Ones wise on Weizenbocks — beer in the Times crossword, 2025

Screenshot of taken after solving the New York Times Crossword, highlighting the clue for 23 across ("Pub drink") and its solution: ALE
One from the bottom of the barrel, so to speak

Keeping track of the beer references in the crossword has become as much a part of my daily routine as solving the puzzle itself.1 So it’s time again to take stock, see what made the cut, what patterns emerge, and consider what their sense of what people might know (or care about) can tell us about the status of beer and its subculture in the wider public consciousness.

There’s inevitably borderline cases of whether something is truly a “beer-related” clue. I skipped ‘Greek goddess whose name becomes a Mexican beer if you change the first letter to a T’ (hecate), for example. And ‘Tavern of TV animation’ (moes), as much as it pained me to cut a Simpsons reference — although a later duff one is included. So your judgements may vary slightly, but I found a total of 110 this time, up about 10% from 2024. They are:2

DateDayNo.ClueAnswer
Jan 2Thu61AMiller optionLITE
Jan 6Mon40ABrewery offeringALE
Jan 10Fri50ARathskeller supplySTEINS
Jan 12Sun66APublican's offeringALE
Jan 21Tue30DEats that pair well with beerPUBGRUB
Jan 23Thu1ATavern regularBARFLY
Jan 24Fri52DStock item in a breweryKEG
Jan 26Sun33DPublic house offeringALE
Feb 10Mon34DHoppy brew, in briefIPA
Feb 12Wed63DInexpensive beer, informallyPBR
Feb 15Sat31DBitter brews, for shortIPAS
Feb 25Tue51DAdams in a barSAMUEL
Mar 1Sat53AMalty craft beerRYEIPA
Mar 1Sat107ABeers advertised with the slogan "La vida más fina"CORONAS
Mar 7Fri44ACheep beer brand, for shortPBR
Mar 9Sun93D48oz beer glassYARD
Mar 12Wed4DLager alternativeALE
Mar 13Thu59DSix-pack that might be in the "Craft" section, for shortIPAS
Mar 18Tue23APub drinkALE
Mar 19Wed4DSchooner fillerALE
Mar 20Thu56DPorter or pilsner alternative, in briefIPA
Mar 21Fri26DSierra Nevadas, e.g.ALES
Mar 23Sun106DSome six-packsALES
Mar 23Sun35AIt follows OktoberFEST
Mar 26Wed52DI'd like a brewskiBEERME
Mar 26Wed51AAlternative to Stella or Sam AdamsPBR
Mar 27Thu57DStout, for oneALE
Mar 28Fri12DOnes wise on Weizenbocks, perhapsBEERSNOBS
Mar 29Sat14DBrewer's needHOPS
Apr 2Wed2DBrew that generally has a higher-than-usual alcohol contentICEBEER
Apr 5Sat92ABrown beerDARKALE
Apr 10Thu3DCorona o Dos EquisCERVEZA
Apr 11Fri17AActivity with pints and pointsBARTRIVIA
Apr 17Thu7DLarge cask for beer or wineTUN
Apr 26Sat97DBeers that might punnily have "hop" in their names, for shortIPAS
May 2Fri56AThey might be red or blondeALES
May 3Sat19ABass outputALES
May 3Sat27ALöwenbräu productBIER
May 6Tue6DLike some ales and health barsOATY
May 6Tue58ADisposable coaster at a barBEERMAT
May 7Wed39DHoppy bar choice, in briefIPA
May 11Sun7DTavern offeringALE
May 11Sun43ABeers from Bremen, informallySTPAULIS
May 12Mon37DAlternative to bottledONTAP
May 24Sat10DMany Dogfish Head brewsIPAS
May 30Fri34DBrown ___ALE
Jun 2Mon47DBeermaking establishmentBREWERY
Jun 4Wed55ADivine medicine, per the Greek physician ParacelsusBEER
Jun 9Mon46ABeermaker's supplyBREWERSYEAST
Jun 11Wed55ACraft drafts, for shortIPAS
Jun 14Sat20AGlass holding about three pints of aleYARD
Jun 15Sun100DColorful selection at an Irish pubREDALE
Jun 16Mon59DBeer barrelKEG
Jun 17Tue7DWord after ginger or paleALE
Jun 18Wed45ABrewer CoorsADOLPH
Jun 18Wed50AHit the pubsBARCRAWL
Jun 19Thu51APart of a beer name... or an instruction for answering 53-AcrossARTOIS
Jun 22Sun101DBlue Ribbon beerPABST
Jun 26Thu4AHoppy brew, for shortIPA
Jun 30Mon16ACertain draft picks?ALES
Jul 2Wed17ADid you know?! The most common bar name in the U.K. is the Red LionPUBTRIVIA
Jul 5Sat23DThey're not as sweet as portersALES
Jul 12Sat15AOne might start fermenting in a kitchenHOMEBREWER
Jul 22Tue64ASome hoppy drinks at happy hour, in briefIPAS
Jul 24Thu16AIt may be brown or blondeALE
Jul 25Fri54DIt's off limits if you 59-Across (TEETOTAL)ALE
Aug 2Sat45AEuropean brewery with over 170 brandsHEINEKEN
Aug 3Sun122ASome draft picksBEERS
Aug 11Mon60ASome hoppy brews, in briefIPAS
Aug 17Sun99ACzech brewPILSENER
Aug 20Wed7DDutch bierAMSTEL
Aug 21Thu56ABrew designed to survive trips to the subcontinent, in briefIPA
Aug 23Sat55AType of alcoholic beverage that originated in the U.K., despite its nameIPA
Aug 26Tue1ASomething tapped at a barKEG
Sep 4Thu14ATap itALE
Sep 5Fri50DCold oneBREW
Sep 7Sun57DBar with draftsTAPROOM
Sep 12Fri34ACase load?BEERS
Sep 13Sat44ABeer alternative to a 38-DownLAGER
Sep 13Sat38DBeer alternative to a 44-AcrossPORTER
Sep 16Tue14APub pintfulALE
Sep 20Sat13DDrink drunk the morning after, maybeSTALEBEER
Sep 25Thu48ABit of fraternity party headgearBEERHAT
Sep 28Sun26AContents of a flagonALE
Sep 28Sun15DBrewskiCOLDONE
Oct 1Wed42AJapanese beer brandASAHI
Oct 1Wed42DDutch beer brandAMSTEL
Oct 3Fri56ASomething raised during OktoberfestBEERTENT
Oct 6Mon66ACold oneBEER
Oct 11Sat36DSpot to order a witbier or hefeweizenBRAUHAUS
Oct 15Wed9DArtisanal brewers' offeringsCRAFTBEERS
Oct 20Mon23AThe "A" of IPAALE
Oct 21Tue60APub orderALE
Oct 30Thu41DBeer brand on "The Simpsons"DUFF
Nov 2Sun97AQuarter barrel containers of beerPONYKEGS
Nov 4Tue14AIt can be blonde or brownALE
Nov 5Wed62ABlue Ribbon beerPABST
Nov 9Sun10APopular Japanese beerASAHI
Nov 12Wed55ABeer brand discontinued in 2021BUDICE
Nov 30Sun2ABrooklyn Brewery's Special Effects, e.g., in briefIPA
Dec 2Tue47ABlue Moon, for oneALE
Dec 3Wed6DDrink that may come in a yardALE
Dec 4Thu34DStein's contentsALE
Dec 6Sat5AWinter quaffsSPICEDALES
Dec 9Tue12DLight lagerPILSNER
Dec 9Tue8DAsahi Super Dry or Kirin LagerRICEBEER
Dec 16Tue28AIt may be blond or paleALE
Dec 19Fri6DYard sale?ALE
Dec 24Wed31DConvenient spot for a pintCORNERPUB
Dec 28Sun56DBlue Ribbon brandPABST

The over-reliance on ale and ipa (and their plurals) has increased. They were about a quarter of last year’s references; now it’s 40%. That kind of frequency means there’s an impossible choice between repeating the same clue over and over, or reaching for one that’s only less common because it’s not very good. ale appeared on successive days several times — often with grim setups like ‘Pub drink’ or ‘Pub order’ — and one bleak fortnight3 had five of them, interspersed with two ipas, none with great clues.

Between the two of them, ale is taking a much greater share. That’s understandable given it’s the broader term4 and contains fractionally more-common letters — but they were about even in 2024. Given that I started this endeavour by noticing that a certain kind of IPA (i.e., “hazy”) had achieved whatever legitimacy inclusion in the crossword bestows, I can’t help but note that it seems to be crashing out a little. There’s only been one IPA reference in the last six months, last November;5 2026 hasn’t had one yet.

That said, one of the more surprising style-specific answers was ryeipa as a ‘Malty craft beer.’ That struck me as fairly niche and under-described; my first guess was porter, especially since the clue lacked the usual hints that an abbreviation was in the mix — like “in brief” or “for short.” Red, blonde, brown and “dark” ales were all included in various ways, and spicedales made an appropriately seasonal December appearance. icebeer and ricebeer rated a mention each; the former mostly exists as catchy branding these days (though the clue alludes to a real and interesting history), while the latter is popping up on shelves increasingly often — at least as “rice lager.” But there weren’t any debuts of new terms that seemed to signal any kind of shift in the zeitgeist, this time around.

Screenshot from the New York Times Crossword, with the answer BEERSNOBS running down highlighted
12D: “Ones wise on Weizenbocks, perhaps” (from 28 March 2025)

Describing stalebeer as ‘Drink drunk the morning after, maybe’ is weirdly dire. There’s an obscure old sense in which “stale beer” simply meant “aged” (in a good way), but even if that’s way too technical for a modern crossword (and it is), why imagine someone drinking that neglected beer rather than just finding it and throwing it away? Yikes. That weizenbock reference though? Sublime. I usually flinch from using “snobs” as a shorthand for subculture enthusiasts (except if you really do mean it as a pejorative), but here the sassy sense of “wise” has things covered. Clue of the year. The obvious choice for my title, here.

Sadly, the opposite award is equally easy to assign, and takes us back to ales. ‘They’re not as sweet as porters’? Madness. Rubbish. Nonsense. A category error akin to saying “fruits aren’t as red as tomatoes.” On the usual understanding, a porter is a kind of ale6 just as a tomato is a kind of fruit.7 And they’re not all sweet; a bracingly bitter one is about as easy to find as a green or yellow heirloom cultivar for your BLT. Besides that — and noting that hops aren’t strictly speaking a ‘Brewer’s need’ — I feel like I have fewer factual quibbles than last year. So perhaps that’s progress.

Terminology raised a few small red flags, though. They can’t decide between pilsner and pilsener, but that feels like a “both is fine” situation and the puzzle does reach for variant spellings when it’s convenient. Using the German word brauhaus as the answer to ‘Spot to order a witbier or hefeweizen’ is a little odd since one of its two examples is a Belgian style.8 And ‘Stein’s contents’ as yet another clue for ale feels a bit off, mixing a different German term with an Anglophone word that’s sometimes a synonym for “beer” in general, but more often used for one of its two main sub-types — and you’re more likely to see the other one (lager) in a stein.

Bar charts of beer-related crossword clues in the New York Times by day of week and month of year. The weekly data is relatively flat, with peaks on Wednesday and Saturday. Yearly data is much more random (but still flatter than last year) and peaks in March.
2025’s beer appearances; a little more evenly spread than 2024’s but still pretty noisy

About a quarter of all the beer-related clues (or their solutions) namedrop a specific brand and they range from local to international — if only Mexican, Japanese and European. Thanks to the ambiguity of the British brewery’s name, ‘Bass output’ made for one of the more refreshing ways to get to ales. And among mostly mass-market names, a few larger “craft” breweries also featured: Sierra Nevada, Brooklyn, and Dogfish Head — though the youngest of those was founded in 1995, so even if the puzzle-solving public is expected to keep up with new kinds of beer occasionally, it seems it’s been a while since a producer has graduated to that level.

pabst is easily the 2025 winner in the trademark stakes. Its five-letter name and three-consonant abbreviation (pbr) must be very useful when trying to fill out an American-style crossword. And you can’t deny its fame, even if (according to the clues) the fact that it’s cheap is as memorable as its distinctive blue ribbon. One clue has pbr as an ‘Alternative to Stella or Sam Adams,’ which feels like either an accidental(?) compliment or simply confused. Those are three very different propositions, not least because the latter is a brewery that makes a lot of varieties.

And that got me thinking about the odd sense of “alternative” that popped up a few times:9 is an ale really a ‘Lager alternative’? Or ipa a ‘Porter or pilsner alternative…’? Are lager and porter ‘Beer alternative[s]’ to each other? (They intersected in the Sep 13 puzzle.) Only kind of, right? I mean, is a tomato an “alternative to” a banana? That very much depends on context. They’re gettable enough clues, I suppose, but it was a jarring new format that didn’t sit well with how I usually think about beer.

Meanwhile, my 2026 spreadsheet is underway and has collected several oddities already. So let’s meet back here in a year or so for a debrief. We’ll see if IPA can stage a comeback or if the crossword really is an omen for some kind of category collapse.


  1. My current ‘streak’ is 489 days — but that’s only because the NYT Tech Guild’s strike ended 489 days ago. I know the Times is sometimes a hideously flawed institution, and I still (see note 1 on last year’s post) don’t feel great about giving them money. For what its worth, I spend a lot more money on other independent media than I do on my NYT Games subscription.
  2. I haven’t yet squashed the bug in my blog software that is stopping the table from being sortable. If you’re really curious, here’s a copy as a Google Sheet. I still hold TablePress blameless, here, and thank them for their excellent plugin.
  3. In March, just when I was writing up my previous report; maybe I jinxed it, maybe the monotony finally drove me to typing up my thoughts.
  4. Which the puzzle itself noted, on Oct 20: ‘The “A” in IPA’ = ale.
  5. Thanks to Natan Last, whose recent book about crosswords — Across The Universe — I really need to track down. Among other things, that puzzle included RSS, a promising sign that someone is a Good Nerd.
  6. Another puzzle even references this, for porter’s historical sibling / parent / twin, cluing ale as ‘Stout, for one.’
  7. And a vegetable! Isn’t taxonomy fun?
  8. Sure, German is one of the three official languages of Belgium. But it’s very much in third place, and any number of other styles — like weizenbock! — would’ve fit the bill and removed the slight weirdness.
  9. And didn’t feature at all, the previous year.

Have at it: