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Midday Somewhere tracks Australia’s top retailers to help you buy your favourite drinks at rock bottom prices.

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Oettinger Pils

Oettinger is brewed according to Germany's famous purity law, and has become Germany's No.1 selling beer brand. A wonderful, crisp, dry lager that has golden colour and finishes with a refreshing dry, bitter taste. Try for yourself and see why this has become a firm favourite of many of our loyal customers!

White Claw Refreshr Alcoholic Lemonade Strawberry Can

White Claw Hard Seltzer Refreshr Alcoholic Lemonade is a fresh new take on a classic. Discover - Strawberry with a hint of Kiwi. Our Strawberry flavour delivers authentic ripe berry sweetness and is perfectly complemented with our slightly tart kiwi for a super refreshing flavour combination. 90 Calories

Ice

Cold filtered Bitter, such as this Ice Beer, is extremely popular due to it's crisp clean taste. It is a mid-strength lager with great value-for-money.

Mountain Goat Billy The Mid Can

If you think you know mid-strength beer then you haven’t met Billy. Brewed with New Zealand malts and American hops, Billy the Mid is an easy-drinking, transpacific pale ale that doesn’t compromise on flavour. Full-bodied with citrus aromas and a crisp finish, this is mid-strength beer Mountain Goat style.

Chimay Red

Topped with a creamy head, it gives off a light, fruity apricot aroma produced by the fermentation. The taste perceived in the mouth is a balance confirming the fruity nuances noticed in the fragrance.

Chimay White

The wonderful flavour of Chimay White, as sensed in the mouth, comes from the smell of hops: above all it is the fruity notes of muscat and raisins that give this beer a particularly attractive aroma.

La Chouffe Blonde (Case)

La Chouffe Blonde leaves citrus notes on the palate, followed by a refreshing, pleasantly spicy note, giving it a lovely lightness. With its 8% alcohol content and slightly hoppy taste, this golden beer has won over beer lovers from all over the world down the years. The story begins in the late 1970s, in the middle of the Vallée des Fées (the Valley of the Fairies), when two brothers-in-law, Pierre Gobron and Chris Bauweraerts decided to create their own beer in the garage belonging to Chris’ mother-in-law. With the little money they had at the time, they began what the brewery’s fans now call the “Chouffe Story”. The 1st brew of 49 litres was produced on 27 August 1982.

Chimay Blue (Case)

The Chimay Blue is a dark ale with a powerful aroma. Its complex flavor improves with passing time. Chimay is an authentic Trappist product. This means that it is brewed within the walls of a Trappist monastery, under the control and responsibility of the community of monks, who are involved through the process of making and marketing the beer. Most of the income generated by this activity is devoted to the needs of the community and social works.

La Chouffe Blonde (6 Pack)

La Chouffe Blonde leaves citrus notes on the palate, followed by a refreshing, pleasantly spicy note, giving it a lovely lightness. With its 8% alcohol content and slightly hoppy taste, this golden beer has won over beer lovers from all over the world down the years. The story begins in the late 1970s, in the middle of the Vallée des Fées (the Valley of the Fairies), when two brothers-in-law, Pierre Gobron and Chris Bauweraerts decided to create their own beer in the garage belonging to Chris’ mother-in-law. With the little money they had at the time, they began what the brewery’s fans now call the “Chouffe Story”. The 1st brew of 49 litres was produced on 27 August 1982.

Westmalle Dubbel (Case)

The dark, reddish-brown Trappist beer from Westmalle contains, thanks to secondary fermentation in the bottle, a rich and complex taste that is characterized by malty and fruity notes with a fresh bitter finish. The monks of Westmalle have been brewing a dark Trappist beer in addition to their existing meal beer since 1856. In 1926 they adjusted the recipe and brew the beer a bit heavier by doubling the ingredients. This is how the beer got its name Dubbel, although many often simply call it Trappist. That recipe is still the basis for the Westmalle Dubbel that we know today.