a division of Crescent Crown Distributing

We're All About Great Beer!

   

 

 

Beer Styles

(Click to see the beers!)

Amber Hybrid Beers

American Ales

Belgian & French Ales

Belgian Style Strong Ales

Bocks

Dark Lagers

English Brown Ales

English Pale Ales

European Amber Lagers

Fruit Beers

German Wheat & Rye Ales

India Pale Ales

Light Hybrid Beers

Light Lagers

Pilsners

Porters

Scottish & Irish Style Ales

Sour Ales

Specialty Beers

Spice/Vegetable Beers

Stouts

Strong Ales

Click Here to See All of Our Dark Lagers

Dark Lagers

The two basic types of beers are ales and lagers. Ales are fermented at warmer temperatures with yeast that thrives at those temperatures and that do most of their work at the top of the fermentation tank, hence the term "top fermenting" is used when discussing ales. Lagers, on the other hand, utilize yeast that work at cooler temperatures and do most of their fermenting near the bottom of the tank, hence the term "bottom fermenting" is applied to lagers.

The origins of modern lagers date to Austria (Vienna) in the early nineteenth century. Anton Dreher is credited with brewing the very first lager in 1836. Prior to that time, all beers being brewed were ales, but Dreher was able to isolate a strain of yeast that fermented at lower, lager temperatures and created a beer that was brewed entirely with that yeast. His creation eventually became the Vienna Lager.

German brewers quickly adopted Dreher's creation and brewed Vienna lagers in Bavaria for years, though very few Vienna lagers can be found in Europe today. In the late nineteenth century, German brewers started brewing the Marzen, or Oktoberfest style of beer which quickly became more popular than the Vienna Lager.  German brewers also created a dark, rich lager known as the Munich Dunkel which is still popular in Bavaria and through many parts of the world today.

Taste

Dark Lagers are typically free of fruity ester or spicy phenol flavors, so they are usually quite drinkable and not overwhelming, even for first time dark beer drinkers who may be surprised at the "clean", crisp experience that a Dark Lager provides. Dark Lagers rely on darker malts for color and some flavor, but none of them are typically heavy on roasted malts

Food Pairings

 

Dark Lagers are wonderful beers to drink on cool, Fall days. Their malty richness and pleasant, sweet flavors also tend to pair well with a variety of foods. Most of them are also strong enough in flavor to stand up to spicy dishes, barbecue and other flavorful foods. 

Dark American Lagers

The ingredients used to make Dark American Lagers are very similar to those used in Standard or Premium American Lagers. Six row barley is frequently used, though sometimes two row can be present. Adjuncts like rice and corn are frequently used as fermentables, which makes recipes for Dark American Lagers very similar to those for beers like Miller High Life, Budweiser, Coors Original and Heineken.

Munich Dunkel

Darker than the Oktoberfest beers but also from Munich are the Munich Dunkel beers. In German, the word “dunkel” simply means dark. Munich Dunkels are typically dark brown beers that are heavy on malt flavors (sweet), in part because of the moderately carbonate water in the Munich area.

Dark as they are, Munich Dunkels are not as dark nor as strong as another dark lager from Munich, the Doppelbock. Otherwise, they are certainly far darker than their cousin, the Munich Helles lager. In German, Helles means pale and they are discussed further in our article on Pale Lagers.

Schwarzbier (Black Beer)

Schwarzbier is likely a variation of the Munich Dunkel style, but it varies from the Dunkel in its greater use of darker roasted malts. While the Munich Dunkel style can sometimes contains very small amounts of roasted malt, the Schwarzbier style always contains some roasted malt. Roasted malt provides a slightly dry, roasted flavor and a typically deeper, dark color.

Though not as dark or dense as Porters, the Schwarzbier is sometimes called a "Black Beer" as a reference to it's dark appearance but it is rarely a truly black beer. Schwarzbier has also been referred to as a "black Pils" at times in reference to its dark color coupled with moderate hop bitterness.

© 2008 Crescent Crown Distributing/ Little Guy Distributing All Rights Reserved
402 South 54th Place • Phoenix • Arizona 85034
Telephone 602-346-5500

Contact the Webmaster at: bmack@worldclassbeverages.com