I tried 5 low-alcohol beers – this was the clear winner ...Middle East

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I love a beer, but if I’m totally honest, I get almost as much from that moment of opening a tin as I do from drinking its contents. It’s a ritual, a line being drawn under the day: nobody better expect me to achieve anything now, because I’m simply not going to! It’s my time.

Like a lot of middle-aged men, my relationship with The Drink is a complicated one. I rarely get properly drunk now, because my ageing organs can’t handle it and the next day is hell on Earth – I sleep badly, then can’t focus on getting any work done, and feel guilty and horrible – but having a couple of cheeky ones is something I enjoy enormously.

Mid-strength beer has an ABV around half to two thirds that of a regular drink

Mid-strength beer has an ABV around half to two-thirds that of a regular drink. If I’m totally honest, my first reaction to that as an idea was a two-word phrase where the second word is “off” – I wanted something a bit more magical than just drinking less alcohol.

“People want to enjoy it all — raise a glass the night before, but not suffer for it the following day,” says James Grundy, co-founder of Small Beer, who make a range of beer types with between 2.1 and 2.6% ABV, brewed for longer than most regular beers to balance out the lower percentage with more flavour.

“The way people think about drinking – and what it means to have a good time – has changed,” says Ross Cleaver, who co-founded Thousand Cups, a 1.2% drink. “Beer used to lean heavily into the idea that more is more, but now more people care about how they feel the next day, how alcohol affects their health, and whether it actually adds to the night.”

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One of the main reasons we get hangovers is that alcohol is a diuretic, causing fluid loss and dehydration by making you wee a lot. However, at a lower alcohol level, below about 2.8%, this doesn’t happen.

While the makers of both beers insist you shouldn’t drive after drinking any at all, getting drunk on Thousand Cups would involve, for most people, putting an absurd amount of liquid into your body. “Most people would feel uncomfortably full long before that,” says Cleaver.

My personal experiment

The glass-half-full way of viewing weaker beers is that you get to spend more time drinking more drinks with fewer adverse effects. The glass-half-empty one is that you’re spending more money for less of the active ingredient.

Mid and low-strength beer means fewer hangovers and dramatically fewer calories

Would Happy Gilmore 2 have been less rubbish if the three beers I drank during it were stronger? No, it sucks, but made for a perfectly pleasant evening and I slept as though I hadn’t drunk at all.

And you can’t binge these: it’s too much liquid. You’d never drink six cans of Sprite, you’d feel terrible. I drank six cans of weak beer on a Wednesday evening – because it was there – and felt like I was going to belch myself inside out.

Despite my initial misgivings, mid- and low-strength beer just makes a lot of sense: fewer hangovers, dramatically fewer calories and less work for my struggling, infirm body, all for basically the same reward.

Not all the time though. You’ve got to do these things in moderation.

Crack open the cans…

Small Beer Lager

2.1% abv, 73 kcal, 330ml

£14.25 for 6 (£4.09 per pint)

Vegan-friendly

Ideal accompaniment: An underwhelming Netflix comedy where everyone seems like they were just in it for the money but you’ve had a long week and don’t mind.

Small Beer IPA

2.3% abv, 83 kcal, 330ml

£14.25 for 6 (£4.09 per pint)

Vegan-friendly and gluten-free

Ideal accompaniment: An in-depth chat about property prices in good school catchment areas.

Small Beer Hazy

THE FAVOURITE (although I’d still prefer a Kronenbourg)

2.6% abv, 84 kcal, 330ml

£14.25 for 6 (£4.09 per pint)

Vegan-friendly

Ideal accompaniment: An impressively seasoned veggie skewer served off your neighbour’s strikingly expensive grill.

Thousand Cups Original

1.2% abv, 40 kcal, 330ml

£26.99 for 12 (£3.87 per pint)

Vegan-friendly and gluten-free

Ideal accompaniment: An incredibly intense 3am chat with a friend who you’re going to have to help get home because they’ve lost their keys, phone and mind.

Thousand Cups Lime

1.2% abv, 40 kcal, 330ml

£26.99 for 12 (£3.87 per pint)

Vegan-friendly and gluten-free

Ideal accompaniment: An ambitious dinner you’ve never made before and somehow took three times longer than anticipated but was delicious.

Kronenbourg 1664

4.6% abv, 210 kcal, 568ml

£6.19 for 4 (£1.55 per pint)

Neither vegan-friendly nor gluten-free

Ideal accompaniment: Several more of the same, and a family-sized bag of crisps all to yourself.

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