5 May 2008

Zierholz Premium Brewery - return tour

| Kramer
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It is almost two years since RiotACT toured the then brand new Zierholz Premium Brewery, although we have been keeping ourselves up to date with the Zierholz product through local establishments with Zierholz on tap and a few Zierholz mini kegs. So the RiotACT team visited Zierholz Premium Brewery out at Fyshwick to catch up with Christoph Zierholz, and taste some beer of course! Christoph still has the most unbelievable passion for his beer and the brewery, working 80 to 100 hours a week. Over the last two years Zierholz has gone from two commercially produced beers to ten, venues with Zierholz on tap have gone from four to eighteen, there’s now a range of Zierholz T-shirts, and a Zierholz website.

The latest development for Zierholz will be the opening of a new restaurant and bar at the brewery. The bar is currently taking shape and the kitchen is about to go in, so if all goes to plan they will open around the end of May. The planned menu will be modern Australian with German influences, and will be accompanied by the full range of Zierholz beers. As with his beer which is fresh and local, Christoph is planning to source fresh seasonal produce from local suppliers.

Christoph continues to make great beer even though world wide shortages of grains and hops have seen the prices of these key ingredients go up by 30-40%. He still brews according to the Reinheitsgebot (German Beer Purity Law), and in keeping with all things German, his favourite brewing music is German metal band Rammstein.

Ten beers are currently being produced in the brewery, we were lucky enough to sample eight of them.

    MiniKegs

Schankbier: a low alcohol (2.7%) draught, but don’t be fooled – this is without a doubt the best tasting light beer I have ever encountered. The beer has full flavour due to a higher temperature mash and the addition of extra hops.

Midstrength: an easy drinking midstrength (3.2%) amber ale, but like the shankbier less alcohol does not mean less taste.

German Ale (kölsch): One of the original lineup, still a great clean and crisp beer, highlights the freshness of Zierholz beers, which is probably why this one is the publican’s choice.

Pils: a strong hops flavour, but without being too bitter or overpowering – kind of like Che, who picked this as his favourite.

Hopmeister: a generously hopped and very flavoursome pale ale.

Weizen: a traditional wheat beer, unfiltered with a cloudy appearance and fruity flavours. This was Joe’s and my favourite.

Brown Ale: a classic ale with rich chocolatiness. This was Jazz and JB’s pick as the dark beer would put some beer drinkers off (particularly women), leaving them to drink the lot.

Porter: lots of flavours in this strong, dark and intense brew.

Unfortunately we missed out on the amber ale and the Irish ale, which were currently out of stock. However I’ll try to get hold of the Irish ale over at King O’Malleys where it is on tap.

So even with eight of the ten beers it was hard for us to pick a winner. Zierholz is still the best beer I have ever had the pleasure of consuming. The flavours and freshness of all the beers make them dangerously drinkable. I think our recommendation is to try them all.

    RiotACT and Christoph

We can easily understand how Christoph still loves his beer and can drink 2 to 3 litres a day! But that’s easy when you have 5 taps of Zierholz on at home!!

    Christoph Zierholz

As I heard the famous brewer Chuck Hahn once say, “I don’t just want you to drink more beer, I want you to drink more beers”.
Cheers to that.

    Zierholz German Ale

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Ingeegoodbee5:19 pm 29 May 08

The Belgians (or any other wogs for that matter) can put whatever they like in it and call it beer – I just don’t rate it, thats all.

Woody Mann-Caruso4:35 pm 29 May 08

it aint beer any more

Somebody better tell the Belgians 😉

Christoph didn’t say “Reinheitsgebot” or “German Beer Purity Law” – notice the absence of quotes in most of the story above? He does however brew according to traditional German brewing styles, which is why I said it. I mentioned the Reinheitsgebot as his beer does comply with it (many brewers of old did add yeast, they just didn’t realise they were doing it) as he doesn’t add any preservatives or nasty chemicals like many commercial breweries do.

Fonz – so where’s your brewery? Is it the same place as mine – in the laundry??

I raised a question on that a while ago, but I think the phrase Zierholz uses is “produced with respect for the German Purity Law” rather than “complies with in its entirety”.

Simply because 1) it doesn’t mention yeast or preservatives, and 2) nor does it allow for anyone to pay more than a pfenning (devalued and now replaced by the Reichsmark) per Maßkrug (bigger than a litre, smaller than a bucket, the things you drink from at Octoberfest).

So archaic laws specifying ingredients which allow for cross-contamination, deadly yeast infections, and fixed pricing aren’t really helpful in the marketplace.

Your sunlight fermented poisonbeer sounds great, Fonzie. Can we come and try your homebrew?

Ingeegoodbee3:47 pm 29 May 08

Woody – the other grains are fine, as for the other stuff – the momemt you add it, it aint beer any more … well not in my book

Woody Mann-Caruso3:41 pm 29 May 08

Althoguh he claims to brew by the Reinheitsgebot (German Beer Purity Law) I would say that this is not true purely based on the fact that he would use cultured yeast

By your logic, almost nobody in Germany has ever brewed beer in accordance with the law. Adding yeast slurry (that is, yeast cultured during fermentation) from one batch to another or pitching the wort straight on to the slurry of a previous batch has always been common practice, even before anybody even knew yeast existed. Using cultured yeast or repitching is entirely consistent with the methods of 16th C Bavarian brewers.

what the hell else would you put in beer?

Wheat, corn, oats, rice, unmalted barley, any of hundreds of different spices, fruit, flowers, herbs, chocolate, salt…

Happy to try your beer anytime Fonz.

Time to step up to the plate.

Ingeegoodbee3:05 pm 29 May 08

Assuming that the water was sterile, you’d be relying on the naturally occuring yeasts present in the barley (and less so on the hops). The big risk there is that you have no idea if your’re going to get a frieldy yeast or one that makes your beer taste like West End Draught.

I get amusement from the German Purity Law thing in as much as what the hell else would you put in beer?

Althoguh he claims to brew by the Reinheitsgebot (German Beer Purity Law) I would say that this is not true purely based on the fact that he would use cultured yeast (there is really no other way unless he just left his wort in the sun and expected it to ferment) and in doing this is no longer part of the original Reinheitsgebot (as there is no mention yeast, the only ingredients to be used were water, barley and hops).

However he makes a great beer and highly recommend but I run my own brewery and I am always amused by the use of the German Purity Law as a marketing point by breweries.

That goes for any Canberra business or intitution – if you have a local and interesting product then let us know.

I’m pretty sure there was a Zierholz special brew for Octoberfest, but it disappeared very quickly, so there’s not much detail on it.

captainwhorebags12:49 pm 12 May 08

A mate organised one of the mobile bar units for an Oktoberfest last year, and it was absolutely fantastic. Everything set up and ready for the good stuff to come out. The beer was great – from hazy memory I think it was one specifically done as an Oktoberfest style beer. Christoph supplied a mini keg of one of the other varieties as well.

I can understand why scraping money together is a difficult task – I’d be tempted to drink all the profits too.

Of course there is a special standard. As implied by the ‘beer for comment’ tagline, provide the RA admins beer, and in light of any other (monetary) income, you will most probably get airtime.

Woody Mann-Caruso11:15 am 12 May 08

and it is german beer, innit? wig and pen make canberra beer!

Well, by that logic, no, they don’t – if Zierholz is German beer, then the Wig and Pen makes German, English, American and Belgian beer.

You seem to be implying that there’s a double or special standard when there isn’t. I still don’t see how making the Zierholz article a feature takes away from any of those places in any way. it’s not like they were written up and not made feature articles – they just haven’t been written up at all. Something had to come first – it just happened to be this.

hairy nosed wombat10:43 am 12 May 08

astrojax said :

where’s the feature on bruno’s truffles, then? or silo’s bread? or any of a dozen excellent wineries? what about some of the fabulous art/culture enterprises in canberra?

Well, get writing. I want to see a review about Bruno’s truffles up by lunchtime, as there are only three things i enjoy more then beer.

3. good Wine
2. good chocolate.
1. sex

Btw. Mrs Wombat lets me combine 2 and 1 every so often.

Astrojax – it’s beer! I don’t think I could get quite as excited about local truffles or bread, although if Bruno or the folks from Silo (or Flute) were to invite RiotACT we’d be keen 🙂

Zierholz brews predominantly German style beers, all of which are brewed in Canberra – much like the Wig and Pen. I do like the Wig & Pen beers (I have even drunk the entire selection one evening – only half pints, but at least I made it unlike others :-), but having drunk copious amounts of both on a number of occaisions I would have to say that Zierholz is my favourite.

BTW – beer is art & culture.

where’s the feature on bruno’s truffles, then? or silo’s bread? or any of a dozen excellent wineries? what about some of the fabulous art/culture enterprises in canberra?

and it is german beer, innit? wig and pen make canberra beer!

Woody Mann-Caruso9:42 am 11 May 08

It’s beer. Canberra beer. Brewed in Canberra, by a Canberran, served all over Canberra for thirsty Canberrans. If that doesn’t deserve a ‘feature’, I don’t know what does.

i don’t mind the thread, per se; but ‘feature’ thread? none of the restaurant reviews have had such an ‘honour’…

I don’t mind it.

It’s like the restaurant reviews – it’s good to find out about a few local gems.

is it just me, or what makes this a ‘featured post’ apart fro the fact some RA bods had a tour? what great relevance to canberra? (nothing against the business, but is a bit of a big free ad…)

Christoph Zierholz9:02 am 09 May 08

First of all thanks for the write-up and kind comments about the beer. And the ongoing support from all you dedicated beer drinkers!

On the questions, bottling is still a little way off – a bottling plant is pretty pricey and I need to make some money first… you know how it goes. As the Australian bottled beer market however has an 80% share compared to fresh on tap (unfortunately) it will be an important step for the business to make. Anyone with some spare lottery winnings lying round can contact me…;-)

As for the mini-kegs, I do a 5 day hire (includes equipment and beer) for $80 and usually have most of the beers available, especially with a few days notice. I also do catering for bigger parties (21sts, weddings etc.) with mobile bar units that dispense 50 Litre kegs ($350 for hire with 1 keg or $500 with two, includes delivery, setup and pickup after).

Unfortunately I haven’t got a firm date on the restaurant opening but we’re working on it as hard as we can.

You can contact me direct if you are interested in organising a tour for a group and I hope to run regular tours once the restaurant is open. We’ll try and update the website and put up all the details there.

Prost!

v_man_returns9:32 am 08 May 08

How much are the mini kegs roughly, didn’t have prices on the site

Thanks for the great post Kramer. i love Zierholz beer, although I wasnt aware he had exoanded his range. I must now try the other eight beers. My favourite beer is from the Redoak brewery, however Zierholz is just as good. Is he planning to seel Zierholz by the bottle anytime soon?

v_man_returns1:55 pm 07 May 08

Are these brewery tours a common occurence, how does one go about booking it all? I should probably just check the website now…

Like the sound of the mini kegs too.

He should make a Rammstein-inspired beer…although I’ve heard they have a thing with urine so it might not be a good idea…

Kramer said :

I found that after drinking a fair amount of Zierholz (only because we had 8 beers to taste 🙂 I was feeling quite well then next morning. I guess this is due to the lack of preservatives. I’m sure with a bit of practice I could make the effort to put away 2 – 3 litres a day – especially the Shankbier!

I found the same thing in Germany.

Makes you wonder what all the additives in our normal beers (and food) are doing to your body, eh?

I like the beer drinking T-Shirt. Ima gonna get one of them for me to wear when my Tui shirt is in the wash.

I found that after drinking a fair amount of Zierholz (only because we had 8 beers to taste 🙂 I was feeling quite well then next morning. I guess this is due to the lack of preservatives. I’m sure with a bit of practice I could make the effort to put away 2 – 3 litres a day – especially the Shankbier!

GnT said :

Did I read that right? Did you say he drinks 2-3 litres per day???

I would too if I brewed beer this good – and bearing in mind some of that would be the very tasty light Schankbier (tried it at Canberra day) 2- 3 litres, no worries – beer is food!

I’m jealous of people who can brew good beer in vast quantities. Bastards.
Rammstein = traditional brewing music? Oh….Kay!
Good story anyway. I haven’t tried any of this bunch’s beers, but will go ferret some out pronto.

Yeah, he a a liver on stand by….stat

It’s easily possible, but not advisable.

Did I read that right? Did you say he drinks 2-3 litres per day???

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