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Cream ale is a style of American beer that is light in color and well attenuated, [1] [2] meaning drier. First crafted in the mid-1800s at various breweries in the United States, cream ale remained a very localized form with different styles until the early 20th century.
Advocaat (/ ˈ æ d v ə k ɑː / ⓘ AD-və-kah, Dutch: [ɑtfoːˈkaːt] ⓘ) or advocatenborrel is a traditional Dutch alcoholic beverage made from eggs, sugar, and brandy. [1] The rich and creamy drink has a smooth, custard-like consistency.
A pint of Kentucky Common beer at Steeplejack Brewing in Portland, Oregon. Kentucky common beer is a once-popular style of ale from the area in and around Louisville, Kentucky from the 1850s until Prohibition. This style is rarely brewed commercially today. It was also locally known as dark cream common beer, cream beer or common beer. [1]
Genesee Cream Ale is a cream ale produced by the Genesee Brewing Company in Rochester, New York. Introduced in 1960, [ 1 ] Cream Ale receives the extra step of kräusening , [ citation needed ] a process in which finished beer is primed for carbonation with wort instead of sugar.
Wittig and Beaton decided to model the Shaftebury beer recipe after this beer. Wittig explained that the original Shaftebury Cream Ale was dark brown: "At the time when we made it, it had a completely different flavour. It was 4.8 alcohol by volume and it got its dark colour from the chocolate and crystal malt that we imported from England."
This arrangement continued until 2001 when the contract was not renewed by Boston Beer Company. [7] Hudepohl-Schoenling continued to operate as a sales and marketing company for its many brands of beer, which included Little Kings Cream Ale, Hudy Delight, Hudy Gold, Christian Moerlein, Mt. Everest Malt Liquor, Burger and Burger Light.
For many years the brewery produced Gibbons beer, ale and porter, and the brewery traded as Gibbons Brewing Company. Gibbons was the flagship brand of The Lion until the acquisition of the Stegmaier brands in 1974. Gibbons beer continued to be produced until November 2009, when the Lion Brewery stopped packaging beer in 16oz returnable bottles.
Oktoberfest is a Märzen-style beer first introduced in 2016. [28] Cream Ale Dry Hopped is a fall/winter edition of Genesee's seasonal cream ale line-up, which consists of two beers split across six-month seasons. It is brewed with a selection of “modern hops” handpicked by head brewmaster Steve Kaplan.