, OH 44114
https://greatscience.com/explore/exhibits/william-g-mather-steamship

The John & Annie Glenn Museum
72 West Main Street
New Concord, Ohio 43762
https://www.johnandannieglennmuseum.org

Cleveland History Center
10825 East Boulevard
Cleveland, Ohio 44106
https://www.wrhs.org/plan-visit/places-to-visit/cleveland-history-center/welcome

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The Garfield Trail of Ohio
https://www.garfieldtrail.org



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Cleveland, OH

Downtown Cleveland roads closed due to filming

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Downtown Cleveland roads closed due to filming


CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – There are several temporary road closures in downtown Cleveland on Monday morning due to filming.

The city said the following roads will be closed intermittently to traffic from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.:

  • Euclid Ave. from 9th St. to Public Square
  • E. Roadway from Euclid to Superior
  • Superior from Public Square to 9th St.
  • 9th St. from Superior to Euclid

Parking Restrictions

  • Euclid Ave. from 9th St. to Public Square
  • 9th St. from Superior to Euclid

Cleveland Police officers will be assisting with pedestrian and car traffic.

The city asks drivers to plan and allow for extra time.

Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.

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