
The person who talks about IBU levels and dry-hopping schedules is not going to be satisfied with a beer-shaped soap. These picks are for the drinker who takes the category seriously — glass shapes that make the beer taste different, a growler that keeps temperature through the drive home, and one homebrewing kit for the person who's been threatening to make their own for two years.
Four glasses, each shaped for a different craft beer style: IPA, stout, wheat beer, and pilsner. Spiegelau partnered with actual craft brewers to design these — the shapes are not decorative, they make a real difference to how the beer presents. For the craft beer drinker who's been drinking IPAs from pint glasses, this is the upgrade.
“The one reliable rule of gift-giving: anything that makes them look more serious at what they love will be received with disproportionate gratitude.”
A laser-cut USA map in blonde wood with individual state compartments for bottle caps. Hangs on a wall, fills up over time, turns the collection into decoration. For the craft beer drinker who's been saving caps in a bowl on the counter, this is the respectful solution they didn't know they needed.
A full small-batch homebrew kit: malt extract, hops, yeast, and the equipment to ferment a gallon of pale ale with no prior experience. CraftABrew kits produce drinkable results on the first attempt, which is not a given in homebrewing. For the beer person who's said 'I should try homebrewing' more than once.
A vacuum-insulated stainless steel bottle that fits a standard 12oz beer can inside. Keeps it cold for twenty-four hours, has a lid with a built-in opener, and goes anywhere a cooler can't. For the craft beer person who drinks at parks, picnics, or events where the cold chain is unreliable.
A book that explains off-flavors, tasting technique, style history, and pairing — written for the drinker who wants to know what they're tasting, not just that they like it. Short chapters, no textbook density. For the craft beer person who has opinions about hops but couldn't explain an East vs. West Coast IPA.
A stainless steel growler that keeps craft beer cold — and carbonated — for twelve-plus hours after filling at the tap room. Vacuum insulation, leak-proof lid, wide mouth for easy cleaning. For the taproom regular who fills growlers and has been racing home in glass ones that don't hold temperature.
A recipe book for one-gallon homebrew batches: 52 recipes, all-grain, seasonal ingredients, from a summer wheat to a barrel-aged porter. Designed for kitchen brewing without a dedicated setup. For someone who finished their first kit and is ready to start building their own recipes.
Double-walled gel-filled pint glasses that go in the freezer for three hours and keep beer cold from first sip to last. No sweating on the outside, no gradual warmth, no apologizing for the temperature. For the leisurely drinker who finishes their second half slowly and wants it to taste the same throughout.
Friends claim items. No duplicates. No awkward conversations.



