Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

A punch in German beer’s gut

As revered brewing law turn 500, ales losing youth appeal “I guess it’s just a generation­al thing. Young people just aren’t into beer the way our parents are.”

- By Erik Kirschbaum Reinheitsg­ebot, — Marlene Schmidt, a 25-year-old Berlin student Reinheitsg­ebot

BERLIN — For 500 years, Germany’s famous beer purity law has been protecting the country’s beer drinkers from contaminan­ts, chemicals and any other additives that unsavory merchants might have thought of adding. But the law, known as

which marked its 500th anniversar­y last month, has been unable to protect the country’s 1,350 brewers and the proud industry from a modern plague: health consciousn­ess.

Beer consumptio­n is dwindling in Germany, falling by an alarming rate of about 30 percent over the last 25 years as younger Germans have increasing­ly turned away from the country’s most famous beverage despite the law that bans anything but four ingredient­s — water, hops, malt and yeast — from being used to make beer here.

The country’s per capita beer consumptio­n fell from 37 gallons a year in 1991 to 25 gallons in 2015. (By comparison, U.S. annual beer consumptio­n is just under 20 gallons per person.)

“Germans are drinking a lot less beer nowadays in pursuit of modern trends like wellness, sports and living healthy,” said Friedel Drautzburg, the owner-operator of one of Berlin’s most popular pubs, the Staendige Vertretung. “On top of that, it’s become a real social turnoff to be buzzed, or a little drunk and/or very drunk. Thirty or 40 years ago, it was socially acceptable to get blitzed. Not anymore.”

Drautzburg, 78, said that 500 to 800 people come into his establishm­ent in the government quarter each day, which represents a solid annual increase over the years, but that beer sales have been slipping as people turn to nonalcohol­ic beverages. He sells about 48,000 gallons per year.

“We’ve got to be realistic and sober about the fact that people want to live longer nowadays and they see cutting down on the alcohol as one of the keys to longevity,” added Drautzburg, who said he stopped drinking alcohol 40 years ago “because I realized I was someone who couldn’t be reasonable about drinking. I managed to stop in time. Many of my friends from back then didn’t, and they’re no longer alive.”

The beer industry is still very much thriving in Germany, a country that despite the erosion in sales still produced about 2.6 billion gallons of the beverage — of which more than 350 million gallons, or more than $1 billion worth, were exported. Italy, France, the Netherland­s, China and the U.S. were the main buyers.

The beer purity law was decreed April 23, 1516, by Munich’s Duke Wilhelm in the Bavarian town of Ingolstadt amid concerns that contaminan­ts such as soot, poisonous roots and sawdust were being added to beer. The law was also aimed at preventing crops used to make bread from being wasted on brewing. The has become a symbol of highqualit­y German beer, even though some critics have said it has actually been a form of protection­ism to keep other beers from the German market.

Chancellor Angela Merkel celebrated the anniversar­y of the law — said to be the oldest existing regulation governing food or beverages — in Ingolstadt last month.

In her speech to beer industry leaders after taking a big sip of alcohol-free beer, Merkel first quoted Martin Luther by saying: “If you don’t have a beer, you don’t have anything to drink.” She was full of praise for German beer and its strong export sales. She drew laughter and applause by quoting a former chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, who said: “While drinking beer, there’s an inherent desire for people to criticize their government.”

“I don’t really like the taste of beer or alcohol,” said Marlene Schmidt, a 25-year-old Berlin student enjoying a warm spring day in the center of the city. “I guess it’s just a generation­al thing. Young people just aren’t into beer the way our parents are. Germany has been a beer country for so long, but it’s not really a cultural symbol for anyone under 35 or 40.”

Schmidt said she drinks the equivalent of about a pint of beer a week, while her parents average that much in a day.

“When I was in high school, we made beer once as a chemistry project; it was part of our good German education,” she said with a wry laugh. “I was only 16 at the time, and we got to drink it when it was finished. It tasted pretty good then. But it’s just not something young people really want to drink anymore.”

That is the attitude that has the country’s brewers scared. In a nation where the drinking age is 16 and beer used to be available from automatic machines, brewers have been rushing to develop mixed beer drinks and alcohol-free beers, proudly pointing to steady increases in those niche-market sales while the overall beer consumptio­n in Germany shrinks each year.

The falling consumptio­n has also led to a price war in some regions, with prices tumbling to less than 50 cents for a pint bottle of beer — about half the price of bottled water in some shops.

“I used to have a few beers each week, but not anymore,” said Diane Adamsky, 47, who delivers flowers in Berlin and has gone from drinking about a quart of beer a week to nearly zero. “There are so many other mixed drinks available now that taste so much better.”

But to Heiko Maecken, a 53-year-old financier, there is no better way to finish off the day than with a cool, fresh beer.

“I’ve always loved a good beer and am definitely not drinking any less than 30 years ago,” said Maecken, who believes he drinks about a pint a day.

“Beer in Germany is good for your health. It’s got important nutrients and is definitely healthier than soft drinks, smoothies or mixed drinks. I don’t like any of that stuff. My four daughters drink all that. It’s not for me, though. I’ll take a lovely fresh beer off the tap over anything else.”

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER/AP ?? Beer consumptio­n is dwindling in Germany as health conscious youth increasing­ly opt out despite a beer purity law.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER/AP Beer consumptio­n is dwindling in Germany as health conscious youth increasing­ly opt out despite a beer purity law.

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