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A Lager for the Longest Nights

When winter settles in, it does so slowly. The change isn’t announced by snowfall or sleigh bells but by subtler signals: the earlier darkness, the soft scrape of cold wind against windows, and the return of silence to the streets after 5 pm. 

If summer is the realm of beers with brightness and bite, we’re thinking of the citrus-laced, hop-forward, lawnmower quencher beers; then winter belongs to something gentler. In our opinion, few styles offer as much quiet satisfaction as a well-brewed Munich Dunkel.

Not spiced. Not sweet or syrupy, just a beer brewed with time and attention. Malt-driven, smooth, and so elegantly restrained that it takes a few sips before you realize you’ve slipped into something special.

The Original Cold-Weather Lager

The Munich Dunkel is one of the oldest dark lagers still brewed today, a beer that’s survived on the merit of its balance. First brewed in 19th-century Bavaria, it came into its own just as cold fermentation techniques and Munich malt were changing what beer could be. Sedlmayr’s Spaten Brewery made it a staple, and it quickly found a home in the beer halls of Munich, where it’s still poured today.

It’s not a beer that ever needed a comeback. It never left.

Our seasonal version at East Brother keeps close to that lineage. It’s built on a base of California-grown malt from Admiral — Midway and Pacific Victor — supported by German classics like Caramunich and Carafa. The hops, Tettnang and Hallertau Mittelfrüh, are present but barely; only there to keep the malt honest. Fermented cool and lagered long, the beer pours a deep reddish-mahogany with a clean, steady glow beneath a soft tan head.

The first aroma is warm toast, crust-forward and earthy. A little cocoa follows. Maybe a touch of coffee; not dark roast, but something gentler, like the smell from grinding fresh beans. And when you drink it, the structure is immediate: smooth, medium-light body, gentle carbonation, and that signature finish: dry, not sharp, and gone just fast enough to ask for another sip.


A Different Kind of Holiday Beer

Each year, the winter beer landscape seems to get louder. More spice, more sugar, more novelty, beers that feel more like desserts than drinks. But not everyone wants that, at least, not all the time.

Some of us want a beer that fits the season without dressing up for it. A cold-weather beer that doesn’t over-perform. That’s what Dunkel offers.

This is the beer for people who bring a six-pack to a party and actually finish it. The beer you open while cooking, while waiting for friends to arrive, or after everyone’s gone. It doesn’t compete. It complements.


You Might Be Wondering…

  • Munich Dunkel is a traditional Bavarian dark lager known for its toasted malt flavor, smooth finish, and subtle notes of chocolate and bread crust.

  • Yes. Dunkel offers just enough malt richness to feel seasonal without the heaviness of stouts or sweetness of spiced ales. It’s one of the best beers for cold weather if you prefer balance over boldness.

  • Neither. It leans slightly malty, but finishes clean and dry. It’s not hoppy, and doesn’t linger on the palate. It’s meant to be drinkable — not dramatic.