Wheat Beer — Smooth, Refreshing, and Naturally Cloudy
🌾 Wheat Beer
Wheat Beer is the friendliest entry point into craft beer. With its smooth body, low bitterness, and naturally cloudy appearance, it’s a style that surprises people who think they don’t like beer. The secret? Wheat — which gives it a soft, creamy texture and a gentle, approachable flavour.
If Lager is about cleanliness and crispness, Wheat Beer is about smoothness, gentleness, and drinkability.
🏯 What Makes a Beer a Wheat Beer?
By law in many countries, a Wheat Beer must contain at least 50% wheat malt (the rest is barley). Wheat contributes:
- Cloudy haze — wheat proteins don’t settle out, giving the beer its signature look
- Creamy head — wheat promotes thick, stable foam
- Soft mouthfeel — wheat adds smoothness without heaviness
- Mild flavour — gentle grain character that lets yeast and spices shine
The defining character often comes not from the wheat itself, but from the yeast — especially in German styles where the yeast produces banana and clove aromas.
👅 The Wheat Beer Family
Wheat Beer comes in two main traditions — German and Belgian — each with its own personality:
🇩🇪 German Wheat Beer (Weizen / Weissbier)
The most famous wheat beer style. Unfiltered, cloudy gold, with signature banana and clove aromas produced by the yeast.
Sub-styles:
- Hefeweizen — The classic: cloudy, banana, clove, creamy
- Dunkles Weizen — Dark version with caramel and toasted notes
- Weizenbock — Strong version (6–8% ABV), rich and warming
🇧🇪 Belgian Wheat Beer (Witbier)
A spiced wheat beer from Belgium, brewed with raw (unmalted) wheat and flavoured with coriander and orange peel. Bright, citrusy, and refreshing.
Key difference: The cloudiness comes from wheat and spices, and the yeast produces milder, spicier notes rather than banana.
🌍 Other Wheat Styles
- American Wheat — Cleaner, more hop-forward, often clearer
- Berliner Weisse — Tart, sour wheat beer from Berlin, often served with syrup
- Gose — Salty, sour, and spiced (coriander) — a German original
🍶 German vs Belgian Wheat Beer
| Aspect | German Hefeweizen | Belgian Witbier |
|---|---|---|
| Wheat | Malted wheat (50%+) | Raw, unmalted wheat (50%+) |
| Adjuncts | None | Coriander, orange peel |
| Yeast character | Banana, clove | Mild, spicy, citrus |
| Bitterness | Very low (10–15 IBU) | Very low (10–20 IBU) |
| Carbonation | High | High |
| Body | Medium-light | Light to medium |
🍽️ Food Pairing
Wheat Beer’s low bitterness and smooth body make it incredibly versatile at the table.
| Food | Why It Works |
|---|---|
| 🥗 Salads | Light body won’t overpower vinaigrette |
| 🐟 Seafood | Citrus and spice notes complement fish |
| 🧀 Fresh Cheeses | Smooth texture pairs with creamy cheese |
| 🍛 Thai / Asian | Cooling effect from low bitterness |
| 🍎 Fruit Desserts | Banana and citrus notes match fruit |
| 🥨 Pretzels | A classic German duo |
💡 Tips for Enjoying
- Serve in a Weizen glass — The tall, curved shape showcases the appearance and holds the foam
- Pour correctly — Leave the last sip in the bottle, swirl to suspend the yeast, then add it to your glass
- Best cool, not ice-cold — 8–10°C lets the flavours open up
- Lemon in Witbier? — Yes! A lemon slice is traditional with Belgian Witbier. In Hefeweizen, it’s more debated
- Great for beginners — Low bitterness and smooth body make it the perfect introduction to craft beer
Want to explore more beer styles? Check out our Beer Styles Guide.