Tired of hazy IPAs and cloudy natural wines? The answer: Makgeolli, a 2,000-year-old knuckleball of a drink from Korea.
“Makgeolli is an alternative to craft beer, natural wine and sake,” Alice Jun, co-founder of craft makgeolli brewery Hana Makgeolli says. “And really it’s at the intersection of those three categories.”
Makgeolli, pronounced “mahk-oh-lee,” is a lightly filtered rice-based drink that clocks in anywhere between 5 percent to 8 percent ABV. Usually sold for under $10, the rice-based drink is characterized by its milky-white appearance, full-bodied, slightly fizzy mouthfeel and a sweet, tangy flavor profile. In terms of price, ubiquity and ability to get you black-out drunk, it’s the Colt 45 of Korea.

Making makgeolli is simple enough, as Jun explains. Mix water, rice and nuruk, a cake-like Korean fermentation starter made of yeast, grains and microorganisms, and you’re there. Traditionally, the beverage is served out of a kettle and poured into rounded, shallow bowls to help prevent the rice from separating.

For centuries, makgeolli has been the go-to drink for farmers. It’s easy to make, filling and somewhat healthy, or as healthy as an alcoholic drink can be. Because makgeolli is largely unfiltered, the drink maintains high levels of lactic acid and lactobacillus bacteria, like that found in yogurt, and a decent amount of dietary fiber. Today’s mass-produced versions of the beverage, however, are packed with sugar and artificial preservatives, so drinking it is more like drinking a bottle of Gatorade.