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-   -   Favorite European Beers (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/favorite-european-beers-372923/)

dffisher Oct 31st, 2003 08:56 AM

Favorite European Beers
 
What are your favorite beers that you have had traveling through Europe or that are frome Europe? For example, I had a great pilsner from a small town in Germany called Alspirsbacher. It was awesome. I was wondering if anyone else had any great finds.

SAnParis Oct 31st, 2003 09:00 AM

The original Budveiser from Ceske Budovice in the Czech Republic. Sold in the states as Czechvar.

swalter518 Oct 31st, 2003 09:04 AM

My husband swears by the Warsteiner in Germany. Says it tastes different than the one sold here.

Budman Oct 31st, 2003 09:12 AM

The beer that is exported to the U.S. taste very different. If you've ever had a Heineken in Holland, you wouldn't be able to stomach the stuff in the U.S.

The Czechs have great beer, but the name of one just doesn't pop out and grab me. ((b))

My favorite is Augustiner Keller in Munich. ((b))

Koshka Oct 31st, 2003 09:14 AM

We have found two Belgian beers that my non-drinking / non-beer-drinking DH enjoys on occasion, Duchesse de Bourgogne and St. Louis Framboise. They are quite sweet compared to most beers.

We import them when we feel like treating ourselves from www.belgianshop.com, a site I would heartily recommend to anyone wanting good prices for a wide variety of beers. Shipping is the killer cost, so we usually split orders with friends so the shipping to the US is more economical.

asbachnate Oct 31st, 2003 09:31 AM

Bischoff bier near Kaiserslautern is a great beer, especially the Donnersberger.

Licher Pils & Export from Lich near Giessen is a favortie from my army days.

Always enjoy a good Grolsch while in the Benelux, maybe just for the flip top. lol

Any beer while on a brewery tour!

Am I the only one that hates Hefeweizen beer?

jkd Oct 31st, 2003 09:31 AM

Any beer in Munich!

seafox Oct 31st, 2003 09:36 AM

Dinkel Acher - hands down the best

jsmith Oct 31st, 2003 09:38 AM

I know it's not a beer but Samuel Smith's Nut Brown Ale is ambrosia.

mp413 Oct 31st, 2003 09:50 AM

A note on the difference in taste of European beers here and over there: I have been told that the US has different pasteurization rules than Euro. countries, so they actually brew it differently for export to the US. I have also heard that the US pasteurization rule is a rumor, and that if it tastes different over here it's because it's slightly less fresh...If anyone knows the correct answer to this I'd be interested. As a Czech Pilsner Urquell is my favorite, but it always tastes much much better over there! (Maybe it's the different brew, but also maybe because I just love being there!)

dffisher Oct 31st, 2003 09:56 AM

MP413, A far as I know, the beer that is sent to the US is not changed or pastuerized differently, but the beer definitely changes in taste coming across the Atlantic. I believe the reason for the change is the fact that the beer is shaken during shipment, and as you said, when you buy it here it might not be very fresh. Now there are some brews that do send a different recipe to the US such as Heineken that was mentioned earlier. I love Heffe Weizen from Germany, especially Erdinger, but when I bought it here it was not very good even though it was the same brew from Germany.

cmt Oct 31st, 2003 09:57 AM

I hate the smell, taste, and aftertaste of beer, but have never had beer in Europe. Is there a beer that beer-haters generally like?

rdfarr Oct 31st, 2003 10:00 AM

I love all the beers of Bavaria, but I remember a simple "bolleke" in Antwerp as the best beer I ever had. I find that the European beers that are imported to the States are different and less tasty than those same brews that I've had over there. I'm looking forward to going to the Czech Republic and liberally sampling some of their "pivo."

matthew Oct 31st, 2003 10:26 AM

cmt - you might try one of the fruit beers (Framboise was mentioned above - that's raspberry) or hard ciders (you can get that varying in taste and strength from strong and dry through to strong and sweet - a lot of people I know say it catches up with them quite quickly :-! - don't know why though)

jsmith - "Beer" is a big term - Ales are regarded a type of beer in the same way as lager beers and pils (eg Heineken, Grolsch, Becks and the derivatives like Bud etc).

asbachnate - hefeweisen's are an acquired taste, not one that I personally wish to acquire! ((b))

Although I do drink lagers and pils etc when I feel like it, I personally prefer the standard British bitter's like Thwaites, Tetley's, John Smiths etc - not real ales but pleasant and smooth, plus you can drink them for most of the night without falling down too much. Try that with Grolsch!

GSteed Oct 31st, 2003 10:35 AM

Poland has a great selection of beers. Some are light and some are strong. One uses honey to minimize the bitter taste. Polish beers range in alcohol content from 0% to 10%. Store brands abound. Latest I've seen is 40 cents per can/500ml. Tap beers are always good. 500ml..$1 to $4. Same brands vary in taste because local waters are not the same. Try some!

mp413 Oct 31st, 2003 11:03 AM

Thanks dffisher!

cmt, before my college roommate 'taught' me to drink beer I was the same way. As Matthew said, fruit beers are the way to. I love 'real' beer now, but I still enjoy cider, and if you can find Lindeman's framboise (rasberry lambic) you'll LOVE it. No beer taste, and very yummy. I also think they have less alcohol than regular beer.

bobthenavigator Oct 31st, 2003 11:21 AM

Pilsner Urquell--czech !
Carlberg--Danish
Moretti--Italian

I have tasted at least 30 beers in Europe--these are my picks.

ira Oct 31st, 2003 11:21 AM

Hi all,

How about Staropromin (Czech), Fischer La Belle (Alsace), Nastro Azzuro (Italy, unexpectedly good), Oranjeboom (Holland), Carlsburg Elephant Beer (Denmark) and St Pauli Girl (Germany)?

AAFrequentFlyer Oct 31st, 2003 11:30 AM

Belgian - Kwak
Polish - Zywiec
Czech - Pilsner Urquell


BTilke Oct 31st, 2003 11:57 AM

Although we live in Belgium, we don't actually like Belgian beer (not for lack of trying--we've had dozens of different beers). We like German and Austrian beer best. The Franconia region (northern Bavaria) is supposed to have some of the best beer in the Germany because the region's water consistently tests about the best and beer is mostly water...anyway, our favorite Franconian beer is Wolfhoher ("immer ein hochgenuss"--always a great treat). While in Baden-Baden last week-end, we brought back a case of Warsteiner, which we really like, and a case of Hatz (hadn't tried it before). In Austria, we drank a lot of Murau.


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