
Ingredients
- 0.5 Pint(s) Larger Beer
- 0.5 Pint(s) Cider Beer
Instructions
Pour Ingredients:
- Pour equal parts of lager beer and cider beer into a pint glass.
Mix and Serve:
- Stir gently to combine, then serve immediately.
Enjoy:
- Drink and enjoy the bold flavors. Be prepared for a strong kick!
Notes
Estimated Nutrition:
Where it came from
The Snake Bite is a 1980s British pub cocktail built on a fifty-fifty pour of lager beer and cider in a single pint glass. The drink was a student-bar staple in the UK in the 1990s and early 2000s, popular at low-end bars where cider was sold cheap and the cocktail stretched the alcohol budget.
It sits in the beer-cocktail family with the Black Velvet, the Shandy, and the Black and Tan. All four lean on beer as the volume base and use a contrasting beverage as the second pour. The Snake Bite picks cider, which is what gives it the apple-and-malt cross-profile.
Best ordered at a British pub, on a Friday night, when a long pour with bite is wanted. Many UK pubs refuse to serve the cocktail because it is associated with student-binge culture; the drink is unfussy and unfashionable in equal measure.
What it tastes like
Lager malt up front, cider apple sweetness through the middle, dry finish on the swallow. The two beverages combine to create a cross-profile that is neither beer nor cider but sits between them. The carbonation lifts both flavours.
Around 5 to 6 percent ABV in the pint glass once the two combine. A real one and a half drinks per pint, sometimes higher depending on the cider strength. Drinks like a long beer with a sweet edge.
The technique
Pour half a pint of lager beer into a pint glass at a slight tilt to control the head. Add half a pint of cider on top of the lager, also at a slight tilt. Stir gently with a long spoon to combine.
Use a cold lager and a cold cider straight from the fridge. The drink is built for the long pour; serve and drink while the carbonation is still active. No garnish; this is a pub drink, not a craft cocktail.
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Ingredient Spotlight
The bottles that make or break this drink.
The lager beer
- Use
- Carling, Foster's, Stella Artois, or any standard pale lager.
- Skip
- Stout. Wrong flavour for the half-and-half balance.
- Why
- Pale lager is the volume and the malt backbone. Its mild flavour and high carbonation give the cider room to come through. Stout would dominate the cocktail and pull it toward Black Velvet territory.
The cider
- Use
- Strongbow, Magners, or any standard apple cider.
- Skip
- Pear cider or perry. Different flavour profile.
- Why
- Apple cider is the cocktail's headline. The dry-and-slightly-sweet profile of standard British cider is what gives the Snake Bite its character. Sweet ciders pull the cocktail toward syrup; pear cider changes the fruit identity.
The pint glass
- Use
- A standard one-pint English pub glass or a tulip pint.
- Skip
- A half-pint glass. Wrong volume for the build.
- Why
- The Snake Bite is a full pint built from two half-pints. The glass needs to hold the full volume; a half-pint is a different drink (a Half-Snake-Bite, which does not really exist).
Three Variations
Three real ways bartenders riff on this drink. Same idea, three different jackets.
The standard build
- Snake Bite, half-and-half pint
- Half a pint of lager poured first, half a pint of cider poured on top, stirred gently in a pint glass.
The Snake Bite Black
- Snake Bite Black, with blackcurrant
- Add a small splash of blackcurrant cordial like Ribena to the standard build. The cocktail turns dark purple and gains a fruit-jam sweetness.
The Diesel build
- Diesel, with extra cordial
- Same as the Snake Bite Black but with a heavier blackcurrant pour. The cocktail is darker, sweeter and pulls toward fruit-cocktail territory.
What if I don't have…
Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.
Pilsner or pale ale. Both work; pale ale adds more hop character.
Pear cider, perry or hard apple seltzer. The flavour profile shifts; the half-and-half ratio holds.
A tall highball or a Collins glass. The pint glass is traditional; the volume is what matters.
Skip it. The standard Snake Bite is the original; the Black variant is the optional addition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.
What is in a Snake Bite?
Half a pint of pale lager and half a pint of apple cider, poured into a single pint glass and stirred gently. Two ingredients, equal volume.
How strong is a Snake Bite?
Around 5 to 6 percent ABV in the pint glass once the two combine. A real one and a half drinks per pint, sometimes higher depending on the cider strength.
What does a Snake Bite taste like?
Lager malt up front, cider apple sweetness through the middle, dry finish on the swallow. A cross-profile between beer and cider, with neither dominating the other.
Why do some pubs refuse to serve it?
The Snake Bite is associated with low-cost student-binge culture in 1990s UK. Some pubs banned it to avoid the patronage that ordered it; the official position was usually about staff safety, the unofficial position was about clientele.
What is the Snake Bite Black?
The Snake Bite Black is the variant with a small splash of blackcurrant cordial like Ribena added to the standard half-and-half pint. The cocktail turns dark purple and gains a fruit-jam sweetness.
Should I pour the lager or the cider first?
Lager first. The cider is slightly sweeter and floats on top; pouring the cider first means the lager has to push down through it, which can over-foam the head.
Can I use stout instead of lager?
It changes the cocktail. Stout plus cider is a different beer cocktail closer to the Black and Tan. The Snake Bite is built on pale lager; stout pulls the drink off the original recipe.
What is the difference between a Snake Bite and a Diesel?
The Diesel adds blackcurrant cordial to the lager-cider base in a heavier pour than the Snake Bite Black. The Diesel is darker, sweeter and pulls toward fruit-cocktail territory.
Can I make a non-alcoholic version?
Replace the lager with non-alcoholic beer and the cider with non-alcoholic cider. Same flavour shape, none of the alcohol.
What other beer cocktails are similar?
A Black Velvet, a Shandy, a Black and Tan and a Boilermaker. All four use beer as the volume base and pair it with a contrasting beverage.
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