Peyton Manning fans can soon add a can of beer made in the former Broncos quarterback’s honor to their collection of memorabilia.

Oatmaha, a collaboration between Denver’s Factotum Brewhouse and Indianapolis’ Tow Yard Brewing Co., will be released in cans starting Friday. The limited-edition cans will only be available in the Factotum taproom and will cost $15 per six-pack.

The brew’s name is a reference to Manning’s oft-used “Omaha” pre-snap calls.

“Omaha — it was cheeky and it was simple,” Factotum co-owner Laura Bruns said in a December 2015 interview with The Post.

Oatmaha contains oats to represent the horse-themed mascots of the two teams in which he’s played for (Colts and Broncos) during his professional career. To define Indiana, the brewers incorporated corn, while sage expresses Colorado.

Bruns and her brother Christopher, who co-owns Factotum, are originally from Indiana and moved to Colorado for college. A love of beer and Manning planted the seeds for the idea.

“Wouldn’t that be cool that once we get a brewhouse going, we would make a beer in his honor?” she said.

Manning’s name and likeness was avoided for legal reasons. Factotum instead features Clifford Bruns — a sheriff of Franklin County, Ind., and grandfather to the Factotum owners — on its cans.

The first batch of the beer was released at Tow Yard prior to the Nov. 8, 2015 matchup between the Broncos and Colts. This latest version was brewed in Denver and is slightly stronger in alcohol content.

“I taste tested them side by side a week ago and I thought the Indiana version was a smidge more hop and the Colorado version a smidge more malt, but (it’s) very very close,” Bruns said via email.

Oatmaha is 6.7 percent ABV with 38 IBU. It is a “light and easy-drinking pale ale,” according to a news release — something aimed for Manning’s palate after he said he wanted a Bud Light during a January 2014 post-game press conference.

Bruns said she’s not sure if Manning has tried Oatmaha yet, but if he hasn’t, they’ll be on the house if he stops by the brewery.

“We do have a sixer of the Indiana version, a sixer of the Colorado version and an Oatmaha T-shirt for him if he ever wants to stop by,” she said.

Joe Nguyen: jnguyen@denverpost.com or @joenguyen