Like an accelerated kid dropped into remedial math, American wheat beer’s potential has been squandered. It lives in the shadow of its German forebears. It warms the bench as IPAs enjoy the spotlight. It’s been wrongfully ignored, and it’s high time to unlock it’s hazy powers and experience the full flavor of one of American craft brewing’s finer liquids.
If you associate wheat beer with Blue Moon and a slice of orange, this is your primer to the world of American brewers doing something more with their wheat malt. They’re adding aromatic hops. They’re open fermenting. They’re cultivating a beer that’s front-palate friendly with a full finish. So throw out the notion that the wheat beer’s just another low-ABV, soft beer to pass by on the way to another tap. The wheat beer offers a session pour that’s high on taste, low(er) on alcohol, and gives you the reward of long, slow liquid satisfaction, beer after golden beer.
Thinking globally and drinking locally is a good adage to adopt, and Brooklyn Brewery is helping support the practice. The Greenmarket Wheat’s only available in NYC, and 70 percent of the wheat and barley that goes into the brew is from New York state. It’s a local disposition, with global appeal.
Tasting Notes: All the traditional wheat beer flavors (honey, banana, clove) are here and performing at their ultimate potential. This was our pick for our favorite traditional wheat beer, and it’s worth the trip to NYC. (ABV: 5.5%)
Three Floyds Gumballhead

Gumballhead’s the wunderkind of the wheat beer world, one part elusive, two parts worth the chase. The master brewers out in Munster, IN, have laced the American red wheat base with Amarillo Hops, so the beer takes on a mildly hoppy nature, giving a slightly bitter note to the smooth fruit-strong flavors.