Stop by Seattle's Lucky Envelope Brewing, as they celebrate The Year of the Water Tiger, January 28th and January 29th.

Stop by Seattle's Lucky Envelope Brewing, as they celebrate The Year of the Water Tiger, January 28th and January 29th.

Celebrating the birth of another New Year, Lucky Envelope is pleased to welcome the Year of the Water Tiger with a party. Featuring food trucks, limited edition beers, and, of course, red envelopes, the ownership and crew welcome you to another Chinese New Year.

Starting on Friday, January 28th and concluding on Saturday, January 29th, from noon to 10pm each day, the brewery taproom are selling Year of the Water Tiger Lucky Envelope shirts, Double Happiness glassware, select cans of Water Tiger Cold IPA, Hawaiian Honey Lager, and 2022 Double Happiness: Five-Spice Vanilla Imperial Stout, along with on-draft Mijiaya Historic Chinese Beer and Lychee Thai Basil Sour.

For those who prefer to avoid the crowds, the brewery is will offer presales of their shirts, glassware, and four-packs starting on January 24th, via their web store.

Finally, to whet your beak, here is a breakdown of the six-beers made especially for this event.

For more information about Lucky Envelope Brewing visit http://www.luckyenvelopebrewing.com. Lucky Envelope is at 907 NW 50th Street in Seattle, Washington.

About Lucky Envelope Brewing

Lucky Envelope’s brewing philosophy is centered around “Culturally Inspired Beer” whose recipes draw from modern and historic brewing styles and techniques. In addition, Lucky Envelope also uses both traditional and non-traditional ingredients in our beers which range from traditional IPAs (ENIAC Mosaic IPA), to German-style lagers (Helles Lager), to seasonal favorites like our Two Pepper Pale Ale (Habanero & Shishito peppers) and Peanut Butter Cream Stout.

The name Lucky Envelope comes from the Chinese tradition of the elderly generation giving the younger generation red envelopes filled with paper money. The color red is meant to ward off evil spirits and bring good health, while the money inside is supposed to bring prosperity. The Mandarin word for the envelope “hongbao” translates to red pouch while the Cantonese word for the envelope “laisee” translates to lucky money. Many refer to the envelopes as red envelope, or Lucky Envelope. For Barry and Ray, lucky envelopes bring back good memories whether it was a Chinese New Year celebration, graduating from school, or celebrating a life milestone.