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Outpost Brewing's New IPA Supports Women in Craft Beer Industry

Outpost Brewing released the "WHO RUN THE WORLD IPA" in Coeur d'Alene, with proceeds supporting Pink Boots Society scholarships for women in brewing.

Sarah Chen1 min read
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Outpost Brewing's New IPA Supports Women in Craft Beer Industry
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Chelsey Borgstrom wanted Outpost Brewing's latest IPA to do more than taste good. The Coeur d'Alene co-owner and her husband Dan released the "WHO RUN THE WORLD IPA" on April 4, a limited-run beer produced in partnership with the Pink Boots Society, an international nonprofit that funds scholarships, training grants, and educational programming for women and non-binary professionals in the fermentation and brewing industries.

Borgstrom described the local scene as "overflowing with talent," and the release was designed to channel that energy into something measurable: a portion of sales from the IPA will return to the Pink Boots Society to support its programs.

The beer earned immediate praise at the taproom. Customers called it "fruity" and "delicious" and noted it "has bite," suggesting the Borgstroms didn't trade craft quality for cause appeal. The flavor profile came together through deliberate collaboration with hop and grain suppliers, with the couple working to produce something that reflected Outpost's local identity while meeting the requirements of the Pink Boots partnership.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The Pink Boots Society operates internationally, but its visibility often depends on grassroots brewery partnerships like this one. The organization's grants and education programs reach professionals across the industry, and Outpost's limited release brings that mission directly into Kootenai County's craft beer conversation.

Limited releases tied to community causes have become a tool for small breweries across the Inland Northwest to build loyalty and engage patrons around a shared purpose. For Outpost, the "WHO RUN THE WORLD IPA" does both at once: a quality beer that, for as long as the kegs last, makes the case that supporting women in brewing is good for the whole industry.

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