Skip to main content

Meet the Milkshake IPA, Your Newest Craft Beer Obsession

The India Pale Ale, or IPA as we know it today, is quite possibly the most popular and versatile craft beer style in America. Developed to exploit the preservative qualities of hops and alcohol (and used to supply British troops in the late 1700s), the IPA has taken on a whole new life in the early 21st century under the creative supervision of adventurous brewers.

While the overall trend has skewed toward embracing the more extreme elements of over-hopping (for example, Stone Brewing’s Ruination), the IPA has also been translated into session styles like Founders Brewing Co. All Day IPA and The Alchemist’s Heady Topper, a cloudy, citrusy New England IPA. Then, of course, there are Double IPAs and Triple IPAs, both with increasing amounts of hops, as well as Black IPAs, which utilize darker malts usually found in porters and stouts.

Recommended Videos

Milkshake IPA is brewed with lactose, pectin, or oats for a full, chewy body.

One of the newer entries into the IPA family of beers is the Milkshake IPA, which is brewed with lactose, pectin, or oats for a full, chewy body. Fruit, vanilla, or other non-fermentable sugars tend to be the key flavoring ingredients, giving the beers a sweet profile. The first-ever version is attributed to Swedish brewery Omnipollo, but it has since been adapted by dozens of U.S. breweries.

While the fledgling category still isn’t recognized by Beer Judge Certification Program, you can get in on the ground floor by tasting some of the best Milkshake IPAs on the American market right now:

All The Boys Milkshake IPA Series

Bhramari Brewing Company

all the boys Bhramari Brewing Company
Bhramari Brewing Company/Facebook

Creamy and utterly delicious, the Mango and Lychee version of this Asheville brewery’s All The Boys Milkshake IPA Series tastes like pineapple upside-down cake. Seriously. It’s a big, sweet dessert beer that has just the right cut of hoppy bitterness.

Citronious Shake

Calusa Brewing

milkshake ipa
Calusa Brewing/Facebook

True to its name, Citronius brings citrus to the fore with tangerine and mandarin orange flavors, as well as a sherbet-like bite. The full mouthfeel, brought to you by Florida’s Calusa, provides an unexpected twist on the overall Citra-hopped IPA trend

Milkshake Extra Vanilla

Tired Hands Brewing Company and Omnipollo

Milkshake Extra Vanilla Tired Hands Brewing Company Omnipollo
Tired Hands Brewing Company/Instagram

Pennsylvania-based Tired Hands teamed up with the creators of the original Milkshake IPA to bring one of the first tastes of this beer style to the States. These 16-ounce cans from the U.S. brewery’s Milkshake series are hard to track down, but devotees swear the entire lineup features some of the best variations on the theme. In particular, Extra Vanilla is brewed with loads of oats and lactose sugar, then hopped with Mosaic and Citra. Finally, it’s conditioned on Madagascar vanilla beans.

Piranha Dealer

Monday Night Brewing Company

Monday Night Brewing/Facebook

Atlanta’s Monday Night Brewing Co.’s Piranha Dealer is a strawberries-and-cream Milkshake IPA style dessert beer that uses rolled oats and honey to shape its profile. Hop lovers aren’t left out as Simcoe, Citra, Ekuanot, Pira, and Mosiac blend to give the beer a bit of twang, but the real show here is the sweet strawberries and rich vanilla.

Language Lessons 

Trophy Brewing Company

Language Lessons Trophy Brewing Company
Trophy on Maywood/Facebook

Bright fuzzy peaches are the key element in Language Lessons, and the stone fruit plays well with this style. The sweet initial sip gives way to a dry aftertaste, which beckons you back for another taste. Plus, the label art and beer name reference the classic flick Better Off Dead, which is bonus points all around.

Article originally published January 20, 2018. Last updated February 6, 2019.

Lee Heidel
Lee Heidel is the managing editor of Brew/Drink/Run, a website and podcast that promotes brewing your own beer, consuming the…
Introducing regenified malt, the latest sustainable move in craft beer
A better way to make beer
Flight of beer

Thanks to a cool new certification process, there's a new ingredient in the craft beer sphere. Regenified malt is now on the market, and just showed up in an Extra Special Bitter release from a brewery in North Carolina. It's a sound step in the name of sustainability and a responsible way to raise malt, a key ingredient in beer.

It's the release of Riverbend Malt House in Asheville, North Carolina. The malt, dubbed Regenified™ Southern Select, is made from Avalon barley. Most importantly, it is certified regenified, meaning the product of regenerative agriculture. This farming style pushes practices that improve the land, including soil and water health as well as increases in biodiversity.

Read more
Craft beer and the aluminum tariff effect
Another challenge for independent brewers
Sour beer

Earlier this month, the current administration put a hefty tariff on aluminum imports. That's less than ideal news for the craft beer movement, which depends on the metal to create and distribute its work. The canning process, especially, is about to be significantly more expensive.

Aluminum is a big deal in beer. It's been reported that some 75% of craft breweries can their product. Tariffs of 25% would increase production costs dramatically, perhaps even putting some out of business.

Read more
Florida craft beer continues to ride significant wave
Still brewing strong in The Sunshine State
A glass of beer on a beach

The news for craft beer hasn't been all rainbows and unicorns as of late. New challenges have arisen, from hybrid beverage options to federal warnings and fears of future tariffs. But there's good news too, if you know where to find it.

Nowhere in the states is craft beer booming quite like Florida. The Sunshine State has gone from 66 to 396 breweries in the last decade alone, according to the Gainesville Sun. It's impressive growth that seems immune to a wobbly economy and shifting consumer preferences.

Read more