Best American Lagers

Wyoming: Snake River Jenny Lake Lager
Photo: © Snake River Brewing Co.

The American craft beer boom has led to some of the best and most diverse brews in history, but most of them reside on one side of beer's family tree: the ale side. The more-challenging-to-brew lagers, on the other hand, remained primarily the domain of large breweries, developing a reputation for light body and even lighter flavor. But no more. Expert brewers around the country are putting out both classic versions of age-old styles and innovative takes that could convert even the most avowed IPA drinker. Here, 50 of the best lagers in America—one from every state.

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Alabama: Blue Pants Pils

Alabama: Blue Pants Pils
© Blue Pants Brewery

Not long ago, you were more likely to find an LSU fan in Alabama than a quality lager brewed in the state. But recently, more local breweries have been tackling the style, including Madison’s Blue Pants Brewery. Last year, they introduced their seasonal Pils made with ingredients imported from Germany, bringing a touch of Old World authenticity to the deep South. bluepantsbrew.com

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Alaska: Glacier Eisbock

beer, beer styles, eisbock
© Glacier BrewHouse

Eisbock is an often forgotten lager style in which some of the beer’s water is frozen and removed to help concentrate the flavors (and amplify the ABV). Of course, Alaskans know a thing or two about freezing, so it’s not surprising that the state is home to a world-class Eisbock like the one made at Anchorage’s Glacier Brewhouse. It’s only released on a limited basis, but if you’re lucky, you might catch a version aged in whiskey barrels from the Buffalo Trace distillery. glacierbrewhouse.com

03 of 50

Arizona: Historic Undercover Cucumber

Arizona: Historic Undercover Cucumber
© Historic Brewing Company

One of the knocks against the ubiquitous pale lager is that it’s often a flavorless style, leaving an innocuous, boring but drinkable brew. To turn that idea on its head, Flagstaff’s Historic Brewing Company makes a summertime seasonal called Undercover Cucumber that tosses a hefty dose of cucumber, basil and orange peel into the mix. The result is certainly designed for a specific palate, but at least it gives your taste buds something to perk up for. historicbrewingcompany.com

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Arkansas: Core Behemoth Pilsner

Arkansas: Core Behemoth Pilsner
© Jeff Genova Photography

The scene in Arkansas is indicative of what’s happening to beer in many states: Though craft beer continues to explode, most of these new breweries are focusing on ales while interest in lagers lags behind. Though Springdale’s Core Brewing Company certainly makes their fair share of ales, they’ve also managed to buck the anti-lager trend by including two lagered brews at the top of their year-round lineup. Their Behemoth Pilsner is a drinkable standard worthy of a warm Arkansas day. corebeer.com

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California: Anchor California Lager

California: Anchor California Lager
© Anchor Brewing Company

Where do you even begin in California? The state probably makes more amazing hopped-up lagers than anywhere else in the country. If you live in the Golden State, you most likely already have your favorite. For the rest of us, California Lager from San Francisco’s Anchor is an easy-to-find beer that brings the feel of West Coast sunshine to the entire country: drinkable, delicate, creamy and brimming with a delightful mix of bread, cracker, light citrus, pepper and bitter notes. It gets bonus points as a historical nod to the first lager ever brewed in the state back in the 19th century. anchorbrewing.com

06 of 50

Colorado: Wibby Schwibby Schwarzbier

Colorado: Wibby Schwibby Schwarzbier
© Ted Risk, Wibby Brewing

Longmont’s Wibby Brewing jumped on the newly growing trend of lager-focused breweries just last year and is already churning out an awesome lineup of cold-fermented beers, including their stunning Schwibby Schwarzbier that revels in all the complexity you’d hope for in a craft beer: an unfolding dance of hops, oats and chocolate malts. wibbybrewing.com

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Connecticut: Thomas Hooker Liberator Doppelbock

Connecticut: Thomas Hooker Liberator Doppelbock
Courtesy of Thomas Hooker Brewing Co.

Not many American breweries are known for their doppelbock—those extra-strong lagered malt bombs that tend toward a dark sweetness and dried fruit flavors—but among the 13 beers Bloomfield, Connecticut’s Thomas Hooker Brewing Company produces throughout the year, their Liberator Doppelbock consistently finds itself rated as one of the best in the world. hookerbeer.com

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Delaware: Dogfish Head Piercing Pils

Delaware: Dogfish Head Piercing Pils
© Dogfish Head Craft Brewery

Dogfish Head stakes its reputation on “off-centered stuff for off-centered people,” so even something as simple as a pilsner is never straightforward. A couple of years ago, the brewery introduced their Piercing Pils—“a Czech Style Pilsner brewed with a White Pear Tea and Pear juice.” Ironically, the result of this off-center experimentation is a craft pilsner that even mainstream drinkers will appreciate, a slightly sweetened brew that stays firmly grounded with a bitter finish of Saaz hops. dogfish.com

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Florida: Cigar City Tampa-Style Lager

Florida: Cigar City Tampa-Style Lager
© Russell Breslow

Part of the irony of lagers is that though these beers need colder temperatures for brewing, their crisp, refreshing flavor is ideal for warm summer months. With that in mind, Tampa’s always reliable Cigar City Brewing has recently put a twist on their old Hotter Than Helles recipe to create what the brewery has dubbed a “Tampa-style lager” that they say is “perfect for the Florida heat.” Though Tampa might not have the same pedigree as Munich when it comes to beer, it’s fun to think that Florida’s Gulf Coast might one day have a signature style. cigarcitybrewing.com

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Georgia: Creature Comforts Bibo

Georgia: Creature Comforts Bibo
© Shannon Vinson

Since exploding onto the scene in 2014, Athens’ Creature Comforts has quickly garnered national acclaim for a steady stream of beers that run the gamut from spot-on versions of established styles to deft attempts at experimentation. The brewery’s Bibo Pilsner does both, pushing the boundaries of the classic German style by using ingredients from five different countries, including very nontraditional Montueka hops from New Zealand. creaturecomfortsbeer.com

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Hawaii: Maui Bikini Blonde Lager

Hawaii: Maui Bikini Blonde Lager
© Jason Moore

There are few more unlikely places to brew a beer that typically requires fermentation temperatures in the low 50s than Hawaii. But the Maui Brewing Company’s Bikini Blonde is a competent take on a Helles lager. It’s a light, easy-drinking brew that ships to much of the continental 48, meaning you can get a taste of the Hawaiian islands without the expensive plane ride. mauibrewingco.com

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Idaho: Grand Teton Double Vision Doppelbock

Idaho: Grand Teton Double Vision Doppelbock
© Grand Teton Brewing

Doppelbocks are kind of like the imperial stouts of the lager world. If you like big beers with lots of dark flavors, they’re easy to fawn over. A brewery in the small town of Victor (population around 2,000) is doing the big style proud, making a top-flight doppelbock that they credit to their state’s “ample supply of top-quality water”—though this beer is so lusciously thick, we don’t blame you if water quality is the last thing on your mind. grandtetonbrewing.com

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Illinois: Half Acre Gin Barrel Aged Pony Pilsner

Illinois: Half Acre Gin Barrel Aged Pony Pilsner
© Half Acre Beer Co.

Barrel-aging tends to be the province of heavier, boozier beer styles like stouts or, for lagers, doppelbocks or eisbocks. But Chicago’s Half Acre proves that even a pilsner can be barrel-aged if you pick the right barrels. By choosing to age their signature pilsner in gin barrels, notes from the botanical-driven drink balance surprisingly well with the pilsner’s hop profile. halfacrebeer.com

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Indiana: Sun King Afternoon Delight

Indiana: Sun King Afternoon Delight
© Mike Atwood | Art Director | Sun King Brewing Co.

Part of why lagers get a bad rap is that the name conjures up images of bright red cans labeled “Old Milwaukee.” But breweries like Sun King have set out to prove that colorful cans don’t have to be filled with boring yellow suds. Off and on since 2013, the Indianapolis-based brand has put their Afternoon Delight—a whiskey barrel–aged doppelbock with notes of molasses and vanilla—in re-sealable Alumi-Tek bottle-can hybrids, an aluminum-packaged lager that packs a wallop. sunkingbrewing.com

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Iowa: Confluence Camp Fire Black Lager

Iowa: Confluence Camp Fire Black Lager
© Mark David

Like many lagers, rauchbiers—a style of smoked beers—have German roots. So from German tradition to America’s heartland comes Camp Fire Black Lager from Des Moines’ Confluence Brewing. The brewery adds a touch of smoke to this lager made from a broad malt bill, “a salute to the state’s great outdoors, conjuring memories of sitting around a campfire or bonfire on a cool autumn evening.” confluencebrewing.com

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Kansas: Free State Octoberfest

Kansas: Free State Octoberfest
© Seth Sanchez

Lawrence, Kansas, may be a long way from Oktoberfest, but since 1989, Free State Brewing has been bringing a taste of the annual festival to the Jayhawks and consistently been rated as one of America’s best takes on the style along the way. freestatebrewing.com

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Kentucky: Goodwood Louisville Lager

Kentucky: Goodwood Louisville Lager
© John Wurth / Hatchcreative.net

Louisville’s Goodwood Brewing whipped up a truly unique beer when they released this lager named after their hometown last year. It became the first beer made with 100 percent Kentucky-grown grains. Not only that, but the lager is aged on white ash, a wood commonly used by the nearby bat-maker Louisville Slugger. You’d be hard-pressed to find a beer with more of a Kentucky pedigree. goodwood.beer

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Louisiana: Great Raft At Arm’s Length

Louisiana: Great Raft At Arm’s Length
© DeRouen & Co.

How we got through 17 states without an India Pale Lager is astounding. The IPA is the runaway king of the American craft beer world, and its lagered cousin is exactly what you’d expect: a super-hopped-up pale beer with a crisp, clean lager finish. Shreveport’s Great Raft Brewing’s seasonal take on the growing style hits a classic lager with 50 IBUs of Bravo, Citra and Amarillo hops for an IPL that proves hops can have fun without the ale yeast. greatraftbrewing.com

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Maine: Bunker Machine Czech Pilz

Maine: Bunker Machine Czech Pilz
© Andrew Foster

One of the reasons you’re less likely to see smaller breweries produce lagers than ales has nothing to do with popularity. Lagers are more technically taxing to make, which is why it’s always cool to see an upstart brewery making amazing lagers. Portland’s Bunker Brewing does precisely that: Their flagship Machine Czech Pilz is a grassy delight, proving that with dedication, great pilsners are within any brewer’s reach. bunkerbrewingco.com

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Maryland: Stillwater Yacht

Maryland: Stillwater Yacht
© Stillwater Artisanal

Think you need your own brewery to make great lagers? Think again. Though Brian Strumke calls Baltimore home, he’s what’s known as a gypsy brewer—meaning he brews beers all over the world before slapping his Stillwater Artisanal Ales label on them. The transient nature of his work has never stopped him from making amazing brews, including Yacht, Stillwater’s dry-hopped session lager that comes in a stylish can befitting a fancy boat. stillwater-artisanal.com

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Massachusetts: Jack’s Abby Hoponius Union

beer, beer styles, india pale lager
© Jack's Abby Craft Lagers

When it comes to making modern American lagers, Framingham’s Jack’s Abby is among the best in the business. The brewery opened in 2011 with a dedication to the bottom-fermenting beers and has already churned out enough impressive creations to practically warrant their own 50 top lagers list. With that in mind, if you have to start somewhere, try their flagship India Pale Lager, Hoponius Union—a hop-lover’s dream in lager form. jacksabby.com

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Michigan: Wolverine State Verano Mexican-Style Amber Lager

Michigan: Wolverine State Verano Mexican-Style Amber Lager
© Wolverine State Brewing Co., LLC

A Mexican-style lager brewed in the distant cold of Michigan? Don’t be so surprised. Ann Arbor’s Wolverine State Brewing, who has distinguished itself in one of craft beer’s most competitive states by focusing on a diverse lineup of lagers since opening in 2006, has offered up this drinkable amber lager (think a better Dos Equis Amber) as a summer seasonal for the past couple of years. wolverinebeer.com

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Minnesota: Surly SurlyFest

Minnesota: Surly SurlyFest
© Surly Brewing Co.

Standard Oktoberfest beers are many things, but innovative is not one of them. Enter Minneapolis’s Surly Brewing Company, who for a decade has been putting its own unique twist on the traditional Marzen by loading it up with three different types of rye and Sterling hops. They describe the result as “not a German style Oktoberfest bier”—a winning contradiction. surlybrewing.com

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Mississippi: Lucky Town Lucktoberfest

Mississippi: Lucky Town Lucktoberfest
© Lucky Town Brewing Company

Speaking of Oktoberfest, though the weather in Mississippi might not be quite the same as in Germany, that doesn’t mean that residents of the southern state don’t want to get in on the party. This year, Jackson’s Lucky Town Brewing Company added a Marzen to their seasonal lineup, and locals immediately started heaping praise on the malty brew from the capital city’s first craft brewery. luckytownbrewing.com

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Missouri: Urban Chestnut Zwickel

beer, beer styles, zwickel
© Joe Taylor, Urban Chestnut

How many American breweries have a Zwickelbier as their flagship brand? In fact, how many American breweries produce a Zwickelbier at all? Actually, quick poll, how many of you know what a Zwickelbier is? Right. St. Louis’s Urban Chestnut Brewing Company made this unfiltered and unpasteurized German style their own, turning the cloudy Bavarian-style lager with notes of grass and honey into a noteworthy beer, distinctly different from that other famous St. Louis lager. urbanchestnut.com

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Montana: Great Nothern Wheatfish Wheat Lager

Montana: Great Nothern Wheatfish Wheat Lager
© Craig Moore / GlacierWorld.com

The Great Northern Brewing Company in Whitefish makes a flagship Wheat Lager that’s a hybrid of three styles: described as, “brewed like a German wheat beer, cold-fermented, aged like a lager, & hopped like an American ale.” The result isn’t just drinkable, it’s also a two-time Great American Beer Festival medalist. greatnorthernbrewing.com

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Nebraska: Empyrean Aries Marzen Oktoberfest

Nebraska: Empyrean Aries Marzen Oktoberfest
© Empyrean Brewing Co.

Lincoln’s Empyrean Brewing Company is one of the elder statesmen of Nebraska’s craft beer scene, originally launched in 1991 as part of the state’s first brewpub. More recently, they’ve been one of the few breweries in the state to consistently offer up a lager: a seasonal Marzen that’s been honoring Oktoberfest since 2011. empyreanbrewingco.com

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Nevada: Pigeon Head Red Rye Lager

Nevada: Pigeon Head Red Rye Lager
© Pigeon Head Brewery

Billed as “Reno’s first lager brewery,” the city’s Pigeon Head proves just how much trying to break out of craft beer’s ale mold has become a selling point. Though the small lager-centric brewery is still getting their feet wet, the Red Rye Lager has stood out as a fan favorite, and they certainly deserve credit for bringing something different to Nevada’s brewing scene. pigeonheadbrewery.com

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New Hampshire: Smuttynose Baltic Porter

New Hampshire: Smuttynose Baltic Porter
© Smuttynose Brewing Company

“A porter?” you may be asking. “Aren’t those ales?” Yes, usually they are. But some porters, especially those labeled “Baltic Porter,” can be made using lager yeast. Hampton’s Smuttynose Brewing Company goes the lagering route with their acclaimed take on the style—a huge, thick brew with notes of chocolate, coffee and dried fruit. smuttynose.com

30 of 50

New Jersey: Ramstein Maibock Lager

New Jersey: Ramstein Maibock Lager
© Gehrig Photography

Since 1996, Butler’s High Point Brewing Company has brought a piece of Germany to North Jersey in the form of their Ramstein line of German-style beers. With such a strong focus on the German tradition, they execute a number of lagers well, but their spring seasonal Maibock is especially acclaimed for its dense malt character. ramsteinbeer.com

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New Mexico: Rio Grande Pancho Verde Chile Cerveza

New Mexico: Rio Grande Pancho Verde Chile Cerveza
Courtesy of Sierra Blanca Brewery

In New Mexico, a chile beer seems only fitting, so Moriarty’s Sierra Blanca Brewing produced a lager made with whole green chiles under their Rio Grande label. The resulting Pancho Verde Chile Cerveza is not everyone’s cup of tea, but on a summer day in the Southwest, you don’t want to drink tea, you want to drink a chile beer! sierrablancabrewery.com

32 of 50

New York: Brooklyn Lager

New York: Brooklyn Lager
Courtesy of Brooklyn Brewery

Originally released in 1988 as a historical nod to Brooklyn’s 19th-century brewing tradition, today Brooklyn Lager from the borough’s Brooklyn Brewery holds a place in history all its own. Beers didn’t taste like this in the ’80s—balancing aromas of dry-hopped complexity with an amber malt bill that evolves on the palate. And though New York City’s beer scene has improved dramatically in past few years, the city’s most famous lager still holds its own as a well-crafted standard. brooklynbrewery.com

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North Carolina: Duck-Rabbit Duck-Rabbator

beer, beer styles, doppelbock
© The Duck-Rabbit Craft Brewery, Inc.

Farmville’s Duck-Rabbit brewery has made a name for itself in North Carolina’s competitive brewing scene with its odd name and by defining itself as “the dark beer specialist.” That includes a few dark seasonal lagers, the most intense of which is their Duck-Rabbator Doppelbock, a beer they proudly proclaim is “like a whole loaf of bread in every glass!” Though grain-wise that might be true, flavor-wise this is one bread you’ll want to save for dessert: sweet, candied and fruity. duckrabbitbrewery.com

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North Dakota: Fargo Original Lager

North Dakota: Fargo Original Lager
© Scott Thuen

According to the Brewers Association, as of 2014, North Dakota had only six craft breweries, the fewest of any state. So it’s probably not surprising that until last year, no beer from ND had medaled in the Great American Beer Festival since 1998. But that all changed when Fargo Brewing brought home the bronze in the “Kellerbier or Zwickelbier” category for their Fargo Original, a beer the brewery describes as “a light, crisp, traditional German style lager.” That’s a long overdue victory worthy of making our list. fargobrewing.com

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Ohio: Great Lakes Dortmunder Gold

Ohio: Great Lakes Dortmunder Gold
© Great Lakes® Brewing Co.

Since the 1980s, Cleveland’s Great Lakes Brewing Company has embraced Dortmunder lager originally brewed in Dortmond, Germany, and turned it into their award-winning flagship—a beer that’s still rated as one of America’s best takes on the balanced, easy-drinking style. greatlakesbrewing.com

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Oklahoma: Marshall Old Pavilion Pilsner

Oklahoma: Marshall Old Pavilion Pilsner
Courtesy of Marshall Brewing

Oklahoma is another state that’s lagged a bit behind when it comes to joining in on America’s craft brewery explosion. Though there are a handful of fantastic brewers, the state is near dead last when it comes to breweries per capita. Still, since 2009, Tulsa’s Marshall Brewing Company has been making their Old Pavilion Pilsner—a German-style lager brewed with a mix of American and German hops. It’s an enjoyable in-state alternative to the mass-marketed brews of a similar style. marshallbrewing.com

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Oregon: Heater Allen Pils

Oregon: Heater Allen Pils
© Lisa Allen

McMinnville’s Heater Allen is another brewery that has built its reputation by focusing on lagers. Despite a relatively small 15-barrel brewhouse, many of their beers are rated by beer lovers as some of America’s best in their style, affording them status that approaches legendary. Their Pils in particular can stand up to any iteration of the style you’re likely to find. heaterallen.com

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Pennsylvania: Victory Prima Pils

Pennsylvania: Victory Prima Pils
© Victory Brewing Company

First produced back in 1996, Prima Pils is one of the granddaddies that helped put American-made German-style pilsners on the map. The Downingtown brewery bludgeoned beer drinkers with a whole-cone floral taste on the tongue that gives way to a piney hop bitterness, reminding craft lovers that lager isn’t a dirty word and awakening the average drinker’s palate to the possibility that a pilsner didn’t have to taste like Miller Lite. More so than many of the beers included on this list, Prima Pils is a true American classic that remains consistently excellent to this day. victorybeer.com

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Rhode Island: Narragansett Lager

Rhode Island: Narragansett Lager
© Narragansett Beer

If you’re the kind of person who simply orders whatever beer’s cheapest, you may have noticed a sea change in the brand of can you typically get. In many hip bars, Narragansett has replaced Pabst Blue Ribbon as the go-to cheap lager of choice. Whether it deserves the crown is up for debate, but love it or hate it, the classic Providence-based brew has suddenly become one of America’s most popular lagers again. narragansettbeer.com

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South Carolina: Westbrook Dark Helmet

South Carolina: Westbrook Dark Helmet
Courtesy of Westbrook Brewing

The Carolinas are one of the latest hotbeds of craft brewing and, on the southern side of the border, Mount Pleasant’s Westbrook Brewing Company has emerged as a standout. Their signature schwarzbier goes down super smooth on the palate. westbrookbrewing.com

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South Dakota: Miner Pale Lager

South Dakota: Miner Pale Lager
Courtesy of Miner Brewing Company

Many lagers stick to the centuries-old German Reinheitsgebot beer purity law that only allows for four ingredients (water, barley, hops and yeast) during brewing. But experimenting with atypical additional ingredients isn’t always a bad thing. Case in point, this past year, Hill City’s Miner Brewing released a Pale Lager with just a hint of Black Hills spruce tips to give the beer its own unique South Dakota character. The experiment was in line with two of the brewery’s other lagers, a fruit-accentuated Black Currant Maibock and a Rosehip Rye Lager. minerbrewing.com

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Tennessee: Wiseacre Tiny Bomb

Tennessee: Wiseacre Tiny Bomb
© Wiseacre Brewing

Memphis’s Wiseacre Brewing knows there are only so many ways you can reinvent a standard pilsner, so to give their Tiny Bomb a bit of extra pop, the brewery adds 50 pounds of Tennessee wildflower honey to every batch. The result is a clean drinking American pilsner that’s become a canned favorite. wiseacrebrew.com

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Texas: Hops & Grain The One They Call Zoe

Texas: Hops & Grain The One They Call Zoe
© Annie Ray

America’s craft beer movement is all about breaking beer rules, and Austin’s Hops & Grain Brewery takes that to heart with The One They Call Zoe—a pale lager that really flies by the seat of its pants: starting with a broad malt bill before dry-hopping the beer until it enters into crossover, nearly IPL territory. If you’re a traditionalist, this is not the lager for you, but if you’re looking for something that’ll go down easy, drink up. hopsandgrain.com

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Utah: Uinta Baba Black Lager

Utah: Uinta Baba Black Lager
© Uinta Brewing

Porter lovers might assume that the world of lagers will never quite pique their palate. To those porter lovers, we say give Salt Lake City’s Baba Black Lager a go. It opens with the qualities of an easy-drinking porter—creamy, cocoa undercurrents, slightly smoky and firmly bitter—but finishes crisp and clean like a lager should. Though not intensely complex, it’s another crossover beer that may make you rethink where the boundary between ale and lager lies. uintabrewing.com

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Vermont: Hill Farmstead Mary

Vermont: Hill Farmstead Mary
Courtesy of Hill Farmstead/Bob M. Montgomery Images

A traditional pilsner offering this is not. Hill Farmstead coaxes some of their typical hop magic, unleashing a lager with a lemon citrus nose practically befitting a pale ale. The taste follows suit, mixing some nice fruitiness among more standard pilsner notes. Mary stands as proof that even the most explored beer styles can still find new life in the hands of a great brewer. hillfarmstead.com

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Virginia: Devils Backbone Vienna Lager

Virginia: Devils Backbone Vienna Lager
© Devils Backbone Brewery

On two separate occasions, including this past year, Lexington’s Devils Backbone brought home gold at the Great American Beer Festival for their Vienna Lager, and it’s easy to see why. The quaffable amber lager drinks with a developing bitter backbone that emerges seamlessly from its slightly sweet Caramel malts. It’s a slickly unassuming brew that tastes exactly like a beer should. dbbrewingcompany.com

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Washington: Chuckanut Pilsner

Washington: Chuckanut Pilsner
© Chuckanut Brewery

Bellingham’s Chuckanut Brewery is another brewery that made a name for itself by lagering its beer. Since opening their location about 30 minutes south of the Canadian border in 2008, Chuckanut has brought home Great American Beer Festival medals by the handful. You have to respect a brewery that knows how to nail a pilsner, and for years now, Chuckanut’s has been recognized as one of Washington’s most reliable. chuckanutbreweryandkitchen.com

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West Virginia: Bridge Brew Works Black Diamond Lager

West Virginia: Bridge Brew Works Black Diamond Lager
© Matt Sanchez - Digital Relativity

In many states, you can visit the top breweries before landing on one that really cares about making decent lagers. But in West Virginia, not only has Fayetteville’s Bridge Brew Works established itself as one of the leaders in the state’s burgeoning craft beer scene, but it’s also proved it’s not afraid to try its hand at lagered styles like their slightly smoky Black Diamond Lager. bridgebrewworks.com

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Wisconsin: New Glarus Hometown Blonde

Wisconsin: New Glarus Hometown Blonde
© Sue Moen / New Glarus Brewing Company

Wisconsin is known for beer, but while casual beer drinkers might associate the state with big names like Miller, when Wisconsinites think beer, the brewery in New Glarus is often the first one that comes to mind. The New Glarus Brewing Company helps maintain that loyalty by refusing to distribute outside of the state, an attitude that’s embraced in the naming of their Hometown Blonde— a delicious seasonal Old World–style pilsner that tends to pop up in the fall. newglarusbrewing.com

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Wyoming: Snake River Jenny Lake Lager

Wyoming: Snake River Jenny Lake Lager
© Snake River Brewing Co.

Since 1994, Jackson’s Snake River Brewing has staked its reputation on making a wide variety of brews specifically to style. Formerly known simply as Snake River Lager, the brewery’s classic Wyoming take on a Vienna lager was rechristened Jenny Lake Lager this past year to help raise money for a project to revitalize Jenny Lake in Grand Teton National Park—so now you can drink a well-made amber lager for a good cause. snakeriverbrewing.com

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