In the case of Fruit Lambics, whole fruits are traditionally added after spontaneous fermentation has started. Kriek (cherries), Frambroise (raspberries), P�che (peach) and Cassis (black currant) are common fruits, all producing subtle to intense fruit characters respectively. Once the fruit is added, the beer is subjected to additional maturation before bottling. Malt and hop characters are generally low to allow the fruit to consume the palate. Alcohol content tends to be low.
View other beer types:   Altbier American Adjunct Lager American Amber Ale American Blond Ale American Imperial Stout American IPA American Pale Ale American Pale Lager American Pale Wheat Ale American Porter American Strong Ale Baltic Porter Belgian Dark Ale Belgian Double Belgian Pale Ale Belgian Quadruple Belgian Strong Dark Ale Belgian Strong Pale Ale Belgian Triple Berliner Weissbier Biere de Garde Black IPA / Cascadian Dark Ale Bock California Common / Steam Beer Cream Ale Dopplebock Dortmunder-Export Lager Double / Imperial IPA Dunkel English Ale English Barleywine English Bitter English Brown Ale English Dark Mild Ale English Porter English Stout Euro Dark Lager Euro Pale Lager European Strong Ale Flanders Red Ale Flavored / Pastry Stout Foreign-Export Stout Fruit-Vegetable Beer Gose Grodziskie Hazy / New England IPA Hefeweizen Herbed-Spiced Beer Imperial Brown Ale Imperial Pastry / Flavored Stout India Pale Lager Irish Dry Stout Irish Red Ale Kellerbier Kentucky Common Kolsch Kristallweizen Lambic Light Lager Marzen Milk / Sweet Stout Munich Dunkel Lager Munich Helles Lager Oatmeal Stout Old Ale Pilsner Rauchbier Russian Imperial Stout Saison / Farmhouse Ale Schwarze Scotch Ale / Wee Heavy Scottish Ale Session IPA Vienna Lager Weizenbock Wheat Wild / Sour Ale Winter Warmer