Craft Breweries Are All In On Japanese Rice Lagers

Visit any local craft brewery nowadays and you’ll notice something, the golden lager feels like it’s everywhere. Craft IPAs are still king but more breweries are spending time making classic golden lagers or pushing the boundaries to create new lager styles like the French pilsner, a style that itself doesn’t exist in France but is an American invention of breweries using French malt and French hops in a lager base.

With this drive to create a world of lagers for their customers, American craft breweries are looking across the Pacific ocean to Japan for inspiration and taking a cue from the big Japanese breweries like Sapporo and Asahi to produce the Japanese rice lager.

What Is A Japanese Rice Lager?

A Japanese rice lager is usually around 4-5% ABV, is a very light shade of pale yellow and is made with pilsner malt as well as about 10% to upwards of 50% of usually flaked rice, although breweries are experimenting with other rice styles like jasmine or koji. The beer is very lightly hopped with usually German hops. The Japanese hop sorachi ace with its pleasing lemon verbena note can also be used.

One Of The First In The U.S. To Brew The Japanese Rice Lager

pFriem Family Brewers in Hood River, Oregon has been making a Japanese rice lager for years now, well before it became popular. They actually may be one of the first breweries in the United States to brew this style, which is one of their year-round beers available in 16 oz. cans and draft.

Brewmaster/Co-owner Josh pFriem credits its current popularity to the beer’s supreme drinkability. The original Japanese brewers were influenced by German beer culture so pFriem looked to both Japan and Germany to create their beer.

“We looked at the historical origin of this beer with its heavy German influence that incorporated the use of rice. This combined with looking at the modern…industrial versions; we wanted to give a nod to both,” said pFriem. “We did this while leaning into the very high quality approach that we take to beer. This has created a beer that is unique and individual, but feels familiar to well known industrial interpretations of Japanese lagers from Japan.”

With the growth of American craft breweries making lager, something that pFriem Family Brewers has been brewing for years, Josh pFriem has enjoyed watching the style get bigger and bigger and enjoy a wider audience than merely industry professionals and beer geeks .

“We see craft beer focused drinkers love this beer as well as a crossover of folks that drink a lot of industrial lager. Also, if people have a connection to Japan, this beer really seems to resinate with them,” said pFriem.

The Japanese Rice Lager Is A Huge Hit With All Types Of Drinkers

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/emsauter/2025/08/18/craft-breweries-are-all-in-on-japanese-rice-lagers/