What are sour beers
Sour beers are defined by their intentional acidity, created through specialised fermentation techniques. Unlike most beers, which aim to avoid sourness, this style embraces it as the core feature. The result is a beer that can be sharp, refreshing and complex, often appealing to drinkers who enjoy bold and unconventional flavours.
How sour beers are made
Sour beers achieve their acidity through the use of wild yeast, bacteria or controlled souring methods. These processes introduce lactic or acetic acidity, which gives the beer its distinctive tang. Modern brewers often balance this acidity carefully to ensure the beer remains refreshing rather than harsh.
Sour beer flavour profile
Flavours in sour beers can range from clean and citrus driven to rich and fruit forward. Common notes include lemon, green apple, raspberry, cherry or stone fruit, depending on the style. The acidity provides freshness, while sweetness or fruit character is often used to balance the sharpness.
Traditional and modern sour styles
Traditional sour beers originate from regions such as Belgium, where styles like lambic and fruit based sours have been produced for generations. Modern craft brewers have expanded the category, creating approachable sours that highlight fruit, softness and drinkability while retaining the refreshing tart edge.
When to choose a sour beer
Sour beers are ideal when you want something light, refreshing and palate cleansing. They work well as an aperitif, during warmer weather or alongside food, particularly dishes with richness, spice or salt that benefit from acidity.
Sour Beers FAQs
Are sour beers sweet or dry?
Sour beers can be either, depending on the balance between acidity, fruit and residual sweetness.
Are sour beers very acidic?
They are intentionally acidic, but well made sour beers are balanced and refreshing rather than harsh.
Do sour beers taste like vinegar?
Good sour beers should taste clean and fresh, not vinegary.
Are sour beers suitable for beginners?
Fruit forward sour beers are often a good introduction due to their approachable flavours.