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Cromarty

Cromarty 80/- Shilling

Cromarty 80/- Shilling

4.30%

Regular price £3.50
Regular price Sale price £3.50
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Indulge in the rich depths of our Scottish Heavy Ale—a masterful fusion of dark, malty perfection. This robust ale captures the essence of Scottish brewing traditions, boasting a harmonious blend of roasted malts, toffee notes, and a subtle smokiness. Each sip unfolds a tapestry of flavours, transporting you to the windswept landscapes of Scotland.

Don’t forget your bottle opener!

Beerhive Waiter’s Friend

Tasting Notes

Caramel Malt, Biscuit, Toffee and Smooth Finish

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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Cromarty

Style: Brewery

Country: Scotland

Region: Highlands

Cromarty Brewing feels deeply Highland in the best possible way. Independent, slightly windswept, proudly local and producing excellent beer surrounded by scenery that makes you briefly consider abandoning city life entirely before remembering midges exist.

Based in Ross-shire near the Cromarty Firth, the brewery started in a farm steading and quickly built a loyal following through modern, approachable beers with loads of personality and absolutely no unnecessary pretension.

The lineup covers everything from crisp lagers and juicy pale ales to richer stouts and seasonal specials, usually brewed with balance and drinkability sitting front and centre. Even the hoppier beers tend to stay clean and refreshing rather than becoming palate-wrecking hop soup.

What makes Cromarty especially enjoyable is the atmosphere surrounding the brewery. It feels genuinely community-rooted rather than “small and independent” purely because a marketing department discovered people like authenticity now.

The Highland setting also seems to influence the whole style naturally. Fresh, straightforward and quietly confident without needing huge hype campaigns or bizarre gimmicks involving breakfast cereal and marshmallow flavouring.

There’s also something very satisfying about good beer produced in places where the weather regularly looks like it’s personally offended by human optimism.

Scotland continues to excel at this strangely specific aesthetic.