Skip to main content

There’s a scientific reason why cold beer tastes better

Science says cold beer just tastes better

Beer in ice
Emiel Molenaar/Unsplash

Imagine this scenario: It’s a scorching, humid, sunny day and you just finished two hours of lawn mowing and weed-whacking. While you probably should have a tall glass of ice water to stave off dehydration, what you want is a frosty, cold beer instead.

You crack open that beer and it tastes like the most delicious, satisfying, thirst-quenching beverage you’ve ever had. Now for the real question. Why? Does drinking it ice cold make it taste better? In the simplest terms, yes.

Does cold beer taste better?

Beer
YesMore Content / Unsplash

Yes, cold beer tastes better than warm beer. That’s obvious if you take a glass of ice-cold beer and then sip it next to a glass of room-temperature beer. One is crisp and refreshing and the other is stale, warm, and potentially a little skunky. But, while you can tell on the base level that you’d rather drink a cold beer than a warm beer, it’s a little more complex than that.

Why does it taste better?

Beer
engin akyurt/Unsplash

A recent study from the Chinese Academy of Sciences suggests that the reason the temperature of beer impacts the flavor is based on several scientific factors. The study, which was published in Matter, found that the alcohol itself is different depending on the temperature it’s consumed. This difference in flavor and overall taste has to do with the ethanol concentration.

It’s all about the ethanol

Beer in ice
James Kern/Unsplash

For those unaware, when it comes to alcohol, the two major components are water and ethanol. Because of this, the researchers studied ethanol at a molecular level. When there’s more ethanol, it makes a chain-like structure. When there’s less it’s a pyramid-like structure. The ethanol is more noticeable in the chain-like structure, presumably because there’s a higher percentage of ethanol.

A study of baijiu

Baijiu
iStock

Technically, the study was done on baijiu, a clear, neutral spirit popular in China. To go back to the formation of ethanol, the researchers found that when baijiu was imbibed at room temperature, the ethanol made a cluster-like shape. When they warmed it, the spirit became more like a chain and the flavor got more complex. They determined that the smallest temperature change had a dramatic effect on the overall flavor.

Where does beer come in?

Beer
engin akyurt / Unsplash/engin akyurt

Beer is very different from Baijiu. Beer is typically around 4-6% ABV and Baijiu is around 30-60% ABV. One is a beer, and the other is a spirit. The interesting thing is that due to its molecular makeup, the researchers saw the same findings in beers, but in reverse. When the beer is warm, the ethanol forms a cluster-like shape. When it’s cooled, the shape becomes a much more flavorful chain-like shape.

Bottom line

Beer cooler
Alexander Schimmeck/Unsplash

Science doesn’t lie. If you’re drinking a high-ABV spirit like cask-strength whiskey, baijiu, or high-proof rum, it’s going to taste better if you let it warm a bit. You might want to enjoy your favorite vodka straight out of the freezer, but the colder it is the less you’ll taste (although that might be the point with vodka).

Lower-ABV drinks like beer and wine are more flavorful when they are colder. That’s why your favorite pilsner or glass of white wine tastes best right out of the fridge. It’s science.

Christopher Osburn
Christopher Osburn is a food and drinks writer located in the Finger Lakes Region of New York. He's been writing professional
This year’s Sierra Nevada Oktoberfest beer has a German wheat twist
It's a collaboration with German wheat beer brewery Brauerei Gutmann
sierra nevada oktoberfest beer 2024 okt gutmann 44

Ever popular craft beer brand Sierra Nevada is announcing its newest release for Oktoberfest season, and appropriately enough, it's a Festbier. Despite the name, Oktoberfest traditionally kicks off in Bavaria, Germany in late September, so Sierra Nevada is rolling out its new offering now.

The Californian brand traditionally collaborates with a German beer brand for its release each year, and this year it is working with family-owned brewery Brauerei Gutmann. Based in the village of Titting in Bavaria, this brewery is famed for its hefeweizen style beers. But together the brands are creating a festbier, which is more like a robust lager style. It will include a hint of wheat malt though, as a nod to the Gutmann wheat beer style.

Read more
9 best fall beers and autumnal releases to drink this year
Pumpkin brews, Oktoberfest ales, and a few more to celebrate the season
Mug of beer outside on a table

Now that we’re well into August, it’s OK to start looking toward fall. Fear not, you still have time for days spent lounging on an inner tube in a lake or pond. But autumn is coming and there’s no way you can stop it even if you cover yourself with more SPF than is remotely healthy and attempt to hide under a dock or beneath a pool floatie.

Don’t worry though, it’s not so bad. The return of the autumnal season means that you’ll soon be imbibing fall beers. It’s a great season to be a beer fan as you have your pick of Oktoberfest-style beers, pumpkin ales, brown ales, Vienna lagers, and all manner of bolder, richer, maltier brews. Keep reading to see our list of the best fall beers.
The best fall beers for your favorite autumn activities

Read more
How is beer made: Everything you ever wanted to know about the basics of beer
How is beer made?
Beer

If you’re just a casual beer drinker who simply enjoys sipping a nice pilsner or an IPA from time to time, you might not think about what beer is. You probably know that at its core, this alcoholic beverage is made up of water, barley (or other grains), yeast, and hops. But that’s an oversimplification. Beer is so much more complex than that.

Contemporary beer is much more than the yellow, fizzy, mass-produced beer that your grandpa drank. There are currently more than 100 different beer styles, including lagers, ales, stouts, porters, wheat beers, IPAs, and so many more. Add to that, over 9,000 breweries are operating in the US alone with many brewers innovating and creating new and exciting beer styles every year. That’s an awful lot of beer.
What is beer?

Read more