[border]
  • About Us
    1. Message from the President
    2. Message from the Chairman
    3. What is a Beer Distributor?
    4. What is NBWA?
    5. Contact Us
    6. Leadership & Staff
    7. Jobs at NBWA
    8. Annual Review
  • Events
    1. Annual Convention
    2. Legislative Conference
  • Membership
    1. Join NBWA
    2. Member Profile
    3. Member Services
  • Federal Affairs
    1. Political Affairs
    2. Legislative Affairs
  • State Center
    1. State Resources
    2. NBWA State Center
  • Industry & Technology
    1. Allied Industry Contacts
    2. Differences Between Beer and Liquor
    3. Technology
    4. BIECC
    5. NBWA Statement of Anti-trust Policy
    6. Getting into the Beer Distribution Business
    7. Craft Beer Distributor of the Year Award
  • Responsibility
    1. Resources
    2. Public Service Announcements
  • Multimedia Resource Center
    1. Publications & Multimedia
    2. Talking Points for Beer
    3. Create a Press Release
    4. 75th Anniversary Toolkit
    5. NBWA Press Releases
    6. Public Service Anouncements
    7. State Association Executive Resources
    8. Photo Gallery
  • News Room
    1. Daily Brew
    2. Press Releases
    3. Distributors in the News
  • The Beer Route
    1. Current Issue
    2. Archived Issues
    3. Associate Member Viewpoint Program
    4. Subscribe
  • All About Brew
    1. Beer Pairings
    2. Recipes
    3. Food Press Releases
    4. Beer Terms
  • NBWA in Spanish
    1. Inicio
    2. Sobre Nostoros
    3. Abogar
    4. Responsabilidad
    5. Sala De Prensa
NavBox
BeerRoute
Brew Box Top
    1. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    2. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    3. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    4. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    5. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    6. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    7. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    8. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    9. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    10. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    11. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    12. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    13. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    14. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    15. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    16. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    17. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    18. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    19. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    20. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    21. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    22. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    23. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    24. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    25. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    26. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    27. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    28. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    29. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    30. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    31. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    32. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    33. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    34. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    35. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    36. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    37. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    38. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    39. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    40. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    41. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    42. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    43. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    44. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    45. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    46. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    47. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    48. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    49. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    50. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic
    51. ABInBev debt clock starts ticking after big beer deal
    52. A Better Brew: The rise of extreme beer
    53. Anheuser-Busch InBev Looks To Make Suds In China
    54. Beers can complement Thanksgiving foods
    55. Coors Light Brings FanFare to the Florida Classic


    56. click here.
Brew Box Bottom
Sites Box Top
  • Related Sites
    1. Visit Here's to Beer
    2. Beer Serves America.org
    3. Stop Alcohol Abuse.org
    4. Repeal of Prohibition.org
Sites Box Bottom
NBWA Logo [border]

Beer Terms

NBWA has compiled of list of terms used often within the beer industry.  You may also be interested in downloading our Beer Types and Styles Guide or visiting Beer Pairing  or Recipes pages.

Ale - A malt beverage brewed with (usually) barley malt and fermented at relatively high temperatures (60-75 Fº) with top fermenting yeast, which usually creates a fruity taste. Ales are produced with a wide variety of colors, palates and alcoholic strengths.

Barley Wine - An English term for an extra-strong ale (implied to be as potent as wine).

Bitter - A well-hopped beer similar to pale ale.  The difference is essentially that pale ales are bottled whereas bitters are usually only draught beers.

Bock - German word for strong beer. It is a lager, usually dark, made from barley malt that usually displays a malty sweetness and relatively high alcohol content while limiting the presence of hop bitterness. Bock beers are traditionally served in autumn, late winter or spring.

Brown Ale - A reddish-brown colored ale known in England as a thirst-quencher and displays hints of chocolate and fruity sweetness.  American versions are more alcoholic (due to increased malt) and more bitter (due to increased hops) but they still display the basic features of chocolate and fruit.

Cask-Conditioned - Draught beer that is neither filtered or pasteurized and has a secondary fermentation and natural clarification in the cellar of the pub.  It is served at a cool temperature but not chilled in order to fully exhibit all of its flavors.

Dopplebock - Double Bock. An extra strong (alcohol content) bock beer that is usually tawny or dark brown in color.

Hop - A climbing plant much like a grape vine. Hops contain oils and resins that provide beer with a bittering balance in taste and aroma to the sweetness of the malt.  Oils contribute to the taste and aroma with resins acting as bittering agents.

India Pale Ale - Commonly referred as an "IPA," it is a stronger, hoppier version of a pale ale.  The term originates from the difficulties of British brewers to make beer that could sustain the long voyage from England to India in the 1700s.  The solution was to add hops to already fermented beer to act as a perserving agent.  Hops are now not only added to fermented beer (dry hopping) but are also boiled in the wort.

Lager - Any beer fermented at low temperatures using bottom fermenting yeast and then stored (lagered) in cool conditions in order to clear away imperfections to ensure a clean taste.  Usually golden in color but can be dark.

Lambic - Spontaneously fermenting style of beer brewed from malted barley and unmalted wheat and is unique to Belgium.

Light Beer - American term indicating a pilsner-style beer that is relatively low in calories and alcohol content.

Malt - Malt refers to grains that have been soaked in water until they are partially germinated (malted) and then kilned, this releases starches which are turned into fermentable sugar.  When yeast is added, these fermentable sugars become alcohol and carbon dioxide.  Malt also gives beer its sweet flavor.

Pale Ale - An ale brewed with pale malts (lightly kilned) giving it an often honey-like or caramel sweetness.  They are often bronze or copper colored as opposed to the dark brown or blakc of porters and stouts, hence the term "pale ale." Some English brewers use this term to describe their premium bitters.

Porter - A London style of beer. It is a lighter-bodied companion to stout. Porters are roasted-tasting dark brews that are bottom-fermented and stronger in alcohol.

Stout - Originally a "Stout Porter."  It is a strong porter that is extra-dark, almost black in color, due to the use of highly roasted malts.

Weisse/Weissbier - A German term for beer made with malted wheat.

Wort - The sweet liquid made from malted grains, boiling water and hops that yeast cells cause to ferment.

Yeast - Yeast cells love to eat sugar. In doing so, they cause the wort to ferment, which produces alcohol and carbon dioxide. Yeast also conveys its own flavor and can be used to give a fruity flavor to beer.
 

[border]
National Beer Wholesalers Association
1101 King Street, Suite 600 - Alexandria, VA 22314-2944
Phone: 703.683.4300 - Fax: 703.683.8965 - Email:   info@nbwa.org

© 2006 National Beer Wholesalers Association. All rights reserved.

Site Map   Privacy Policy   Terms & Conditions   NBWA Linking & Use of Logo Policy Statement