Activity scenario
A guided tasting where guests compare beer styles, learn palate prompts, enjoy pairings, and connect in a relaxed social room.
A guided beer tasting with style notes, palate prompts, and relaxed social time. Use this template to define the attendee promise, audience fit, schedule, host notes, and signup details for a polished public event page.

1.8 hours
$20-65 depending on flight size, snacks, educator, and venue. Best in brewery, bottle shop, bar, restaurant private room, tasting room, or event space.
A guided tasting where guests compare beer styles, learn palate prompts, enjoy pairings, and connect in a relaxed social room. Guests want to discover new flavors with guidance, not just order another drink without context. The format helps alcohol-related events feel thoughtful, safe, and educational with clear age rules and serving expectations.
A guided tasting where guests compare beer styles, learn palate prompts, enjoy pairings, and connect in a relaxed social room.
Guests want to discover new flavors with guidance, not just order another drink without context.
The format helps alcohol-related events feel thoughtful, safe, and educational with clear age rules and serving expectations.
Rewrite the Craft Beer Tasting template around the host's city, venue, audience, price, and tone. Preserve the core promise: A guided tasting where guests compare beer styles, learn palate prompts, enjoy pairings, and connect in a relaxed social room. Keep the page concrete: who it is for, why guests come, what happens, what guests should prepare, and what they leave with.
Use this template when the event should feel like discovery, not overconsumption.
A brewery flight night comparing seasonal releases.
A bottle shop tasting with style education and snacks.
A restaurant pairing night with small plates.
A private group tasting for people new to craft beer.
The format helps alcohol-related events feel thoughtful, safe, and educational with clear age rules and serving expectations.
Age, serving size, and transport notes are visible before registration.
Guests learn how to taste and compare instead of only drinking.
A guided experience can lead to purchases, repeat visits, or membership without feeling pushy.
The strongest event pages usually add concrete host details: the place, the people, the promise, and the small moments that make guests picture themselves there.
No real usage has been recorded yet. The template is still available as a clean starting point, and this section will update as hosts publish events from it.
The agenda gives first-time hosts a reliable shape while leaving room for your own personality, venue, and timing.
Arrival and tasting notes
Guided flight
Style comparison and Q&A
Social tasting and snack pairing
These are the basics hosts usually check before turning a template into a real event page.
Yes. Hosts should follow local alcohol laws and check ID as required.
List flight size, number of pours, snacks, gratuity, and any take-home items.
If the host offers non-alcoholic options, state that clearly on the page.

A relaxed park picnic where guests bring one thing to share, join easy prompts, and meet new people.

A guided tasting workshop where guests build a personal cheese and charcuterie board.

A hands-on cocktail class where guests shake, garnish, taste, and learn a signature drink formula.