Where to buy beer in
Sri Lanka
Beer is pretty widely available in restaurants although not
always legally. A lot of places don’t list it on the menu but will offer it to
you on arrival. On one occasion a waiter hurried around a restaurant I was
eating at asking everyone to put their beer bottles under the table! I was also
unable to buy beer on Sri Lankan National Day (February 4th)
although again it appeared that not everywhere adhered to the ban. You may also
find it difficult to buy beer on or around ‘Poya’ days (full moon) which are
celebrated by the Buddhist population.
As in many other countries beer is not sold in supermarkets
or small shops, it’s available only in specially licensed premises known as ‘Wine
Shops’. These aren’t always that easy to find, when I was walking around towns
on foot I rarely came across them but when driving from town to town I seemed
to see loads, so it’s quite possible that they’re located on the fringes of
settlements.
On the whole it doesn’t seem that the authorities are that keen to promote beer consumption. Carlsberg’s website (owner of Sri Lanka’s biggest brewery) suggests that there is a ban on all forms of advertising for alcohol, even on trade.
How much is beer in Sri Lanka?
Alcohol is fairly cheap, particularly from a Western
perspective. Large 625ml bottles would cost little more than approx. £0.80
($1.30) or so from a wine shop, including the strong beers and stouts, a quite
astonishing price when you consider the amount of alcohol in them. Restaurant
prices were higher and in some of the smarter or more touristy places you might
pay up to £2 or so ($3.30).
Beers available in
Sri Lanka
I’ve featured four Sri Lankan beers on this blog in the last
week or so and I’ve got a couple more that I brought home with me but I didn’t
find it that easy to track stuff down.
Lion Stout |
Three Coins Lager |
The other lager I managed to try was the Sri Lankan version
of Anchor Smooth. As per my post on this lager, versions are brewed across
Asia. This isn’t a particularly good beer at all and unless you’re a completest
I’d stick to Lion or Three Coins.
Annoyingly I came across a wine shop on my last night that
had the widest range of beers I’d seen on the whole trip but I didn’t have room
in my bag for any more (or the desire to carry them). Stupidly I didn’t note
the names but there are more beers out there although they are most likely
variations on a theme; pale lager, a stout (most likely 8.8% ABV) and strong
lager.
To the best of my knowledge there aren’t any microbreweries
out there and the beer you’re likely to find will be from one of the three
breweries mentioned above, but I’d love to be proved wrong on this so please
let me know if you find anything exciting!
Beer locations in Sri
Lanka
Actual pointers on where to find beer are always useful, so
here are a few places I found that didn’t just sell Lion Lager…
Kandy – The Queens Hotel bar serves Three Coins Lager and
Anchor Smooth. This colonial-era hotel is also quite a pleasant way to pass a
couple of hours and is of interest historically, there are some old photographs
and artefacts on display near the bar.
Ella – There is a licensed bar on the main road towards the
north of the village. When I went it was populated entirely by locals despite
the large tourist presence. They sold me a Lion Stout to take away and had a variety
of other beers available (again I didn’t make a note, sorry!)
Negombo – There are at least three wine shops on the main
roads that run alongside the beach (Porutota Road and Lewis Place). They sell
different stuff at each one; one place sold Lion stuff exclusively whilst
another had everything but (yet again, I didn’t make a note) and this was where
I picked up my Sando Stout.
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