Milwaukee: The Underrated Midwest Gem Offering Beaches, Culture & Cuisine
Milwaukee: Underrated Midwest Gem with Beaches & Culture

Milwaukee: The Underrated Midwest Gem Offering Beaches, Culture & Cuisine

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Milwaukee is often overshadowed by Chicago, but this city boasts everything from great beaches to cultural wonders and a vibrant culinary scene.

Milwaukee's Laidback Vibe and Urban Energy

Milwaukee is the American Midwest at its most laidback, welcoming, and unpretentious. The pace feels unhurried compared to nearby Chicago, especially in the breezy waterfront parks and on lazy beach weekends. When strolling between art galleries and diners in the walkable neighborhoods, visitors can soak in a relaxed atmosphere. However, do not mistake laidback for sleepy, because Milwaukee knows how to have fun, with vibrant bars and buzzy festivals. This revitalized city gently bubbles with urban energy, making it unspectacular by reputation but cool and moreish upon closer inspection.

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A Great Lakeside Setting Without Chicago Crowds

Milwaukee boasts 29 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline that has a distinctly ocean-like vibe, with no visible opposite shore on the horizon, as the lake is 90 miles wide at this point. The water is reachable by foot from downtown in just 10-15 minutes. A good starting point to anchor your bearings is the waterfront Milwaukee Art Museum, famous for its moving rooftop "wings" that help deflect heat. From here, paved paths to the south and north trace the shoreline. Stroll north for 10-15 minutes and you will arrive at one of the city's most popular stretches of sand, Bradford Beach, which is a hotspot for swimming and volleyball during the warmer months. The temptation to linger is strengthened further by The Dock at Bradford Beach's tiki huts, tacos, and tasty frozen cocktails. Go south from the museum and you will find yourself in Lakeshore State Park, a tranquil, 22-acre urban oasis that features a small beach, a marina, wheelchair-friendly trails, and skyline views.

A Surprisingly Strong Food and Drink Scene

Milwaukee's dining-out scene is a strong draw, a mouthwatering blend of hearty Midwestern comfort food, offerings from innovative craft brewers and independent eateries, and fare that points to the city's strong German roots. For classic examples of the latter, head to Mader's, where waiting staff in traditional attire have been serving caramelized Brussels sprouts, wiener schnitzels, and bratwursts for more than 120 years in a time-warp Bavarian-style dining room decked out in medieval weaponry, stained glass windows, and iron chandeliers. A few minutes' walk away in Old German Beer Hall, the focus is more on Germany's beer-brewing prowess, though there are plenty of Bavarian crowd-pleasing food-menu items on offer, from giant pretzels to gourmet sausages. In Milwaukee Public Market, around 10 minutes away by car in the Historic Third Ward neighborhood, multiple vendors showcase the city's culinary diversity: try St. Paul Fish Company for delicious lobster rolls, Anodyne Coffee Roasting Co. for smooth brews, West Allis Cheese & Sausage Shoppe for handmade sausages and 200 varieties of cheese, and Margarita Paradise for tasty taqueria-style dishes and versions of the cocktail it is named after. Other must-visits include The Pasta Tree on the East Side for handmade pasta, and, 15 minutes south by car in the trendy Bay View neighborhood, there is Café Corazón for breakfast burritos, nachos, and quesadillas. Further south in Bay View, Honeypie does a roaring trade in homemade pies and buttermilk biscuits, and classic Midwestern frozen custard, a local obsession, can be enjoyed at Fred's Frozen Custard & Grill, about 10 minutes northwest of downtown by car.

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Fascinating Beer Heritage That Still Matters

For Milwaukee, beer is much more than a refreshment; it is a liquid that is part of the city's DNA, shaping its architecture and cultural identity. The origins of this influence can be traced back to German immigrants with lager-brewing expertise arriving in the 1840s. Capitalizing on the city's ample water supplies and rail access, they set up breweries that bubbled with such success they earned Milwaukee the nickname "Brew City." The city was the world's No.1 beer producer by the early 1900s, with the big four, Schlitz, Pabst, Blatz, and Miller, distributing millions of barrels around the U.S. Of the four, only Miller still brews in the city, and you can learn more about its fascinating 160-year history with a tour of the Miller Brewery, about a 10-minute drive west of downtown. To go behind the curtain of the craft scene, join one of the lively tasting tours of Lakefront Brewery, established in 1987. Milwaukee's brewing heritage is also in evidence at the neighborhood level: you will notice how the city is laced with enticing beer gardens and tap rooms, with denser clusters of them across neighborhoods such as Walker's Point and Bay View.

Architecture and Culture That Punches Above Its Weight

Think it is all beaches, bratwursts, and beer drinking? The city has a few surprises in store; architecturally and culturally, it is unexpectedly enticing. The aforementioned Milwaukee Art Museum is no gimmick. Venture inside and you can discover more than 32,000 works by American and European artists, from paintings to textiles, including pieces by Georgia O'Keeffe, Andy Warhol, Norman Rockwell, Wassily Kandinsky, and Roy Lichtenstein. Walk 20 minutes inland and soak up the atmosphere of the Historic Third Ward, a once rough area that has risen from the ashes to become a vibrant arts and culture district, 10 square blocks of galleries, boutiques, and theaters peppered among Victorian-era commercial buildings. A tour of the Pabst Mansion five minutes west of downtown offers deeper insight into the prosperity of the golden era of brewing. The magnificent house was built at 2000 Grand Avenue, now West Wisconsin Avenue, at a cost of $254,000, around $10 million in today's money, for German-American brewing magnate Frederick Pabst and his wife, Maria. The 20,000-square-foot mansion was filled with treasures and was the setting for glamorous parties and receptions. The Mansion was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 21, 1975, and opened to the public in 1978.

Fantastic Family-Friendly Attractions

Family fun is easy to find in Milwaukee thanks to attractions guaranteed to keep tantrums at bay. One of the highlights is Discovery World, a science museum near the lakefront, five minutes by foot from the Milwaukee Art Museum, that is jam-packed with exhibits, many of which are interactive. There is a stunning model railway, the chance to compete with artificial intelligence at tic-tac-toe and table tennis, and kids can unleash their inner architect in the block-building room. For younger kids, there is the nearby Betty Brinn Children's Museum. Here, children can get a taste of adult life in "Home Town," which has a kid-sized post office and grocery store complete with working phones and cash registers. In another exhibit, children get a chance to design their own volcanic lava course, while the Let's Play Railway puts kids in charge of a realistic train engine, complete with levers, dials, cranks, and buttons. Visiting August 6-16? The Wisconsin State Fair, held about 15 minutes west of downtown, is not to be missed. There is a giant slide, rides including a windmill-like arm that thrusts riders 160 feet into the air, agricultural displays, and live music.

Where to Stay in Milwaukee

Drink in Milwaukee's rich brewing history with a stay in the Brewhouse Inn & Suites, set in the original Pabst Blue Ribbon Brewery in the heart of the redeveloped Brewery District. There are 90 spacious suites, each boasting a full kitchenette, and six of the original copper brewing kettles in the central atrium, rising six stories high. The Iron Horse Hotel is set a few minutes' walk from the Harley-Davidson museum, and while unaffiliated, has a rugged vintage-modern aesthetic that will appeal to bikers, with dedicated storage for helmets, leathers, and motorcycles. But it is a hotel with broad appeal; the 100 rooms are plush, the bar is lively, and there is a very good on-site restaurant serving gourmet pub fare, from wedge salads to smash burgers. Kimpton Journeyman Hotel is set in the Historic Third Ward, within walking distance of the Milwaukee Public Market and lakefront, and offers 158 accommodations. The look is a beguiling mix of industrial chic and contemporary cool, with concrete stenciled floors and modish furniture, and, nine stories up, rooftop restaurant and bar The Outsider is an appealing spot for food and drink with panoramic skyline views.