When it comes to beer packaging, cans are demonstrably better than bottles for preserving the quality of your brew. The biggest reason? Light. A surprising fact often overlooked is that clear and green glass bottles offer almost no protection from UV rays, leaving the beer inside vulnerable to “skunking” in mere minutes of exposure. Cans, by contrast, offer 100% light protection, eliminating this common flaw entirely.
Defining “Better” for Beer Packaging
For most drinkers, “better” packaging means two things: it protects the beer’s intended flavor, and it’s practical. This involves safeguarding against light, oxygen, and physical damage, while also considering environmental impact and portability. When evaluated against these criteria, the modern beer can emerges as the superior choice.
The Clear Winner: Cans
Modern beer cans are not just a trend; they are a technical advancement that solves long-standing problems with beer preservation.
- Total Light Protection: This is the can’s strongest advantage. Light exposure, especially UV light, causes hop compounds to break down, reacting with sulfur compounds to create 3-methyl-2-butene-1-thiol – the exact chemical found in skunk spray. This “lightstruck” flavor is irreversible. Cans are opaque, blocking all light and preventing this spoilage.
- Superior Oxygen Barrier: Oxygen is the enemy of fresh beer, leading to oxidation that manifests as stale, cardboard-like, or sherry-like flavors. While both packaging types aim for an airtight seal, cans generally achieve a tighter seal at the rim and prevent micro-oxidation through the material itself more effectively than glass, which is microscopically permeable.
- Enhanced Portability and Durability: Cans are lighter, more compact, and unbreakable. This makes them ideal for travel, outdoor activities, and reduces shipping costs and carbon footprint. They also cool faster.
- Environmental Footprint: Aluminum cans are infinitely recyclable and have a higher recycling rate globally than glass bottles. Their lighter weight also means less fuel consumption during transport.
The Enduring Appeal of Bottles
While technically inferior for preservation, bottles hold a special place for many drinkers, primarily due to tradition and aesthetics.
- Ritual and Presentation: There’s an undeniable sensory experience associated with uncorking or uncapping a bottle, and the visual appeal of a label on glass. Many prefer the feel of glass in hand or the sound of pouring from a bottle into a glass.
- Perceived Sophistication: Historically, premium beers were often bottled, creating a lasting association with quality, even if the underlying science doesn’t support it for preservation.
What Many Articles Get Wrong About Beer Packaging
Misinformation persists, often driven by nostalgia or outdated information.
- “Bottles Protect Beer from Light”: This is only true for dark brown bottles, which block about 98% of UV light. Green bottles block only about 20%, and clear bottles block virtually none. Most bottled beer you encounter is therefore highly susceptible to lightstrike.
- “Cans Make Beer Taste Metallic”: This myth stems from older can linings or a placebo effect. Modern cans are lined with a water-based polymer that creates a barrier between the beer and the aluminum, preventing any metallic interaction. If you taste metal, it’s likely from the can’s rim, not the beer itself, or a poorly made beer.
- “Cans are Worse for the Environment”: While both have environmental impacts, aluminum cans are generally more sustainable due to their higher recycled content, lighter weight for shipping, and higher recycling rates compared to glass, especially non-refillable glass. For more on evolving consumer preferences and the technical advancements in brewing, explore our collection of insights.
Final Verdict: Cans Win for Quality and Practicality
If your primary concern is the integrity of the beer’s flavor and aroma as the brewer intended, and you value portability and environmental impact, cans are unequivocally the better choice. They provide superior protection against light and oxygen, which are the two biggest threats to beer quality.
However, if your priority is the traditional aesthetic, the tactile experience of glass, or you simply prefer the ritual, bottles still offer that experience. Just be mindful of light exposure.
Ultimately, for optimal flavor preservation and modern practicality, choose cans. For those moments when tradition trumps technicality, opt for bottles, but always pour them into a glass.