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Gose

or ·

[ goh-zuh, -suh ]

noun

  1. a sour wheat beer with a distinctive salty taste also typically characterized by coriander flavor and aroma.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of Gose1

First recorded in 1990–95; from German, from Goslar, a town in Lower Saxony where the beer originated
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Even beyond session IPAs, lower-alcohol brews across styles – gose, Helles lager, Kölsch, saison, and pilsner – are increasingly visible, available and popular in both pint and print, which is just another way of saying that, now more than ever, you can readily find a low-alcohol or nonalcoholic brew in your glass or on your screen.

From

The Sumac Gose is perhaps Tabatabai’s most personal, a slightly tart but not face-twisting sour that pours ruby pink and bursts with the zest of cured sumac sourced from a farm in Turkey and salt and sour cherries from Iran, all ingredients she knows her grandfather used.

From

The Guardians also designated left-handers Anthony Gose and Kirk McCarty for assignment to make roster room.

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Gose pitched 21 innings this season for Cleveland before being shut down.

From

As is frequently the case with drink origins, opinions differ as to how truly “antique” the gose style is.

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