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  2. The best non-alcoholic drinks to try during Dry January

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-non-alcoholic-drinks...

    Fieldwork proves that you don’t need alcohol to enjoy a genuine craft beer experience. The brand’s non-alcoholic brews are packed with the same complex flavors and high-quality ingredients you ...

  3. Sodas like Poppi and Olipop bill themselves as healthier ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/sodas-poppi-olipop-bill...

    Caffeine: 0-32 mg. Calories: 25 per can. Sugar: 3-5 grams. Fiber: 2 grams. Sodium: 0-35 mg. Poppi features flavors like Raspberry Rose, Strawberry Lemon and Classic Cola and comes in brightly ...

  4. Doing dry January? These are the healthiest non-alcoholic ...

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    In many cases, NA beers contained fewer calories than their alcoholic counterparts. Guinness 0, Budweiser Zero, Coors Edge Non-Alcoholic Brew, and Heineken® 0.0 are all lighter than the ...

  5. Fassbrause - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fassbrause

    The chemist Ludwig Scholvien invented Fassbrause in 1908 in Berlin for his son, in order to offer a non-alcoholic beer substitute of similar color and taste. Scholvien's original recipe included a natural concentrate of apple and licorice, intended to approximate the beer taste, along with the main ingredients of water and malt. [5]

  6. Pilsener (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilsener_(disambiguation)

    Prohibition in Iceland#Pre-abolition, non-alcoholic beer in Iceland during prohibition, usually mixed in such drinks as bjórlíki, a legal beer substitute Old Style Pilsner , a beer brewed in Canada by Molson's popularly known simply as Pilsner in regions where it is widely consumed

  7. Happōshu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happōshu

    Due to the nature of allowable ingredients in beverages that can legally be sold as "beer" in Japan (malted barley/wheat, hops, and adjuncts rice, corn, sorghum, potato, sugar/caramel, and starch), many imported Belgian beers and North American craft beers are also designated as "happōshu", despite meeting the 67% malt requirement.