Varies each season!
Sure to delight every birthday celebrant, this case is packed with ales from up and down the land. Two bottles of each ensures there's enough to share with family and friends at the party. The perfect birthday present! All our mixed cases can be customised however you like in your shopping basket, so you can have a little more of this or a little less of that.
You might say, a great beer is man’s other best friend. So when we made this German-style pilsner, it just made sense to name it after the brewery’s dog, Hans — our owner’s German Shorthair Pointer. Inspired by the pilsner beers of Northern Germany, Hans is crisp, brightly hoppy and full of flavor. At 50 IBUs and featuring Tettnang hops, it’s even hoppier than many pale ales. The German malt helps create a nice pale golden color and provides the perfect companion to the hops. ABV: 5.3% – IBU: 50 – OG: 12.5° Silver Medal Winner – 2012 Great American Beer Festival – German-Style Pilsener
Fall and German beer go together like Texas and tacos. So we brewed Oktoberfest, our first lager, using traditional Bavarian brewing methods and the highest quality German malt, hops, and yeast. Munich and Vienna malts are the real heroes of this brew, resulting in a smooth, copper-colored, medium-bodied beer that’s perfect for Fall. This year, celebrate Oktoberfest with Real Ale and fill a stein with this traditional Bavarian lager. We won’t even make you wear lederhosen.
Texas has more buried treasure than any other state. (Seriously, Google it.) That fact was the inspiration for Lost Gold. English Crystal malts give this IPA a rich golden-orange hue and a subtle, yet firm, malt background. Bright and citrusy with grapefruit notes, Lost Gold features an abundance of American hops that always mark the spot. Don’t worry, however, you won’t have to hunt for this treasured favorite. It’s available year round all over Texas. ABV: 6.6% – IBU: 62 – OG: 15.5°
Brewed for tap walls overrun with the white noise of West Coast IPA's, here’s an offering so exotic, you’d think it was from another world. Like its namesake before it, the axis deer of Southern Asia, so too has this species (beverage?) of hop-forward animal magnetism come to invade the landscape of IPA’s that have long held sway over the taps of Texas’s finest watering holes. Tropical fruit, citrus, and a pale golden body, help keep this breed light on its feet. And with few natural predators there is little anyone can do to stop the spread. IPA may not have been born in Texas, but it will soon seem as native as the sky that stretches between its borders.