
Our White Label Series of limited edition bier continues this spring with Mai-O-Maibock, an amber doppelbock-style version of our spring seasonal, Maibock. It is the same recipe as the traditional Maibock, but brewed to a higher alcohol content (10% ABV). This adds a boozy character to the rich malt flavors of honey and toasted biscuits — yet it remains crisp and refreshing. Mai-O-Maibock is double decocted, naturally carbonated, and brewed with only four ingredients: water, yeast, and 100% imported malt and hops.
Mai-O-Maibock will be available in limited edition 6-packs exclusively in the Bierhalle and will go on sale beginning at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 5. Pricing info is below.
- 6-Packs: $13.99 each
- Case: $55
- Limit 1 case per customer
From 4:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. on March 5, guests can purchase a traditional Maibock/Pretzel Combo for $7, or a traditional Maibock/Bratwurst Combo for $9. Sales will continue during regular business hours while supplies last. The bier also will be available on draft in the Bierhalle while supplies last.
We’re excited to announce the full list of bier to be featured at our upcoming 5th Anniversary Bier Festival, which is set for Saturday, Feb. 16, from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. in our brewery and bottling hall. (FAQs and other event details can be found
Bock is the German word for billy goat, but it’s also the name for a moderately strong German lager. While Bock is most commonly identified as a Bavarian style, the origins may be linked to a strong ale from the northern city of Einbeck around the 16th Century. Historians believe that Bavarian Royalty was so fond of the style that they had it brewed at their court brewery, Hofbräuhaus, but as a lager, rather than an ale. Beer folklore suggests that because Einbecker Bier in the Bavarian dialect was pronounced Ainpöckisch, the name was shortened to Pöckisch Bier, and finally Bock Bier. So, the name historically has nothing to do with a billy goat, although many brewers still depict a goat on the label.
KC Bier Co.’s Maibock has an original gravity of 16.25°Plato, 18 IBUs and 6.25% ABV. The bier presents a reddish amber color, smooth maltiness accented by flavors of honey and toasted biscuits derived from a majority portion of Vienna-style malt, and subdued bitterness from a single addition of Perle hops from the Bavarian Hallertau Valley. The bier offers a rich maltiness accentuated by double decoction mashing, yet it remains crisp and refreshing. Our version leans toward the amber end of the style’s color scale in comparison to the Blind Tiger in Topeka, Kan., that brews an excellent version of the style that is lighter in color.

