
After the Bud Light fiasco I switched to Yuengling. I prefer the Yuengling Flights. The lager is too heavy for me.
Our soling with an engine in back for safety on the river was stern heavy. We used cases of cans Yuengling in the bow for ballast.
Yuengling was unavailable in TX five years ago - now a day hardly goes by where I don’t see one of their trucks whizzing by down the road or a billboard by the highway. You’re next.

My daughter manages a liquor store in Bella Vista, AR, the extreme NW corner of the state. Wal Mart urged Yuengling to start selling their product in Arkansas, and when they did enter the Arkansas market, my daughter’s store sales exploded!
People from the neighboring states started showing up and buying as much as 50 cases at a time, due to the fact it was the first store in Arkansas they could access.
Ying-Ling, isn’t that a Chinese beer?
I grew up in central PA not too far from Pottsville. Always liked their Porter, back when no one else made a dark beer in the USA.
Never did like this beer..
With diabetes I don’t drink very often. But it’s nice to know I can get Yuengling in the enchanted mitten now.
CC
The best beer in Wisconsin is Spotted Cow from New Glarus.
L
Good company. Fairly priced decent beer.
Good beer. Popular here in Ohio.
Really? WOW. I was wondering if they were still around. I encountered it at a MLB stadium back in the day when I watched MLB.
Full disclosure: I don't like beer.
I discovered Yuengling while vacationing in Sunny Florida 30-some years ago. We would pack every bit of empty space in the car with the stuff when it was time to head back to Misery.
A few years back they began selling here and I drank enough of the stuff to float an ocean liner.
I don’t drink much these days. Racetrack weekends and an occasional get-together/BBQ/etc. at the house, but when I do want a beer it’s going to be either Yuengling or STAG, with a Ranger Imperial Voodoo (Mrs. Augie’s favorite) every now and then.
We like their black and tan.
Yuengling landed in Missouri a couple years back. Sales still brisk. Good beer.
The name "Yuengling" originates from the German surname "Jüngling," meaning "young man" or "youth". The founder, David Gottlob Yuengling, was a German immigrant who changed his name from Jüngling to Yuengling upon arriving in the United States. This anglicization of the name is believed to be an attempt to adapt the original German surname for American use, which may contribute to its unfamiliar sound to English speakers. The brewery was originally named Eagle Brewery and later became D.G. Yuengling & Son in 1873 when his son Frederick joined the business. The name "Yuengling" is not Chinese, despite its appearance, and the brand has been the subject of confusion and even boycotts due to this misperception. The brewery, established in 1829 in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, is the oldest operating brewery in the United States and remains a family-owned busines
And;
The surname "Yingling" is not a traditional Swedish name but is derived from the German word "Jüngling," meaning "youth" or "young man". It is an anglicized form of the German surname, which itself may have evolved from variations like "Jäntschlin" or "Jentschlin," derived from the personal name "Jens" or "Jantsch," a short form of Johannes. The name likely entered the United States with German immigrants and was adapted into its current spelling.
While the name "Yingling" is sometimes associated with the ancient Swedish royal dynasty known as the Ynglings, this connection is based on a misunderstanding. The Ynglings were a mythological and historical dynasty in Sweden and Norway, descended from -Freyr, a god associated with fertility and prosperity. The name "Yngling" in this context means "descendant of Frey" and is linked to Old Norse sources like the Ynglinga saga and Beowulf, where they are referred to as Scylfings. However, the surname "Yingling" is not a direct descendant of this royal lineage but rather a phonetic adaptation of the German "Jüngling".
There is no evidence that "Yingling" is a genuine Swedish surname or that it has a direct historical or genealogical link to the Swedish Yngling dynasty. The confusion may arise from the similar-sounding names and the fact that both are associated with Northern European heritage.
The name "Yingling" is primarily found in German-speaking regions and among German diaspora communities, particularly in the United States.
There we be! Prost and Skol!
This is the beer on tap at the campus pub of the National Fire Academy in Maryland. It has oiled many discussions and decisions by leaders in the fire and EMS community here in the USA!