While the gigantic breweries all pasteurize, there are many American beers that are bottled unpasteurized. Everything Bell’s makes, for example.
This one. (PDF)
Why would that come from the GPO and not the FDA?
In previous centuries, the Government Printing Office was the organization that printed (on actual paper) laws and records for the federal government. Today they do so electronically. “GPO’s Federal Digital System (FDsys) provides free online access to official publications from all three branches of the Federal Government.”
At least one US state (Massachusetts, where I live) still charges you a 5¢ bottle deposit for each glass beer bottle that you buy; so you pay 30¢ extra for each six-pack. (The deposit also applies to aluminum cans and plastic soda bottles.) You can get your money back by returning the bottles to the store. I’m not sure what’s done with them from there, though.
ETA: Here’s info about the states that have bottle deposit laws. All of those states’ laws include beer bottles.
They’re also noticeably heavier than single-use bottles.
This is actually different than what I was talking about. This has to do recycling. For many, many years soda came in 8 pack 16 ounce glass bottles and beer in 24 pack glass bottles. Grocery stores had bins in the front entrance of the store and you had to haul back the empties. It was a pain, especially the beer cases. The bottles were cleaned/refilled at the bottling plants.