Four Fathers Brewing Co. is the answer when a group can't agree on whether the night is dinner or a few pints. In Hespeler Village, the Cambridge taproom runs a full kitchen and a working brewhouse under one roof, then surrounds them with pickleball, trivia nights, disc golf, and live music. The result is a place built to hold a table for a whole afternoon, not just a single meal.
The food is brewery comfort cooking with more reach than the format usually asks for. Wings anchor most tables, carried by a sauce list that runs from Shevchenko 9 BBQ and honey garlic to Nashville, gochujang, Cajun, and Blue. The Hespeler Burger — mild cheddar, that same Shevchenko 9 BBQ sauce, crispy onion straws — is the most direct burger expression of the kitchen, with the Brewery Burger close behind on house brewery sauce and pickle. From there the handhelds branch out: a Short Rib Melt layered with brie, aged cheddar, braised short rib, and house gravy on panini; buttermilk-fried Nashville chicken under hot sauce and dill pickles; and El Pollo Loco, fried chicken dressed with chipotle aioli, tomato relish, and chevre.
The Spuds section treats fries as a main event rather than a side. OG Poutine sets the baseline with squeaky curds and house gravy; a short rib version deepens it with gochujang, sesame, and green onion; Smashburger Fries pile on chuck patty, grilled onion, beer queso, and diced pickles. The shareables hold up their end too — three warm pretzel sticks with beer cheese and grainy mustard, fried Brussels sprouts tossed in soy with bacon and chili crisp aioli, duck fat fries under shredded gouda. Flatbreads stretch from a Sweet & Spicy build of cup-and-char pepperoni, pineapple, basil, and hot honey to vegetarian Roasted Veg and Four Cheese. Lighter options round it out — a toasted pecan and chevre salad with candied pecans and pickled onion, house-made nacho chips with guacamole and tajin-toasted pepitas — for tables that want to ease off the heavier plates.
What sets the kitchen apart is how far the brewery reaches into it. The pairing guide sets house beers — It Takes a Village Lager, the Starter Session IPA, IV IPA, the Shevchenko 9 Euro Dark Lager — directly beside the dishes, so choosing food and choosing a pour become one decision. The lineup spans a low-calorie light lager to hoppier IPAs, giving a table ordering rounds somewhere to go. The beer doesn't stay in the glass: it shows up as beer cheese on the pretzels, beer queso under the smashburger fries, and brewery sauce on the burger, and the Shevchenko 9 BBQ sauce takes its name straight from the dark lager. The menu reads as one operation, not a kitchen and a brewhouse sharing an address.
The name is not decoration. Local reporting traces Four Fathers to a group of hockey dads who started small before moving into the large Hespeler industrial site the taproom has occupied since 2018. The scale shows: the property carries an event calendar most breweries never attempt, and Family Sundays and a dedicated kids menu pull the same crowd back in daylight. The brewery sells its beer to take home, and on weekends the taproom stays open past midnight.
That breadth is the real case for Four Fathers. A mixed table can split lanes without anyone settling for less — short rib poutine and a panini melt on one end, a Beyond Meat Hespeler Burger or a plant-based Nashville sandwich on the other, a falafel bowl or garam masala hummus with naan somewhere in between. It suits a beer crowd, a family Sunday, and a group that turned up as much for the disc golf as the dinner. On a Saturday all three show up at once — pints, strollers, and someone arguing a trivia answer between bites of poutine.