Czech beer

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A mug of Czech beer in the Klásterní Pivovar Strahov, Prague.
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A mug of Czech beer in the Klásterní Pivovar Strahov, Prague.
Map of Czech Republic made up of beer caps.
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Map of Czech Republic made up of beer caps.

Czech beer, beer brewed in the Czech Republic, has a long and important history. A brewery is known to have existed in 1118, Brno had a right to brew beer from the 12th century, no and the two cities most associated with Czech beer, Plzeň and České Budějovice (Pilsen and Budweis in German), certainly had breweries in the 13th century.

Hops have been grown in the region for a long time, and were used in beer making and exported from here since the twelfth century.

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[edit] History

In 1842 a brewery in Plzeň employed Joseph Groll, a German brewer who was experienced in the new cold fermentation lager method. Their beer at the time was not of very good quality and they needed to compete. Groll developed a golden Pilsner beer, the first light coloured beer ever brewed. It became an immediate success, and was exported all over the Austrian Empire (a special train of beer was sent to Vienna every morning), and reached Paris and the U.S. by 1874.

[edit] Pilsner

Pilsner Urquell - main gate.
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Pilsner Urquell - main gate.

Originally Pilsner was a specific term for beers brewed in Plzeň (with Pilsner Urquell being registered as a trademark by the first brewery, meaning "Original Source Pilsner"), and Budweiser for those brewed in České Budějovice (the most famous being Budweiser Budvar today). Both terms have lost their original meanings by different means, Pilsner because all the imitations of the original style (especially in Germany where the style became extremely common) used the name, Budweiser because of the American Budweiser brewery, set up by a German immigrant. The problem (or the funny thing) is that the name Budweiser Bier does not historically belong to either of them, since it was used for the first time in 1802 by burgess brewery, which exported its beer under that name to USA in 1875 while Anheuser-Busch started operation in 1876 and their first trademark registration is from 16th July 1878 (made by C. Conrad as Budweiser Lager Bier and transferred to the company on 27th January 1891). In 1911 an agreement was settled that Anheuser-Busch may use the Budweiser name in North America and in 1939 it was banned to use Budweiser by Czech breweries there. Nowadays, Anheuser-Busch is trying to extend this to the rest of the world by various lawsuits.

A tour is available at the Pilsner Urquell brewery, and they have a great restaurant you can visit. The tour will show the history of beer making and the process used to make the first pilsner beer. You will also have the chance to go underground into the many kilometers of tunnels that make up the brewery’s beer cellars. One of the highlights of the tour is drinking the unfiltered, un-pasteurized beer directly from one of the old barrels. See photo. The restaurant located on site is a great place to have a meal before exiting through the historical gate.

[edit] Reinheitsgebot

The German Reinheitsgebot was imposed when under German rule, and has been retained. Communism meant that the breweries, while nationalised, were not given funds for modernisation, so traditional methods were retained. Since the reintroduction of a full market economy, however, production methods of most mainstream Czech beers have been altered to take advantage of new technology. Lagering times have been, on the most part, reduced, and the quality of the final product is increasingly being questioned. Some Czech breweries have even begun to allow their trademark beers to be brewed abroad in Poland, Russia and other countries. Most beers are Pilsners, but some wheat beers and a large amount of dark lagers are produced. The Czech Republic also has the highest beer consumption per capita in the world.

[edit] See also