I’m not drinking it at the moment, but in the fridge we have some Pliny the Elder from Russian River Brewing Company, founded in 1997.
My last beer was a Bud Light orange. Wikipedia says Anheuser-Busch was founded in 1852 as Bavarian Brewery in St. Louis. So, to answer the OP, 166 years old.
Schaefer (I always have more than one) dates to 1842
or possibly a
Bartels/Gibbons/Stegmaier/Lion – it depends on the exact label/brand – call it 1900 or around that. Gibbons, until they stopped production, was far and away my lifetime favorite. Nothing I loved more than twisting a head off a monkey.
I’m actually drinking a Hamms right now (Don’t laugh. It’s surprisingly malty and hoppy for the price. $2.89 for a sixer of pints is only $2.89 more than free! ) It says 1865 on the can but the brewer doesn’t actually exist any more and I believe it’s really made by Miller.
If so, they were violating the prohibition law of that province between 1921 and 1930. There was also a national prohibition in Canada for a couple years before that. If the company did survive those years, they must have produced non-alcoholic beverages.
And of course, any US breweries have not have continuous operation further back than 1933, when the 18th Amendment was repealed.
I don’t see very much value, for me, in knowing.
If I cared, then what I would care about would be the age of the currently-used recipe, not the age of the establishment. If you’re still following Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandpa’s recipe (or Our Illustrious Founder’s recipe, whoever) to the letter, then that’s something worthy of note.
I don’t drink a lot of beer, but I do like beer. Looking forward to when the excessive-hops fad has passed, and beer is again permitted to taste like good beer, instead of like bad grapefruit juice that’s been used to boil a Christmas tree.
Yeasterday I had Warsteiner (1753) and Brand (1341).
A Cherry Lime Wit from Alloy Brewery poured from my growler.
I think they opened last Spring 2017.
Premium Pils, a fine Belgian hobo beer made by brewery Martens (1758)
My beer of choice is made by Stiegl, an Austrian company that has been brewing since 1492.
Kronenbourg. Since 1664, as every drinker and/or Alsatian knwos.
Anti Hero IPA by Revolution in Chicago, est. 2010. I’m getting an early start today, screw it. It’s a holiday weekend with no work tomorrow.
I still have a 6-pack of Billy Beer, circa the Carter Administration.
Hamms. Huh. Haven’t seen that in a long time but was the first beer I snuck off my parents. About 1969.
I do like Bass, which I think is the oldest trademark. Otherwise, I’ll drink just about any beer. My Wife leans towards wheat beers which I enjoy. I will confess that my daily go to beer is Keystone Light. Which is just Coors Light in a different wrapper. Just a little cheaper.
Had a very fun 3 week trip to Bavaria 6 years ago. They are VERY serious about their beer (there are a bunch of German laws about it). And it shows. We almost always have some on hand.
Hamms was just the beer I was drinking when I posted. I have over 1000 beers rated on ratebeer.com I rarely buy the same beer twice in a row. Right now I’m having an Andeker crowler I got down at the Pabst brewery.
Later tonight I’ll be trying Happy Glamper from lakefront Brewery.
I’m mainly Yuengling Porter & Lager these days: 1829.
Bass was my go to for 20 years but they’re not the same since the InBev buyout. 1777
In my fridge are 3 Founders Porter. They go all the way back to 1997.
Pilsner Urquell, 1842, according to the label.
Moosehead–exactly as old as Canada: 1867.
Out of curiosity, who brewed that? Does it say on the cans?
Wiki says it’s the Falls City Brewing Company