Skip to product information
1 of 1

Wylam Brewery

Wylam Jakehead

Wylam Jakehead

6.30%

Regular price £6.00
Regular price Sale price £6.00
Sale Sold out
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

Supercharged India Pale Ale.... Rich/bright & amber/bronze with lots of American hop aroma. Distinctly bittersweet on the palate with a massive hop complexity fashioned deep within the IPA tradition.

Don’t forget your bottle opener!

Beerhive Waiter’s Friend

Only 4 left

Tasting Notes

Tropical Fruit, Citrus, Hops and Bitter 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

View full details

Wylam Brewery

Style: Brewery

Country: England

Region: Newcastle upon Tyne

Newcastle has always had a strong brewing history, but Wylam helped drag that story firmly into the modern era without forgetting where it came from.

Founded in 2000 by John Boyle and Robin Leighton in the village of Wylam, Northumberland, the brewery started life in a potting shed before gradually growing into one of the most respected names in British craft beer. Eventually the operation moved into the remarkable Palace of Arts building in Newcastle’s Exhibition Park, a restored 1929 structure that now functions as brewery, taproom, music venue and general excuse to spend far longer there than originally planned.

The beers cover a broad range of styles, though hop-forward pale ales and IPAs remain central to the brewery’s identity. Bright citrus, tropical fruit, soft bitterness and plenty of freshness run through much of the range. Alongside them sit lagers, stouts, collaborations and seasonal releases that show the brewery’s willingness to keep evolving.

Part of what makes Wylam stand out is consistency. The brewery has managed to remain relevant through multiple shifts in British beer culture without feeling like it is desperately chasing trends.

A lot of breweries talk about community. Wylam built a brewery inside one of Newcastle’s most distinctive public spaces and filled it with beer and live music. That tends to make the point rather effectively.