Clem's Tap House in Kensington, San Diego pours from a rotating draft wall at 4108 Adams Avenue, a taproom extension of the Kasawdish family's bottle shop operation that has occupied this stretch of the 92116 corridor since 1987. The original store — Clem's Bottle House & Deli, still operating in the adjacent building at 4100 Adams Avenue — was founded by its namesake Clem in 1970 before Paul Kasawdish and his family took over and expanded into craft beer and wine retail. The tap house side runs roughly 50 rotating handles with an emphasis on West Coast IPAs, Belgian sours, barrel-aged stouts, and seasonal lagers, supplemented by a wine-by-the-glass list and cider taps. Kensington's village-scale commercial district centers on this section of Adams Avenue, where restaurants kensington searches lead diners to neighboring kitchens including Et Voilà! French Bistro and the cluster of indie eateries that define the corridor east of Kensington Drive. The food menu extends beyond bar snacks into full sandwiches — the Cuban and the Gobbler in particular pull deli-counter ingredients from the bottle house next door — along with hot wings, paninis, and hand-cut salads. The Kensington-Normal Heights Branch Library sits a few blocks east on Adams, anchoring the residential side of the neighborhood, and the iconic Kensington sign at Marlborough Drive marks the gateway into the walkable village core. Bars kensington searches consistently index to this block. The tap house welcomes dogs and keeps a street-side patio that fills during the annual Adams Avenue Street Fair and Adams Unplugged acoustic music festival. Eclectic retail neighbors including Back From Tomboctou Gallery share the sidewalk, reinforcing the block's mix of craft beverage and independent shopping. The bottle house deli counter builds sandwiches to order in the eight-dollar range, making a split visit between both storefronts a single-stop lunch for the Kensington neighborhood.