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Mackenzie Patel
Spoon University Lifestyle
Lifestyle


11 BEERS RANKED BASED ON HOW AMERICAN THEY ARE


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MACKENZIE PATEL

University of Florida
May 25th, 2023
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Sucking down a few tall ones with the boys during a sweaty, sultry summer is one
of America's favorite pastimes. Out by the sizzling grill, by a pool with
flamingo floats, or in the dripping heat of a baseball stadium – as Kendrick
would say, it’s inside our DNA. Whatever the type of beer (Pilsner, Ale, Lager,
Porter, Stout, etc.), some are more traditionally “American” than others.

Your Belgium IPAs are a far cry from Eagle and ‘Merica-level brew, but a bottle
of Yuengling or Sweetwater 420 was fermented with red, white, and blue. Here's a
list of 11 beers, ranked based on how “American” they are.

#SpoonTip: Spoon University does not support binge drinking or underage
drinking. So, 21+ friends, please drink responsibly!




11. STELLA ARTOIS



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Sorry Pilsner lovers, this beer is not American at all. Although a six-pack is
available at any Publix or Walmart, its regal lettering and impressive founding
date (1366) heralds from Belgium, not the United States.



Stella is golden and commercialized, and its only American-ish quality is its
owner: Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev). A beer conglomerate based in Belgium, AB
InBev is the largest beer brewer and distributor in the world.






10. BECK'S

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Mackenzie Patel

This green-bottle Pilsner is most famous in Germany, although it has an American
distribution center in St. Louis, Missouri. It makes the list because of the
controversy that occurred in 2015, in which the brewery was sued for deceiving
American customers.



Most of these customers thought it was imported from Bremen, Germany (where the
headquarters are), when really, it was produced in the same complex as
Budweiser. It was also acquired in 2008 by Anheuser-Busch InBev, the
Belgium-based company that owns household brands such as Bud Light, Corona, and
Port Royal. 






9. CORONA



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Corona (“crown” in Spanish) is omnipresent in American bars, despite its origins
in Mexico. Most likely to be in a Kenny Chesney song, this lager is the fifth
most popular beer in the US according to VinePair. Corona Extra has been
imported since 1981 and is marketed as “Beach in Can." It may be Spanish, but
Americans sure as hell love this pale cerveza (¡salud!).






8. BUDWEISER



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Photo by Dawn Traylor via Pexels


This might come as a shock, but Budweiser isn’t as American as it seems.
Littering every tailgate parking lot and low-tier frat house, this beer is also
owned by Anheuser-Busch InBev.



The product of commercialization, Budweiser also stole its name from Budweiser
Budvar Brewery, a Czech Company that brewed the original lager. In the EU,
American Budweiser is relabeled as “Bud” so as not to infringe upon the name of
the OG Czech beer.






7. MILLER HIGH LIFE






Branded as the “Champagne of Beers,” this wannabe-luxury was introduced in 1903
by the Miller Brewing Company. Although ownership of Miller is confusing and
big-business (i.e. Miller Brewing Company to SABMiller to AB InBev), the amber
liquid is as inexpensive and easy-to-drink as ever.



It’s the American dream in a kitschy bottle — who could refuse? However, I tend
to also confuse it with Coors, another run-of-the-mill American beer that has
been commercialized.






6. NATURAL LIGHT



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Although this beer is owned by AB InBev, I had to rank it higher because of its
integral importance on American college campuses. This is the beer of frat house
kegs and nights of bad decisions. I mean... just look at the picture!

The 80s movies with beer pyramids (not to mention the real-life ones) were all
Natty Light: the beer cheap enough to get hammered inelegantly. Chugging a Natty
to "I Love College" is the quintessential American experience.






5. PABST BLUE RIBBON (PBR)



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Photo via PabstBlueRibbon.com


All you need is a can of PBR and a Zac Brown Band song to be a real American.
The “Blue Ribbon” part was added to the Pabst name after it won the Blue Ribbon
award at the Columbian Exposition in 1893.

Back in the day, blue silk ribbons were hand-tied around the cans – a true USA
icon. Although sales declined in the 1980s, they revitalized in the 2000s and
the company remains American-owned.




4. GENESEE CREAM ALE



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Although not as famous as Yuengling or Sierra Nevada, the Genesee Brewing
Company was founded in 1878 in Rochester, New York. Its flagship beer, Genesee
Cream Ale, is a light beer that’s easy to guzzle down while still retaining a
distinctive flavor.



Besides cream ales being staunchly American, this beer is a poster boy for
patriotism because the water used to ferment the beer is from New York. The
traces of sulfur give the beer its smooth, “American original” taste.






3. SAMUEL ADAMS



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Photo via SamuelAdams.com


Named after an influential Founding Father, how could this beer not be hella
American? It’s brewed by the Boston Beer Company, the “second largest craft
brewery in the US."



Their main beer is the Samuel Adams Boston Lager, a beer with a chiseled
portrait of Adams floating in the background. No other beer will make you feel
more in tune with middle school American history.








2. SWEETWATER 420





Although SweetWater brewery was founded recently in 1997, it’s an authentic
American company loaded with Georgia charm and craft brews. The founders, Bensch
and McNerny, met at the University of Colorado at Boulder and named their
Atlanta brewery after the Sweetwater tributary of the Chattahoochee River.



Even their most famous beer, Sweetwater 420, got its name from Interstate 420,
an Atlanta bypass that was never built (among other innuendos).






1. YUENGLING LAGER



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This homegrown beer is as American as it gets. Branded as “America’s oldest
brewery,” it was founded in 1829 by David Yuengling during the Andrew Jackson
presidency. To survive during the prohibition, the company founded Yuengling
Dairy and sold ice cream to their dry customers.





Since then, it has been family-owned and still bears the patriotic Eagle on its
labels – and no party is complete without a bucketful of Yuengling Traditional
Amber Lagers. They can be found at any grocery or wine/beer store and taste best
outdoors. 



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Mackenzie Patel

Is your mouth watering with lager lust? Dying to get those lips around a
Yuengling? Patriotism doesn’t have to be confined to sparklers on July 4th or
not wearing white after Labor Day. Stock your fridge with American beers and
drink up.

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MACKENZIE PATEL

University of Florida
May 25th, 2023
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