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A guide to the best breakfast beers in the world

Published 13:43 23 Apr 2023 BST

Updated 13:44 23 Apr 2023 BST

Jack Peat
A guide to the best breakfast beers in the world

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Step aside, Wetherspoons...

There is general acceptance among ale enthusiasts that, while most beers might be brewed equally, not all are consumed equally.

A pint in the pub might go down well after a long day at work, but it doesn’t compare to the first sip of a beer served in an iced glass sat out on the balcony on holiday. And while you’ll find few things that beat a can on the couch in front of the television, it’s got nothing on the first sip after 18 holes on the golf course in blazing hot conditions.

And the same can be said of the breakfast beer, too.

The breakfast pint holds an unrivalled position in the pantheon of beer drinking. Paired with a hearty plate of grub it soothes the soul in a way few other drinks can. It puts a sparkle in the eyes of the dreary and hungover, puts an instant sheen on the day ahead and can even make your mate’s stories about blockchain and Chat GDP seem like reasonable chat.

At least that is how we’ve viewed them since Wetherspoons cemented a culture of enjoying a few frothy ones next to a calorific fry-up served on Churchill China plates. Tim Martin reinvented the breakfast beer in Britain, and the country’s train stations, airports and high streets have never been the same since.

But it wasn’t always that way.

In the Middle Ages, beer was often drunk at the start of the day because it was seen as being purer than water and full of calories. Indeed, as late as the 1980s breweries would often hand out free beers to their workers at the start of the day, although many would argue this was just to prevent pilfering later in the day.

Many other places around the world also have their own unique traditions. Aside from the obvious, here’s just a few of them:

Bavaria, Germany

Lyon, France

Van, Turkey

Barcelona, Spain

There’s only one way to kick off your day in Barcelona, and that is with the classic Catalan dish Pa amb tomàquet. Rustic and crusty bread is layered with fresh tomatoes and served with olive oil and salt. It is a common feature in bars across the Catalan Countries and, indeed, throughout Spain, where it is also known as pan tumaca.

Trang, Thailand

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