Skip to product information
1 of 1

Pomona Island

Pomona Island IBUKI XI

Pomona Island IBUKI XI

Regular price £5.50
Regular price Sale price £5.50
Sale Sold out
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

We’ve brewed a beer to celebrate the birthday of Ibuki, Gaz & Meiko’s daughter since before we had a brewery. She’s 11 this year and we’ve made a sweet and sassy Sour IPA with the returning cast of Yuzu & Sorachi Ace bringing the juice. Kanpai!

Don’t forget your bottle opener!

Beerhive Waiter’s Friend

Tasting Notes

Yuzu Peel, Green Tea, White Pepper and Lemon Thyme

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

View full details

Pomona Island

Style: Brewery

Country: England

Region: Greater Manchester, Salford

Manchester has always had a healthy appreciation for pubs, music and slightly chaotic creativity, so it makes sense that Pomona Island Brewing turned those ingredients into one of the UK’s more recognisable modern craft breweries.

Based in Salford, the brewery built its reputation through hazy IPAs, imperial stouts, fruited sours and beer names that often read like obscure jokes shared at closing time. Thankfully the brewing is considerably more focused than the naming strategy.

The pale beers sit at the centre of the range. Soft, heavily hopped and full of citrus, pineapple and stone fruit character, they helped establish Pomona Island as one of the key names in Britain’s modern IPA scene. The stouts often move towards richer territory with adjuncts, barrel ageing and plenty of indulgent flavours, but generally maintain enough structure to stay enjoyable.

There is a strong sense of personality running through everything they do. The branding, references and general atmosphere feel rooted in Manchester culture rather than copied from American craft beer trends wholesale.

What keeps people returning is that beneath the humour and colourful labels, the beers are consistently well made. Which is ultimately more important than having the longest beer name in the fridge.