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Schofferhofer Lemon Radler Weisse

Schofferhofer Lemon Radler Weisse

Regular price £2.40
Regular price Sale price £2.40
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Producer Schofferhofer Brewery
Country Germany
Region Frankfurt

Tasting Notes

Cloudy Lemonade, Wheat Bread, Lemon Sherbet and Blossom Honey

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More About Schofferhofer Lemon Radler Weisse

A German classic built for sunshine and easy drinking, Schöfferhofer Lemon Radler blends refreshing wheat beer with cloudy lemonade for a crisp, lightly sparkling beer that’s all about pure refreshment. Traditionally made as a 50:50 mix of Hefeweizen and lemon lemonade, it sits at a gentle 2.5% ABV and drinks beautifully ice cold.

Bright, zesty lemon takes centre stage, backed by soft wheat beer character, subtle sweetness, and a touch of the banana-and-spice notes you’d expect from a classic German weissbier. The result is light, citrusy, and incredibly thirst-quenching, with just enough beer character to keep it balanced.

More refreshing than serious, but no less enjoyable for it. Perfect for hot afternoons, picnics, barbecues, or whenever you want something cold, sharp, and easy to drink. Think lemonade with a proper beer backbone.

Meet the Producer, Schöfferhofer Brewery

Schöfferhofer Brewery

Style: Brewery

German wheat beer often carries a reputation for tradition and seriousness. Schöfferhofer looked at that idea and decided it could probably relax a little.

Produced in Frankfurt, the brewery became widely known for combining classic wheat beer with fruit flavours, particularly through the hugely successful Grapefruit blend. While purists occasionally grumble, the popularity of the beer suggests most people are quite happy ignoring them.

The foundation remains proper German wheat beer. Soft wheat malt, gentle spice, banana notes and refreshing carbonation all sit underneath the fruit additions. The result feels lighter, brighter and considerably more summery than many traditional wheat beers.

The Grapefruit version remains the best-known example. Slightly tart, lightly sweet and remarkably easy to drink, it occupies the sort of space between beer, radler and holiday optimism that proves surprisingly useful on warm afternoons.

What keeps Schöfferhofer relevant is that it never pretends to be anything other than enjoyable. Sometimes that is a far more valuable quality than endless complexity.