Product Code Database
Example Keywords: kindle -gps $73-158
   » » Wiki: Pale Lager
Tag Wiki 'Pale Lager'.
Tag

Pale lager is a pale-to-golden with a well-attenuated body and a varying degree of noble hop bitterness.

In the mid-19th century, Gabriel Sedlmayr took British brewing and malt making techniques back to the in Germany and applied them to existing methods. The resulting beers gradually spread around the globe to become the most common form of beer consumed in the world today.


History
Bavarian in the sixteenth century were required by law to brew beer only during the cooler months of the year. In order to have beer available during the hot summer months, beers would be stored (lagered) in caves and stone cellars, often under blocks of ice.

In the period 1820–1830, a brewer named Gabriel Sedlmayr II the Younger, whose family was running the in Bavaria, went around to improve his brewing skills. When he returned, he used what he had learned to get a more stable and consistent lager beer. The Bavarian lager was still different from the widely known modern lager; due to the use of dark malts it was quite dark, representing what is now called beer or the stronger variety, beer. This technique was applied by in the city of Pilsen, , , (now ) using less-roasted grains, resulting in the first pale lager in 1842.


Description
Pale lagers tend to be dry, lean, clean-tasting and crisp. Flavors may be subtle, with no traditional beer ingredient dominating the others. character (bitterness, flavor, and aroma) ranges from negligible to a dry bitterness from . The main ingredients are water, and noble hops, though some brewers use such as or to lighten the body of the beer.

Depending on style, pale lagers typically contain 4-6% alcohol by volume.


Variations

Pilsner
Pale lager was developed in the mid-19th century, when Gabriel Sedlmayr took some British brewing techniques back to the Spaten Brewery in Germany, and started to modernize continental brewing methods. In 1842, a new modern lager brewery Měšťanský pivovar was built in Plzeň (), a city in western in what is now the . The first known example of a golden lager, , was brewed there by . This beer proved so successful that other breweries followed the trend, using the name . Breweries now use the terms "lager" and "Pilsner" interchangeably, though pale lagers from the Czech Republic and Germany categorized as pilsner tend to have more evident noble hop aroma and dry finish than other pale lagers.


Dortmunder Export
With the success of Pilsen's golden beer, the town of in Germany started brewing pale lager in 1873. As Dortmund was a major brewing center, and the town breweries grouped together to export the beer beyond the town, the brand name Dortmunder Export became known. Today, breweries in Denmark, the Netherlands, and North America also brew pale lagers labelled as Dortmunder Export.


Helles
"Helles" or "hell" is a traditional German pale lager, produced chiefly in , particularly . The German word hell can be translated as "bright", "light", or "pale". In 1894, the Spaten Brewery in noticed the commercial success of the pale lagers and Dortmunder Export; Spaten utilized the methods that Sedlmayr had brought home over 50 years earlier to produce their own pale lager they named helles in order to distinguish it from the darker, sweeter or dunkles Bier ("dark beers") from that region. Initially other Munich breweries were reluctant to brew pale-coloured beer, though, as the popularity of pale beers grew, so other breweries in Munich and Bavaria gradually began brewing pale lager either using the name hell or Pils.
(2011). 9780195367133, Oxford University Press.

Pale lagers termed helles, hell, Pils or gold remain popular in Munich and Bavaria, with a local inclination to use low levels of hops, and an abv in the range 4.7% to 5.4%; Munich breweries which produce such pale lagers include Löwenbräu, Staatliches Hofbräuhaus in München, Augustiner Bräu, , and , with Spaten-Franziskaner-Bräu producing a 5.2% abv pale lager called Spaten Münchner Hell.


American lager
The earliest known brewing of pale lager in the United States was in the Old City section of Philadelphia in 1840, by John Wagner, using yeast from his native Bavaria. Modern are still widely made, in a market dominated by large breweries such as and (formerly ). Lightness of body is the norm, both by design and since it allows the use of a high percentage of less expensive, light-bodied rice or . Some American lagers are brewed as calorie-reduced .


Australian lager
Beer from XXXX, various Tooheys' brands, Victoria Bitter (which is classified as a lager), West End, Swan, and Foster's Lager, are Australian lagers. An with an amber hue and slightly bitter flavour typically brewed with Pride of Ringwood hops or its descendants.


Dry beer
The term "dry beer" has varied with time and region, and still does.

Though the term was not yet used, the first dry beer, Gablinger's Diet Beer, was released in 1967, developed by at Rheingold Breweries in Brooklyn. Owades developed an enzyme that could further break down starches, so that the finished product contained fewer residual carbohydrates and was lower in . www.truthinadvertising.org

A marketing term for a fully attenuated pale lager, originally used in Japan by in 1987, dry, Asahi Breweries | Products | Asahi Super Dry was taken up by the American brewer in 1988 as "dry beer" for the Michelob brand, Michelob Dry.Philip Van Munching, Beer Blast, pp 232-233, 1997, This was followed by other "dry beer" brands such as , though the marketing concept was not considered a success.Philip Van Munching, Beer Blast, pp. 233–235, 1997, In Australia, the term "Dry" is used for beers that are lower in carbohydrates.

While all lagers are well attenuated, a more fully fermented (i.e. "dry") pale lager in Germany goes by the name Diät-Pils or . "Diet" in the instance not referring to being "light" in calories or body, rather its sugars are fully fermented into alcohol, allowing the beer to be targeted to diabetics due to its lower carbohydrate content. Because the available sugars are fully fermented, dry beers often have a higher alcohol content, which, if desired, may be reduced in the same manner as .

Since the 2012 revisions to the (Ordinance on Dietetic Foodstuffs), it is no longer permitted to label beer as "Diät" in Germany, but it may be advertised as "suitable for diabetics". Prior to this change, a Diätbier could contain no more than 7.5 g of unfermented carbohydrates per liter (a typical lager contains 30-40 g/L), and the alcohol content could not exceed normal levels (5% ABV).


Strong lager
Pale lagers that exceed an abv of around 5.8% are variously termed , /super strength lager, /Märzen, or European strong lager.


Bock
Bock is a strong lager which has origins in the town of in Germany. The name is a corruption of the German brewing town of Einbeck, but also means billy goat (buck) in German. The original bocks were dark beers, brewed from highly roasted . Modern bocks can be dark, amber or pale in color. Bock was traditionally brewed for special occasions, often religious festivals such as , or .


Malt liquor
Malt liquor is an American term referring to a strong pale lager brewed to an unnaturally high alcohol content through the addition of such high-carbohydrate adjuncts as corn, rice, and sugar. In the UK, similarly made beverages are called super-strength lager.


Oktoberfestbier/Märzen
is a German festival dating from 1810, and are the beers that have been served at the festival since 1818, and are supplied by six breweries: , Löwenbräu, Augustiner-Bräu, Hofbräu-München, and .
(2011). 9780195367133, Oxford University Press. .
Traditionally Oktoberfestbiers were lagers of around 5.5 to 6 abv called Märzen, brewed in March and allowed to ferment slowly during the summer months. Originally these would have been , but from 1872 a strong March brewed version of an amber-red made by Josef Sedlmayr became the favorite Oktoberfestbier. Despite its origins, the color of Märzen - and thus Oktoberfestbier - has become ever lighter since the late 20th century, with many Oktoberfest beers brewed in Munich since 1990 being golden in color; though some Munich brewers still produce darker versions, mostly for export to the United States.

Oktoberfestbier is a registered trademark of the big six Munich breweries, which call themselves the Club of Munich Brewers. Along with other Munich beer, it is protected by the as a Protected Geographical Indication (PGI).

Notes

Bibliography

  • Fix, George J. Vienna Marzen Oktoberfest (Classic Beer Style), Brewers Publications, 1991,
  • Miller, David. Continental Pilsener (Classic Beer Style), Brewers Publications, 1990,
  • Rickman, Darryl. Bock (Classic Beer Style), Brewers Publications, 1994,

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs