IPA — The Hoppy, Bold Beer That Changed Craft Brewing
🍯 IPA (India Pale Ale)
IPA — India Pale Ale — is the style that sparked the craft beer revolution. Known for its bold hop character, higher alcohol, and unapologetic bitterness, IPA is the most diverse and exciting beer family in the world today.
If you’ve ever tasted a beer that bursts with pine, citrus, or tropical fruit flavours, you’ve experienced what makes IPA so special: the hop.
🏯 A Brief History
Despite the name, IPA has little to do with India. The story goes that in the 18th century, British brewers added extra hops to their pale ales to preserve them during the long sea voyage to India. The result was a beer that was more bitter, more alcoholic, and more aromatic than standard pale ale.
The modern IPA revolution began in the United States in the 1970s and 80s, when American brewers started experimenting with the bold, aromatic hop varieties grown in the Pacific Northwest. By the 1990s, IPA had become the defining style of the American craft beer movement, and it has since spread worldwide.
👅 The IPA Family
IPA is not a single style — it’s a vast and diverse family:
🌊 West Coast IPA
The classic American IPA. Crystal clear, sharply bitter, and boldly hoppy with pine, citrus, and resin notes. Clean malt profile, dry finish.
☁️ Hazy IPA (NEIPA)
The modern sensation. Cloudy, juicy, and low in bitterness with intense tropical fruit flavours. Soft, pillowy mouthfeel from oats and wheat.
🍯 Double IPA (DIPA / Imperial IPA)
IPA turned up to 11. Higher ABV (7.5–9.5%), more hops, more malt body. Intensely flavourful and satisfying.
🇬🇧 English IPA
The original. More balanced, less bitter, with earthy hop character and a noticeable malt presence. Lower ABV than American versions.
🌿 Session IPA
A lighter IPA (4–5% ABV). All the hop flavour, less alcohol. Perfect for drinking multiple pints.
🥭 New England / Hazy DIPA
A hybrid — Double IPA brewed in the Hazy style. Big ABV, massive fruit flavours, low bitterness, pillowy body.
Special: Brut IPA, Cold IPA, White IPA, etc.
Brewers continue to push boundaries — Brut IPA is dry and Champagne-like, Cold IPA uses lager yeast, and White IPA blends IPA with Witbier.
🍶 IPA vs Pale Ale
| Aspect | IPA | Pale Ale |
|---|---|---|
| Bitterness | High (40–100+ IBU) | Moderate (20–45 IBU) |
| ABV | 5.5–9.5%+ | 4.5–6.0% |
| Hop character | Bold, intense | Moderate, balanced |
| Malt | Supportive | More present |
| Body | Medium to full | Light to medium |
🍽️ Food Pairing
IPA’s bold hop character makes it a powerful food companion.
| Food | Why It Works |
|---|---|
| 🍔 Burgers | Bitterness cuts through fatty beef |
| 🌮 Tacos | Citrusy hops complement salsa and lime |
| 🧀 Aged Cheddar | Hops match the intensity of aged cheese |
| 🌶️ Spicy Wings | Bitterness and carbonation balance heat |
| 🥩 Grilled Meats | Smoky flavours love hoppy beers |
| 🍫 Dark Chocolate | The bitterness of both complements each other |
💡 Tips for Enjoying
- Fresh is best — Hop aroma fades quickly. Drink IPA within 2–3 months of packaging
- Serve cool, not cold — 8–12°C. Too cold and you numb the hop flavours
- Not all IPAs are bitter — Hazy IPA proves you can have massive hop flavour without harsh bitterness
- Try them side by side — A West Coast IPA vs Hazy IPA tasting reveals the full spectrum
- Great for aging (some) — Imperial IPAs and English IPAs can develop nicely over 6–12 months
Want to explore more beer styles? Check out our Beer Styles Guide.