What is Beer?

Beer is essentially fermented, hop-flavored, malt sugar tea. There are four basic building
blocks needed to make beer: water, malted barley, hops and yeast. Yeast is used to ferment
the tea into an effervescent liquid with an average of between three and seven percent ethyl
alcohol by weight.

Other Frequently Asked Questions about Beer.


What is a beer style?
Simply put a beer style is a label given to a beer that describes its overall character and
often times its origin. It's a name badge that has been achieved over many centuries of
brewing, trial and error, marketing / branding and consumer acceptance. Below are a few of
the more common types. SPORTSMAN’S proudly stocks many of these beers and will gladly
research and locate your favorites – if they are available for distribution in Arizona.



American Light Lager
This style of beer is the result of the growth of national breweries, and their ability to brew a
beer with wide appeal and a competitive price. It is essentially a pilsner-style lager, brewed
with significant quantities of grain other than barley malt; a slightly sweet, lightly hopped,
straw-colored, effervescent beer.

British Bitter
This top-fermented classic ale style offers a deep, rich brown or ruby color with a malty, very
lightly hopped flavor. True bitter is only lightly carbonated.

Indian Pale Ale
India pale ale was developed as a high-gravity, well-hopped brew, which enabled it to last
the voyage from England’s breweries to overseas locales (thus its name).

Brown Ale
Brown ale is a traditional British, top-fermented ale, similar to a pale ale, but sweeter and
darker.

Strong Ale
Also called Old Ale, this high-alcohol brew is noted for its dark color and sweet flavor.

Barleywine
Barleywine is a very dark, almost opaque ale. The term "barleywine" is a fairly new -- once
called "Strong Ale," this is the most alcoholic style of beer. The addition of a healthy amount
of hops forms a powerful flavor triad of sweet malt, bitter hops and warm alcohol.

Wheat Beer
This top-fermented beer contains more than half wheat. Hallertau hops are used for both
bittering and aroma. Lager yeast is used and the beer is allowed to lager for approximately
two to three weeks at just below freezing temperatures.

Lambic
Typically served in a champagne flute, this beer is usually sold in 750 ml bottles. Lindeman's
Kriek, a good example of the style, is a top-fermented cherry flavored Lambic (70 per cent
malted barley and 30 per cent unmalted wheat), with a rose color. It has an aroma of
cherries and is sparkling, with a dry finish. The acidic flavor of the Lambic blends well with
the cherry flavor.

Trappist Dark
Brown with a ruby hue, three types of Trappist beers are produced by Chimay: Premier
Chimay (red), Cinq Cents (white), and Grand Reserve (blue). The red, as well as the blue,
has a fruity taste, with a soft, full, deep body. The white Chimay has a stronger hops flavor
and a drier finish, with a quenching hint of acidity. It also has a paler color, more amber than
ruby red.

Herbed/Spiced
Every year, since 1975, Anchor has brewed a Christmas Ale. It is produced in small
quantities and is available only from late November until early January. Each year the recipe
is changed and there is a special label designed around the tree, a traditional symbol of
renewal. Properly refrigerated, this beer remains drinkable for years.

Octoberfest
A fairly strong beer, Paulaner Marzen’s brew starts with a two-mash process using dark- and
light- colored brewing malt from two-row Bavarian summer barley. Hallertau hops are used
for both bittering and aroma. Lager yeast is used and the beer is allowed to lager for
approximately four weeks at just-below-freezing temperatures.
Pilsner
A light-straw colored, full-bodied, lagered, bottom-fermented beer named after the town of
Pilsen (in what was then known as Bohemia), where it was first brewed in 1842. It quickly
became a popular style because it was so different from the amber brews that were the
norm at that time.

Pale Ale
Pale ale, another classic British top-fermented ale style, has more hop flavor than the bitter
style, but not as much as India pale ale.

Vienna Lager
This style was the rage in Vienna at the turn of the 19th century. Then it fell from fashion
and left Europe for the warmer climate of Mexico. Today, the only true Vienna lager is Dos
Equis, but with the growth of the specialty beer market it may not hold its special place for
long.

Scottish Ale
This is a high-alcohol brew made with Scottish malted barley. The flavor includes hints of
caramel and smoke, and less hops taste than English brews.

Bock Beer
Similar to strong ale, this style uses bottom fermenting yeast and is "lagered" (aged) for at
least a month.

Porter and Stout
Whether dry or sweet, flavored with roasted malt barley, oats or certain sugars, stouts and
porters are characterized by darkness and depth. Both types of beer are delicious with
hearty meat stews and surprisingly good with shellfish. The pairing of oysters and stout has
long been acknowledged as one of the world's great gastronomic marriages.

Flanders Red Ales
Considered the best of the “red beers,” Rodenbach is brewed from four different malts. Five
different strains of yeast are used in the fermentation process.

Belgian Strong
Brewed by the Moorgat brewery in Belgium, Duvel is seen as the quintessential pale Strong
Ale, with a flavor that is complex and deep. It is made with Danish summer barley malt, whole
flower Styrian and Saaz hops. Duvel undergoes three fermentations. The first is warm, the
second cold, and the final one takes place in the bottle, lasting five weeks.

Steam Beer
In the 19th century "steam beer" was a nickname for local beers that were fermented with
lager yeast, at ale yeast temperature, producing beers with ale-like character. It may also
have been common practice to "top off" kegs of beer with beer that had not finished its first
fermentation. The result was an in-keg fermentation that produced high levels of natural
carbonation. With no refrigeration to control this fermentation a freshly tapped keg would
produce copious amounts of foam or "steam."

Smoked
Germany’s Kaiserdom, a good example of this style, is brewed from Bavarian barley that has
been roasted over a fire of moist beech wood logs. Whole Hallertau hops are used to
provide flavor and aroma. After bottom fermenting, the beer is lagered for three months.
The finished product is a dark-colored, smoky-flavored beer.



PILSNER - Loosely, any golden-colored, dry, bottom-fermenting beer of conventional
strength. Is characterized by the hoppiness of its flowery aroma and dry finish.

PORTER - The first commercially brewed beer in England and was a dark crude ale. It is
heavy bodied and dark with a slightly sweet taste.

SCOTCH ALE - Scotch ales are inclined to be more malty and full-bodied, less hoppy and
dry than their English neighbors.

STOUT - An extra dry, almost black, top fermenting brew, made with highly roasted malts.
The color comes from roasted barley and they often have a coffee or chocolate taste and
aroma.

WEISSE - German for “white beer”, implying a pale brew made from wheat. Available with or
without yeast.

WHEAT - Is a common additive to beer promoting head retention. Used in large quantities it
alters the flavor of the beer creating its own style. Wheat beers are regaining popularity and
are very common in Germany and Belgium.

YEAST - A single cell microorganism related to the fungus family. Yeast is the organism that
produces alcohol by ingesting sugars and creating alcohol and carbonation. Yeast also
adds to a beers flavor profile.
Beer Definitions