
During Prohibition, Law-Abiding Michiganders Drank Bay City’s ‘Cer-Ola’
Near-Beer, non-alcoholic beer, and 3.2 beer... remember that one? A low-alcohol beer we used to drive across the border to Ohio to get.....
.....But back during Prohibition there was a beverage that was specifically made as a cereal-based drink to replace beer: Cer-Ola.
Made from the usual cereal grains like barley and corn, Cer-Ola was advertised as a non-intoxicating cereal beverage that was produced and distributed by the Kolb Brewing Company of Bay City. Cer-Ola was created to satisfy the beer cravings of those who didn’t want to break the law and consume illegal brew during the 1920s Prohibition years.

Cer-Ola was said to be a beer alternative soft drink (almost) that was “nutritious and thirst-quenching" with advertising that depicted the drink’s elite consumers hanging by a beach and labeled with the slogan "A triumph in soft drinks".
Bay City’s Kolb Brewing Company played along with the 18th Amendment by making Cer-Ola a "near beer" that contained less than 0.5% alcohol.
Cer-Ola is not to be confused with Choc-Ola (who remembers that one?), a chocolate drink that came out in 1944.....even though many of us have not seen Choc-Ola for years, it is still available. However, Cer-Ola is not.

