Is A 500-Year-Old German Beer Law Heritage Worth Honoring?

A German law from 1516 says beer should only include three ingredients: hops, barley and water. Now brewers are lobbying to have the law be recognized by UNESCO.i i

hide captionA German law from 1516 says beer should only include three ingredients: hops, barley and water. Now brewers are lobbying to have the law be recognized by UNESCO.


Dan Love/Flickr

A German law from 1516 says beer should only include three ingredients: hops, barley and water. Now brewers are lobbying to have the law be recognized by UNESCO.

A German law from 1516 says beer should only include three ingredients: hops, barley and water. Now brewers are lobbying to have the law be recognized by UNESCO.

Dan Love/Flickr

Germans are serious about their beer. Serious enough for the European country’s main brewers association to urge the United Nations to recognize that fact.

The brewers association wants a five-century-old law governing how German beer is made to become part of the UNESCO World Heritage list. It’ll join the Argentinian Tango, Iranian carpet weaving and French gastronomy, among other famous traditions, that are considered unique and worth protecting.

Written by Bavarian noblemen in the year 1516, the law says only water, barley and hops may be used to brew beer. Yeast was added to list, known as the beer purity law or Reinheitsgebot, when scientists discovered the fermenting agent centuries later.

The law was aimed at preventing crops used to make bread from being squandered on brewing. But over time, it became synonymous with high-quailty, German beer. Currently, some 5,000 different beers carry its seal. Today many brewers still make beer that would pass muster under the law, though penalties for breaking it are long gone.

Many patrons at the bar called Staendige Vetraetung — or Permanent Representation — near what was once the border between East and West Berlin embrace the purity law as a proud, German tradition.

Friedel Draugsburg, who is 76 and one of the owners, says they only sell German beer brewed under the law, which he brags is one of Germany’s oldest food laws. He adds it’s a sure way to ensure high quality and good taste.

That sentiment is shared by the German Brewers’ Association, which is pushing for UNESCO recognition of the law.

“It stands for the things you are thinking of when you think of Germany and beer and culture, friendship and all these positive things,” says the association’s spokesman Marc-Oliver Huhnholz. “I think it’s a traditional thing because it brings us together as a nation within this more and more international lifestyles.”

He and others in the German beer industry hope UNESCO recognition will help foster more beer drinking here. A study earlier this year found Germans drink less beer now than they did a generation ago. There are fewer jobs in fields once associated with beer drinking, like mining and construction. Plus many more are drinking less alcohol for health reasons.

Huhnholz says German brewers are also trying to be more creative with their beers while adhering to the purity law. For example, by adding aromatic hops that taste like grapefruit or pineapple. “The idea and message is that German beer is pure and will be pure in the future,” he says.

A waiter carries beer mugs during the 2012 Oktoberfest in Munich.

Traditional fare at Bavarian Oktoberfest is heavy on meat, but that's changing as restaurants add more vegan and vegetarian options.

But some German brewers dismiss the attempt to gain UNESCO recognition as arrogance. They say the purity law is from a bygone era and that Germany can compete in the world beer market without it.

One opponent of the Reinheitsgebot is Johannes Heidenpeter. He brews ales without following the purity law and sells them to patrons at this indoor market in the popular Berlin neighborhood of Kreuzberg.

In the basement underneath the market, Heidenpeter removes several barrels of his brews from a storage locker for the many customers he’s expecting later in the day.

He first began brewing beer four years ago at home in his kitchen, but for the past year has produced 300 gallons on average per week in the marketplace basement.

Heidenpeter claims that limiting his brewing to the centuries-old law restricts creativity. He says, “Why shouldn’t I include coriander or berries if they improve the taste?”

Plenty of countries with brewing traditions as old as Germany’s produce high-quality beer, he adds, without the purity law.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/12/17/251959392/is-a-500-year-old-german-beer-law-heritage-worth-honoring?ft=1&f=1001

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