
Asahi Beer Bottle 330ml (Case of 24)
AED 130.00 Original price was: AED 130.00.AED 110.00Current price is: AED 110.00.
Crisp, clean, and dangerously easy to stock up on, this Japanese lager is the fridge-filler you’ll reach for when you want refreshment without the fuss. Think bright malt, a snap of bitterness, and a super dry finish that keeps you coming back for the next sip. Bonus: it comes as a case of 24, so you’re sorted for BBQs, beach days, and “someone’s coming over” moments. Solid choice for fans of Japanese beer, Asahi beer, and easy-drinking lagers!
| Packing | Case of 24 |
|---|---|
| Size | 33cl / 330ml, Case of 24 |
This is the kind of beer that makes you feel instantly more organised. A crisp Japanese lager with a dry, clean finish, built for the moments when you want something refreshing and reliable, not a big flavour project.
Asahi is from Japan, and it drinks like it. Precise, bright, and snappy, with a light malt backbone and a tidy bitterness that keeps everything feeling sharp. It’s the classic “one more” beer, because it stays lively instead of getting heavy.
- Nose: Light cereal malt, a hint of citrus peel, and a fresh, bready lift.
- Taste: Clean malt up front, quick lemony zip, and a crisp bitterness that makes it feel extra refreshing.
- Finish: Dry and brisk, with a faint hop bite that fades fast, readying you for the next sip.
The best part is how useful it is. The flavour is clean enough to keep everyone happy, but it’s not boring. It plays nicely at a BBQ, it’s a clutch move for casual hangs, and it won’t bulldoze your food, it just keeps the vibe moving.
Packing: It comes in a case of 24, which means fewer “we ran out” moments and more last-minute plans that magically work out. Keep a few cold, stash the rest, and you’re basically hosting-ready at all times.
If you’re the type who likes dependable fridge beer with a crisp edge, this one earns the space. Great for fans of Japanese lager, Asahi beer, and clean, dry beers that don’t try too hard.
Fun Fact: Asahi Super Dry helped kick off Japan’s “dry beer” boom in the late 1980s, and it became such a phenomenon that it changed what a whole country expected from lager.