An Alabama craft brewery will observe the state's new growler law by debuting a limited-release peach beer inspired by the ongoing Gov. Robert Bentley scandal.

Salty Nut Brewery of Huntsville said its new Unimpeachable Pale Ale will celebrate the "unimpeachable leadership shown by Bentley," who came under fire in March after he admitted to making sexually inappropriate comments to his former political adviser, Rebekah Caldwell Mason, who has since resigned.

The promotional artwork references a leaked recording, part of which includes Bentley describing how he liked to stand behind Mason and touch her breasts. Both Bentley and Mason have denied there was a physical relationship between them.

"When naming and branding a beer, we try to come up with names and imagery that are memorable and descriptive of the beer, and feel that Unimpeachable Pale Ale is both," said Salty Nut co-owner Jay Kissell in an interview with AL.com.

Unimpeachable Pale Ale, made with fresh peaches and Idaho 7 hops, will be available for on-premise consumption on 2406 Clinton Avenue West in mid-May and 32-ounce cans when the growler law takes effect June 1. T-shirts, posters and stickers are already available for purchase here.

The initial taproom release will likely be a week or less. If consumer interest is there, Kissell said the brewery would be eager to make Unimpeachable Pale Ale available to beer lovers across the state.

Kissell, who wouldn't directly address the impact the scandal has had on Alabama's image, said they are focused instead on "the positive attention that the passage of the growler law has brought to the state of Alabama."

"Eight years ago, Alabama had a very restrictive legal structure for breweries that has changed dramatically and the industry and consumers are seeing the benefits," he said.

Bentley signed the growler law, also known as House Bill 176, the day after he apologized to the people of Alabama for comments he made to Mason in 2014. It was the same week former Alabama Law Enforcement Secretary Spencer Collier hurled the affair rumors into the national spotlight.

Salty Nut co-owner Jay Kissell says the limited-edition Unimpeachable Pale Ale is "so good you'll have to lock the door when drinking it." (Courtesy photo)

The bill will allow breweries that make less than 60,000 barrels per year to directly sell up to 288 ounces of its beer per customer per day for off-premise consumption. The law also abolishes the requirement that brewpubs can only open in historic buildings, historic districts or economically-distressed areas.

While to-go sales may not change Salty Nut's business dramatically, the owners think it will offer more convenience to customers, especially out-of-town visitors.

"We believe the new law will have a positive impact on small businesses, economic development, and Alabama's blossoming craft brewing industry," said Brent Cole, president and head brewery at Salty Nut.

Whether Bentley is actually unimpeachable remains to be seen. Earlier this month, the governor said there was "absolutely no basis" for impeachment, despite a recent call by several Alabama lawmakers to impeach him for willful neglect of duty, corruption in office, incompetency and offenses of moral turpitude.

Bentley, who has said the effort to remove him from office is "political grandstanding," said last week he had "no problem" with the House of Representatives setting up a committee that could consider impeachment articles against him.

Kissell isn't concerned about potential fallout from the Unimpeachable Pale Ale.

"The name of our brewery is Salty Nut Brewery -- clearly we don't take ourselves too seriously," he said. "But we are serious about making good beer."