Bockbier: For monks, it's what's for dinner

By Molly Hayden, U.S. Army Garrison Bavaria Public AffairsMarch 5, 2014

Caution: strong brew ahead
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

The 13th in the Insider's Tips for Auslaender series, which focuses on ways to make the most of your tour in Bavaria. Look for articles with this tag and if you have tips or suggestions, e-mail bavariannews@gmail.com.

MUNICH -- While I can't pinpoint the origin of this story, it's not going to stop me from telling it. And, according to numerous tourism sites and "legend," it's true. Promise.

The story goes something like this: In the early 16th century, Paulaner monks of the Neudeck ob der Au monastery outside of Munich began brewing a strong, dark beer in order to compensate for the greatly reduced intake of food during the Lenten fast.

The beer was known as bockbier: a rich, complex, malty, low-hop style of lager.

The monks were technically only supposed to consume water during Lent, so when the Pope heard of this strong brew, he ordered a sample to be transported to Rome for a taste.

During the long journey over the Alps and under the hot Italian sun, the beer spoiled. Tasting the spoiled ale, the Pope decreed the beer as punishment for the Bavarian monks to drink during Lent.

Five centuries later, Germans remain the frontrunners in production of the robust brew -- in a nonspoiled version, of course.

Regardless of how you drink it, the beer is to be consumed with extreme caution as it's still brewed in its original approach - as a source of nourishment rather than indulgence.

Bock beer can range in alcohol content from roughly 6.3 to about 12 percent. By comparison, mass-brewed light beer is typically 3.5 to 4.5 percent, so even the lightest bocks should be handled with care.

Bock beer is justly referred to as "liquid bread," and between Ash Wednesday and Easter every year, villages across Bavaria invite residents to embark on this longstanding tradition do what the monks did and drink their dinners at local breweries and bockbeir fests.

While the dark brew is the main course, music, dancing, and that traditional Bavarian charm are served in heavy doses on the side.

Join in the fun at the local bockbier fests listed below:

Sorghof: March 8, 7:30 p.m. at the Wolfgangsheim.

Amberg: March 14-15 at the Winkler Braeuwirt, evening.

Vilseck: March 22, 7:30 p.m. at the Burg Dagestein.

Kuemmersbruck: (near Amberg), April 5, 7 p.m. in the Mehrzweckhalle.

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