How to Read a Beer Menu: From Numbers to Flavors

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In a good restaurant, the beer menu is often packed with abbreviations, style names, and detailed descriptions. For a beginner, it may seem overwhelming—but once you understand it, you’ll be able to choose your drink with confidence. Let’s break it down in just a few minutes.

ABV, IBU, OG, SRM: what they mean and why they matter

Those unfamiliar letters next to a beer’s name are technical characteristics. Here are the main ones to know:

— ABV (Alcohol By Volume) — the alcohol content. Values below 4–5% indicate light, refreshing beers. 6–8% is medium strength. Above 8–10% and up to 12–15% are strong, often dessert-like or warming styles.

— IBU (International Bitterness Units) — bitterness. 0–20 IBU — almost no bitterness; 20–40 IBU — light, balanced; 40–60 IBU — noticeable (IPAs); 60+ IBU — intense, dominant bitterness.

— OG (Original Gravity) — original wort density. Higher OG (1.050–1.080+) means richer flavor and higher alcohol potential.

— SRM (Standard Reference Method) — color scale. Pale (3–6), amber/copper (10–20), dark (30–40+). Color hints at flavor: pale — light and malty; amber — caramel and nutty; dark — roasted malt, coffee, chocolate.

Now you know what ABV, IBU, OG, and SRM mean. If a menu includes these parameters, it’s a sign the establishment takes beer seriously.

From sour to gose: how not to get lost in styles

You don’t need to master every beer style, but knowing the key categories makes choosing much easier:

— Lagers (pilsner, helles, bock) — bottom-fermented, clean, smooth, malty.
— Ales (ale, pale ale, IPA, porter, stout) — top-fermented, fruity, complex. IPAs — hoppy and citrusy; porters/stouts — dark, coffee, chocolate.
— Wheat beers (weizen, witbier) — soft, banana, clove, citrus. Light, often cloudy.
— Sour beers (gose, Berliner Weisse, sour ales) — refreshing, acidic.
— Gose — German style, lightly salty, coriander.
— Lambic — Belgian spontaneous fermentation, sometimes fruit-based (kriek, framboise).

Menus often group beers by type (light, dark, sour, hoppy). If not, rely on keywords: «light/dark,» «hoppy/malty,» «sour/neutral.»

How to tell from the description if you’ll like the beer

A beer description is your guide. Focus on three key elements:

— Aroma and flavor. Citrus/tropical — hoppy, refreshing; caramel/bread/nuts — malty, warming; coffee/chocolate — dark, bitter; banana/clove — wheat; apple/cherry — sour.
— Body. «Light» — easy drinking. «Medium/full-bodied» — richer, pairs with hearty food.
— Finish. «Dry/clean» — quick, refreshing. «Long/rich/warming» — lingers, savor it.

If you enjoy dark chocolate and coffee, look for stouts. If you prefer light white wine, try gose or lambic.

How to quickly navigate a Lambic beer list

The Lambic restaurant menu is structured clearly:

— Draft beers «on tap» first: blond ales, lambics, Bourgogne des Flandres.
— Bottled beers next: Belgian classics (Trappist ales, quadrupels) and international selections. Includes specialties: Brussels champagne, cider, non-alcoholic options.
— Unsure? Order a tasting set of 3–5 beers to compare styles.
— Ask the staff! Say «something light and not bitter» or «a rich, dark beer» — they’ll suggest options.

The key principle: don’t try to cover everything at once. Pick one parameter (strength, bitterness, color, or fermentation style) and filter by it. The rest will fall into place with guidance. See you soon at Lambic beer restaurants!

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