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Cold Town

Cold Town Peachy Lager

Cold Town Peachy Lager

Regular price £3.50
Regular price Sale price £3.50
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As a seasonal surprise, we've taken our classic Cold Town Lager and cut it with peach to create a clean, and crisp glass of gorgeousness that simply screams "Refreshment!" Pale straw in colour with an unsurprinsgly peach aroma, at 4% abv our peach lager is an easy sipper that will pair perfectly with any delicately flavoured dish

Don’t forget your bottle opener!

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Tasting Notes

Peach Iced Tea, Lemonade, Cracker Malt and Summer Herbs

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Days Monday- Wednesday- Friday

Order before 12 for same day delivery on these days

Order inside Edinburgh Bypass EH7 Free Delivery

Edinburgh minimum order £20

Free shipping for Courier Deliveries over £90 to UK Mainland

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Cold Town

Style: Brewery

Country: Scotland

Region: Edinburgh

Cold Town feels like Edinburgh looked at its brewing history, added modern craft beer energy, then decided to build a brewery directly above a pizza restaurant because honestly that’s just sensible planning.

Named after Calton Hill’s old nickname “The Cold Town”, the brewery launched in 2018 and quickly became one of the city’s most recognisable modern beer brands. Based at Cold Town House in the Grassmarket, the brewery combines fresh beer, rooftop views and enough pizza to dramatically improve most people’s life decisions.

The beer lineup leans modern and approachable. Pales, lagers, session IPAs and seasonal specials all feature heavily, usually brewed with freshness and drinkability front and centre rather than trying to become aggressively experimental hop soup. The Cold Town Lager especially has become a proper Edinburgh staple.

What makes Cold Town especially enjoyable is the atmosphere surrounding the whole project. It feels social and relaxed rather than deeply serious about beer in an intimidating way. You can absolutely nerd out over brewing details if you want, but equally you can just sit on a rooftop with friends and accidentally stay there far longer than intended.

The brewery also fits nicely into Edinburgh’s newer wave of independent beer culture, where local brewing moved far beyond traditional cask ale without completely abandoning drinkability in favour of pure hype.

And honestly, fresh lager with pizza while looking over Edinburgh rooftops remains a fairly difficult evening to improve upon.