Our Favourite Maple Beers



Enjoy A Cold One for Fête Nationale!

Fête Nationale is the perfect time to try out locally-crafted products. Here are three suggestions for maple-flavoured suds to kick off a great summer!

There are, of course, many other delicious maple beers out there, available all year round or sometimes just at sugaring season. Keep an eye out for them, give them a try, and be sure to share the joy with others! And a shout-out to our great Québec microbreweries for making us proud with their yummy maple masterpieces!

La Pure Laine from La Voie Maltée

La Pure Laine got a thumbs-up from our entire tasting crew. It presents a delicious maple flavour with notes of caramel but without being too sweet. Despite being a dark beer, it’s surprisingly light and mild. A lovely sip on a sunny patio!

5.5% alcohol content

18 IBU

Vieux Champion from Ras L’Bock

A strong beer that’s very, very well made with excellent ingredients including barrel-aged maple syrup. And the beer itself is also aged in those bourbon barrels. It’s a Scotch ale, sold in double-size 750-ml bottles, perfect for sharing! A fine, original choice for your Fête Nationale party.

9% alcohol content

24 IBU

Suzanne Marceau from Microbrasserie de l’Île d’Orléans

Flavour-wise, this beer seems to come somewhere in between the first two. We picked it for its pronounced maple flavour and pretty amber colour. And great news, beer lovers: they brew Suzanne Marceau all year long. Fête Nationale is a great starting point!

6% alcohol content

Where to Find Them

You’ll find our favourite maple beers in specialty stores, even in some grocery stores.

Did you know ?

Québec exports its maple products to over 70 countries.

Everywhere it goes, people appreciate maple’s unique flavour as well as its nutritional values. Find out how we are promoting it around the world so that even more get to taste our liquid gold.

Scientists are studying all of maple’s potential health benefits.

Studies now underway include those on the antioxidant properties of the polyphenols naturally present in maple syrup.

Maple syrup can be used as a sugar substitute in most recipes.

In cake and most dessert recipes, for each 250 ml (1 cup) of syrup used, simply reduce the called-for amount of liquid (water, milk, juice, etc.) by 60 ml (1/4 cup).