Lagers range in colour from extremely pale, through amber beers such as Vienna lager, to dark brown and black Dunkel and Schwarzbier. The depth of colour comes from the specific grain bill used in the beers; paler lagers use unroasted barley and may even add other grains such as rice or corn to lighten the color and provide a crisp, bright finish to the flavour. Darker lagers use roasted grains and malts to produce a more roasted, even slightly burnt, flavour profile.
Pale lager Pilsener beer , sometimes called "the Father of the Pilsner" The most common lagers in worldwide production are
pale lagers. The flavour of these lighter lagers is usually mild, and the producers often recommend that the beers be served refrigerated. Pale lager is a very pale to
golden-coloured lager with a well attenuated body and
noble hop bitterness. The brewing process for this beer developed in the mid 19th century when
Gabriel Sedlmayr took
pale ale brewing techniques back to the
Spaten Brewery in
Germany and applied it to existing lagering brewing methods. This approach was picked up by other breweries, most notably the
Pilsner Urquell Brewery in
Pilsen,
Bohemia (now part of the
Czech Republic), where
Josef Groll produced the first
Pilsner beer. The resulting pale coloured, lean and stable beers were very successful and gradually spread around the globe to become the most common form of beer consumed in the world today. Another pale lager variety is
Helles, native to Munich.
Amber lager Amber lagers are generally darker in color than pale lagers, often a deep tan or amber color. Among the common styles of amber lager are
Märzen, traditionally brewed in Munich for the celebration of
Oktoberfest,
Bock, a higher alcohol-content amber lager originating in
Einbeck in central Germany, and the widely distributed Vienna lager. The Vienna lager style was developed by
Anton Dreher in the late 1830s. While on a trip to England and Scotland in 1833 with Gabriel Sedlmayr, Dreher gained knowledge of the pale malt making process. Dreher combined the pale malt making techniques with cold bottom fermentation, using yeast given to him by Sedlmayr. In late 1840, Anton Dreher started renting a cellar to mature his beer under cold conditions, a process that is called "lagering". The resulting beer was clean-tasting and relatively pale for the time thanks to the use of smoke-free "English" hot air kilns, resulting in a pale amber colour. The beer style became well-known internationally, in particular due to the Dreher brewery's restaurant and beer hall at the
International Exposition of 1867 in Paris, and started getting copied by many of the US-American lager breweries founded by German immigrants.
Dark lager Dunkel beer
Dunkel is German for "dark". Dunkel was the original style of the Bavarian villages and countryside, and the most common lager beer in the 19th century. At 4.5% to 6%
abv, Dunkel is weaker than
Doppelbock, a stronger dark Bavarian beer. Pale lagers were not common until the later part of the 19th century, when the use of lighter roasted malts spread. Dark lagers may be called
Dunkel,
tmavé or
Schwarzbier depending on region, colour or brewing method.
Tmavé is Czech for "dark" – beers which are so dark as to be black are termed
černé pivo, "black beer".
Schwarzbier, a much darker, almost black beer with a chocolate or licorice-like flavour, similar to
stout, is brewed in
Saxony and
Thuringia. ==See also==