Credit: photos by Elijah Hasan

Weโ€™re still feeling the aftershocks of the Great Portland Brewery Glut of the early and mid-2010s, but alongside the recent news of brewery closures and ownership transfers in our cityโ€™s oversaturated market comes a bright light in the form of Level Beer, which opened shop last summer in the Argay neighborhood of Northeast Portland. Just a couple of football fieldsโ€™ distance from the south shore of the Columbia River, Level Beer hasโ€”after a year or so of brewing in collaboration with various other breweries in Portlandโ€”landed on a promisingly spacious location at the edge of the city that they can call their own. Itโ€™s an ideal pit stop going into or out of the Gorge, or the perfect place to wind down if youโ€™ve spent the day cycling on Northeast Marine Drive. And, of course, itโ€™s poised to be a focal point of the Argay and Parkrose neighborhoods, a much-needed โ€œthird placeโ€ thatโ€™s equally inviting to families, childless twentysomethings, and thirsty beer questers.

Levelโ€™s aesthetic is a happy mishmash of rustic barn and cozy dorm room. The breweryโ€™s name reflects an affection for classic-era video games; on a recent visit, the taproom walls were covered in paintings of Nintendo characters. The beers themselves wield a variety of game-inspired appellations, such as Ready Player One, Press Pause, and Pixelated Pale. (Fittingly, a Ms. Pac-Man table sits in one corner, opposite a small stash of board games in another.) A large, three-dimensional version of their arcade-like logo sits atop the impressive draft tower, looking both futuristic and retro.

If youโ€™re looking at that logo, youโ€™ve also got your eye on the brewery itself, extending behind the bar into the warehouse-sized room. You may even see the brewers at workโ€”Jason Barbee, formerly of Deschutes and Ex Novo, and Shane Watterson, formerly of Laurelwoodโ€”on the shiny new 20-barrel Criveller system, or tinkering on a separate 2.5-barrel pilot system for concocting new recipes. Levelโ€™s third partner, Geoff Phillips of Baileyโ€™s Taproom and the Upper Lip, carries his well-regarded beer barsโ€™ attention to presentation over to Level as well.

The brewery also seems to be emphasizing relatively low-alcohol โ€œsessionโ€ beers, with only two out of 15 taps pouring beers above seven percent ABV, and a total of six coming in at five percent or lower. Our team of three drinkers tasted all 15 that were available, and while Levelโ€™s beers are not unilaterally great (it seems theyโ€™re still trying out recipes and havenโ€™t settled on a regular roster just yet), the best ones are very good indeed. By and large, these winners seemed to follow traditional British styles: We liked the clean, nutty flavor of the Be Your Own Dad best bitter quite a bit, as well as a mellow porter named I Believe in a Thing Called Love, which was compulsively drinkable while offering a substantial amount of roast. We were mixed on the And the Crowd Goes Mild, a dark English mild that one of us really enjoyed and others appreciated for the relative rarity of the style. A surprising triumph was the Button SMASHer, made with a single type of malt and a single hop varietyโ€”a beginner homebrewerโ€™s trick that paid dividends in this case. And the ExEx, a farmhouse ale made with Buddhaโ€™s hand, a bizarre-looking citrus fruit, floored all three of us, with a crisp, yeasty flavor and an unmistakable Asian twist.

We were also lucky enough to try an exquisitely balanced cask-conditioned rendition of their Neon Snowsuit winter warmer, which poured directly off the bar top from a half-firkin (or โ€œpinโ€); it was only the third time Level has ever offered a cask beer, so it may not be a regular thing just yet, but letโ€™s hope it becomes one.

The brewery/taproom is inside a big red barn, but Levelโ€™s real draw is the great, huge, covered patio, and a former greenhouse that stayed awfully warm even on a chilly December evening. There are currently three food carts outside if you need to line your stomach while you drinkโ€”Flor de Guelaguetza makes Oaxacan dishes like tlayudas and molotes, Bam Pow Burgers delivers an array of brewpub staples, and Natureโ€™s Old Time Meats has a varied if vegetarian-unfriendly menu that includes terrific barbecue and pasta. Thereโ€™s ample room for more carts to join them.

Itโ€™s already a wonderfully inviting place, but whatโ€™s more exciting is Levelโ€™s potential, with plans for the two-acre space to include more outdoor seating, farmers markets, and hops grown on-site. Be aware that it currently closes at 8 pm on weeknights, although itโ€™s open until 10 on Friday and Saturday.

Ned Lannamann is a writer and editor in Portland, Oregon. He writes about film, music, TV, books, travel, tech, food, drink, outdoors, and other things.