Commercial Description: Choc beer was named after its place of origin, the Choctaw Nation. The Choctaw people brewed a homemade beer and taught the Italian immigrants, who came to work in the coal mines, how to make the home brew. Pete Pritchard was one of those immigrants. He came to the US with his family in 1903 and began to work in the coal mines at age eleven. At twenty-one years of age, he was nearly killed in a mine accident. After the accident, Pete Pritchard began making and selling choc beer, along with sausages and cheese in his home in Krebs. A prosperious business developed and in 1925, Peter formally opened a restaurant in his home. Pete's Place Restaurant served choc beer until 1932 when Pete was arrested for the brew.
In 1964, Bill Prichard, the sone of the original owner, developed a "gentleman's agreement" with the powers that be about the illegal choc beer...until a statewide newspaper ran a front page, headline story about the agreement. That was the end of choc beer at Pete's until Joe Prichard, Bill's son who now wears the chef's hat and has the choc beer recipe, reintroduced choc beer as a legal brew in 1995.
Choc brand beer is brewed in small batches in our brewery using the finest ingredients. Starting with beer-perfect Krebs water, we blend American Malted Barley, wheat, and roasted malts with American-grown Liberty and Cascade hops to create more than just a beer... a legendary Choc beer is unfiltered, so all the flavor we create stays where it belongs. And since it's unfiltered, you may notice a cloudy haze in the beer. This is normal. Tradition dictates Choc beer be "bottle-conditions," which means it's fermented a second time in the bottle, as well as aged in the bottle, resulting in a thin layer of yeast at the bottom. You can choose to carefully decant the beer off the yeast, or simply drink it, as we do, and let the yeast travel into your glass. Either way, we hope you enjoy our beer, a handcrafted Krebs original. Style: American wheat Color: Golden opaque Ingredients: 2-row malted barley and malted wheat, Liberty and Cascade hops Bitterness Units: 15 IBU's Alcohol: Alcohol by volume 5.0%, Alcohol by weight 3.9, also available in 3.2% Alcohol by weight version
Can (12oz) shared with HogTownHarry, garthicus, jerc & mabel -- courtesy of HogTownHarry. Pours a quite cloudy yellow with some floaties and a spare diminishing white head. Mild aroma of wheat, some skunkyness and maybe some citrus. Very watery flavour of skunky wheat. Light bodied. Awful stuff.
2008-10-22. Hazy pastel yellow small white head. Mild muted aroma, musty-dank. Light vegetal touch. Muted mild, sort of grainy flavour, very light astringent grainy bitterness. Average to thin bodied palate. Meh, poor. Can shared by HogTownHarry
Can (12oz). Shared with blankboy, garthicus, jerc and mabel - courtesy of ol’ man biegaman. Flat-looking, wispy white head - ugly beer. Smells like dead weeds with some sweetness, vaguely vegetal and unpleasant. Ugly taste - sour milk and pesticides - long bitter linger to that shite taste - overcarbonated to boot. Yuck ... but ----- tick! (O-K-L-A-H-O-M-A ...... Oooooooooooklahoma!
12 oz bottle. Pissy yelllow color-filtered. Nose has faint notes of wheat and sourishness-also skunky. Taste comes off as skunky/pukey, slightly wheaty if you hunt hard. Thin, watery. Not a good beer.
Slight sweet aroma, with underlying notes of lemon and wheat. Pours a hazy pale yellow, with a thin cap of white head. Tart flavor, crisp, light on the palate. Drinkable, could be a nice session beer.
Woohoo first Oklahoma beer. A cloudy yellow appearance with a white head. The pour caught me off guard because I was expecting something choc but now I know the choc is for Choctaw not chocolate. Anyway the flavor is rather malty with some citrus mainly lemons. Overall not much to this beer but ok for a hot weather session ale.
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