A beer cocktail is a cocktail that is made by mixing beer with other ingredients (such as a distilled beverage) or another style of beer. In this type of cocktail, the primary ingredient is usually beer.
Look up cocktail in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
List of beer cocktails
edit- Black and tan – A layered drink made from a blend of pale ale and a dark beer such as a stout or porter. Traditionally uses bitter and stout.
- Black Velvet – A layered drink using a combination of Stout and sparkling wine or champagne.
- Blow My Skull – Ale or porter with rum and brandy
- Boilermaker – Mild ale mixed with bottled brown ale (United Kingdom). The American version is a glass of beer with a shot of whiskey.
- Flaming Doctor Pepper – a flaming drink made from a bomb shot of high-proof alcohol and Amaretto ignited and dropped into a pint of beer.
- Hangman's blood – Porter combined with brandy, gin and rum.
- Irish car bomb – a pint glass containing half a pint of Irish stout with a mixed bomb shot of Irish cream and Irish whiskey.
- Michelada – Beer with citrus juice (e.g. lime juice), tomato juice, seasoning, chili sauce and Worcestershire sauce.[1] A variant of cerveza preparada (Mexican prepared beer).
- Porchcrawler – Equal parts of beer, vodka, and lemonade concentrate.
- Queen Mary – Beer with grenadine and maraschino cherries, originally from Canada, named for Mary of Teck.
- Red Eye – beer, tomato juice (or clamato in Canada), with optional lemon or hot sauce.[2]
- Sake bomb – Shot of sake poured or dropped into a glass of beer.
- Shandy or radler – Beer with lemonade, citrus soda, ginger beer, ginger ale, or fruit juice, e.g. grapefruit.[3][4][5]
- Snakebite – Equal parts lager and cider.
- Somaek – Soju mixed with beer.
- U-boot – Glass of beer with a bomb shot containing vodka.
See also
edit- List of cocktails
- Beer mix
- Bierlikör – beer liqueur
References
edit- ^ Goyanes, Ily (January 3, 2014). "Battle of the Cerveza-Mixed Drinks: Cuba's Bul vs. Mexico's Michelada". Miami New Times.
- ^ Media, Adams (2017). The Bar Cart Bible: Everything You Need to Stock Your Home Bar and Make Delicious Classic Cocktails. Simon and Schuster. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-5072-0116-9.
- ^ "What's the Difference Between a Radler and a Shandy?". Coastal Living. Archived from the original on 2020-08-13. Retrieved 2019-07-21.
- ^ "What Is the Difference Between a Radler and a Shandy?". Chowhound. 25 September 2021.
- ^ "A Guide to Citrus Beer: What is a Shandy and a Radler?". KegWorks Blog. April 3, 2019.