Green Name, Brown Bottle, Great Beer: Wernesgruner Pilsner
May 26 '06
The Bottom Line For $5 a six-pack why would you buy Bud?
Deep in the heart of what was once East Germany there is a tiny little brewery with a long history in the quaint town of Wernesgrun. Maybe youve heard of it, but more likely you havent (its OK, I hadnt either before I found out they had a brewery). The brewery is called, fittingly enough, Wernesgruner, and they make a legendary pilsner that is sold far and wide in Europe, Africa, and Asia.
My first taste of the beer came just the other day, when I picked up a six-pack at the local Aldi discount supermarket. In case you dont have an Aldi nearby, you should know that they are a German-owned concern that stocks mostly private label brands at deeply discounted prices. Our local Aldi, until quite recently, was not able to sell beer and wine, though many do. When they finally received their alcohol license, one of the first beers they offered was Wernesgruner Pilsner.
When I got my six-pack home I immediately popped the bottles out of the six-pack carrier, and was a little distressed to see a best by date of December 2005 stamped on the package. No wonder theyre so cheap, I thought. But then I looked closer and saw that I was mistaken: the 2005 was really 2006. These old eyes can do that to me sometimes.
Anyway, that meant I had pretty fresh beer. Kudos, too for the brown glass bottles attractively adorned with a gold logo label and a flashy foil neck wrapper done up in the same color (brown glass protects the beer inside from harmful light much better than green glass does).
Before I finally get to the beer itself, Ill travel down memory lane a bit too an old brand I once enjoyed, because Wernesgruner Pilsner reminds me of it a bit. That beer was Berliner Pils, another East German brand that was actually sold in the USA years before the wall came crashing down. It was a very respectable example of German pilsner and sold for a song back in the eighties, thanks to a very favorable exchange rate.
The brewery claims to have been brewing since 1436, though Pilsner, of course, has not been around nearly so long. Their motto is Alles im Grunen Bereich (everything in the green circle), sort of a circle of life reference as far as I can tell. And their flagship brew is Wernesgruner Pilsner.
Wernesgruner Pilsner pours to a light golden color with a thick, spritzy head formation that fades almost as quickly as it forms. The nose promises fresh grassy hops; the palate delivers them. At first, the beer is crisp and biscuity malty with fresh bread notes and a very clean palate. The hops slowly begin to emerge, and they leave a gentle minty-grassy buzz on the tongue that balances the beer perfectly.
That hop buzz lingers a little after sipping and makes this a very refreshing beer indeed, and one you could easily drink a lot of. Partially thats because the beer is a little lighter (just a little mind you) in body and than say, Warsteiner German Pils. But consider this: Wernesgruner sells for a ridiculously low $4.99 a six-pack. That makes it a much better buy than Becks or St. Pauli Girl, and it has more flavor than those beers too.
In fact, this beer is actually cheaper than Bud in many places, and that makes it a great brew to move you away from the so-called King of Beers.
Epinions Criteria:
Overall Rating: Four stars.
Beer Rating: Better than most.
Weight: Medium body
Flavor: Bitter.
Complexity: Average.
Price: $4.99 per six-pack.
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