Entries from November 1, 2011 - November 30, 2011

Sunday
Nov132011

European Stereotypes

Recently I received an email listing the new workshops in Europe offered by the Nikonians Academy.

Notice anything funny about how they targeted these courses?

 

For the UK customers, they focus on getting the most out of your software and hardware...

 

For the Dutch customers, the same technical focus, plus nature photography....

 

And then we see what they offer the French, Italian, and German customers....hmmm....

Saturday
Nov122011

Have you seen... [crystallization]

Here are two cool illustrations of materials crystalizing - both the effect and the crystals' appearance are neat.

The first video uses a super-saturated solution of sodium acetate, and the demonstrator triggers the reaction with a single crystal.  In his second display, he pours the solution onto crystals, and the resulting growth occurs so quickly that it forms effectively a stable stalagmite on the plate!

You'll have to pardon the voiceover on the next video -- it sounds like he's in the witness protection program.
The experimenter uses a solution of silver, and crystallization requires some electrical current applied.
He repeats the process with a higher current (crystallization occurs much faster) and with a solution of silver nitrate.  When viewed through his microscope, the effects (some time-lapsed) are beautiful and fascinating.

Wednesday
Nov092011

Hopfenland - the Wolnzach Lehrpfad

The Alps are a little too far away from the Hallertau region for hard-core hiking or trekking. However, biking is big here, and over a dozen towns have well-marked nature walks.  Many of these family-friendly trails include information signs along the way about flora, fauna, or culture so they are called a "lehrpfad" (learning path).

(Note:  like hops in Hallertau, many towns in wine regions have a similar path through vinyards.)

Our home base for the weekend in this German "Hopfenland", Wolnzach, has a Hops Lehrpfad that we walked:

The lehrpfad is about 4km long (under 2 miles) and has 26 signs along the way (like the one in the photo above).
It takes 2-3 hours to walk the circle, is open year round, and has a small parking area at the start/finish point.

We were interested in seeing hops fields close-up and learning more about hops and the region in general.
The hops field at the very beginning of the path was already harvested, but shows the grid structure clearly...

...with the poles, wire lines where the bines are attached, and rows of hops plants (now cut back) on the ground:

We read further about the "largest hops cultivation region in the world" (translation below):

From the sign:  Hops have been cultivated in Germany for over 1000 years... for a long time only near Monasteries and breweries... only in the last 200 years has Hallertau developed into a major production region...
today they export to over 100 countries throughout the world.

Hallertau has 14 official areas (each with their own "seal") that control and track quality across more than 1500 production entities and their 15,000 hectares.  Almost 50% more area is farmed today than in 1970. 


Sign #4 shows what to expect in the fields throughout the year, from the winter rest (Oct-Feb) to first growth (Apr-May) to bloom (July) and harvest (Aug-Sept).  The bines are cut back aggressively after the harvest for the winter.

Each hectare of hops requires 250-300 hours of labor a year, compared to grains that require only 10.  Wow.
Guiding the bines (3x a year, to help climb) and cutback is done by hand, although the harvest is semi-automated.

The hanging lines are 7.5m tall (24.6 ft).  Each hectare of hops field has 3500-4300 lines (2 per bine); this plus the main structure requires 30 kilometers of wire.  At harvest, one hectare yields 1500-2500kg of dried hops.

 

By signs #5-6 we still had not encountered a non-harvested hops field!  But we carried on and learned more:

From Sign 5:  hops bines have three stalks (we knew this from our hops wreath-making)... the plant can live up to 50 years but is mainly productive from 3-18 (then removed)... in May & June they grow 35cm a day, by harvest reaching 7m... only the female flowers are used (seeds aren't useful so pollination is prevented).
 

From Sign 6:  99% of hops production is used in brewing beer; the remainder is used in herbal medicines and as flavoring in liquors... beer brewing can use the flowers directly (like Lamplbräu) or extract syrup/pellets.

The flowers from one hops vine contain ~450g of resin, which is enough for 350 liters of "helles" beer.
As a rule, weizenbier uses 80g of dried hops per 100 liters, helles uses 120-150g, and pilsner uses 200-400g.
 

Finally, we rounded a corner and came directly to some "ripe" hops fields -- very tall and very full:

You can see the tire tracks in the background that the tractor and harvesting machine will follow:

The smell of the flowers was rich and fresh:

 

The next stretch along the lehrpfad had long hops fields...

... and the landscape in many directions was end-to-end hops fields:


The rest of the information signs were about nature in the area:  forest trees, insects & animals, etc.
At one point, cattle pastures took over, along with a Christmas Tree farm!

The sign below says:  this is a field of northern pines... trees are 8-12 years old when cut for Christmas.


In one of the cutest things of the day, the farmer has built a "wild bee hotel" in the edge of the woods:


Of course nothing in Bavaria is complete without at least one shrine:

The Wolnzach "learning path" was really quite fun to walk and photograph (plus we had great weather).
It's another of those things to do when you schedule your beer pilgrimage to Germany and Bavaria.

Tuesday
Nov082011

The locker system at Cologne's Hauptbahnhof

Frau A and I spent a weekend in Cologne recently.

On Sunday morning, our plan was this:  after checking out of the hotel, we'd place our suitcases in a locker at the train station, spend the day sightseeing in town, then retrieve the luggage before boarding the train to the airport.

We expected to find the typical long rows of metal lockers, where you insert some euros, get a key, etc..

Instead, we found this newer system that automatically conveys, stores, and retrieves the bags.

That morning we found the machine, put in our suitcases, and received a card identifying our luggage.
The video below was shot late that afternoon, as Frau A paid for and retrieved one of the suitcases.

The animation of the bag being run along the conveyor is pretty funny.  But it works quite quickly, no?
There's even a phone number on the machine to call if you happen to lose the card that the system gives you.

Although it's more expensive than a DIY locker, it seems to be a much better use of floor space in the Hauptbahnhof.

Sunday
Nov062011

The Ultimate NCAA Tournament Bracket of German Beers

About one year ago, to launch the Schnitzelbahn blog, we took 64 German beers (available in Munich, our home) and arranged them into a bracket like the NCAA Basketball Tournament.  The "regions" were loosely defined as:

16 helles
16 weissbier  (although the "selection committee" had to send a few Oktoberfest beers here)
16 pilsner
16 dunkel & other styles

The starting bracket looked like this (click for larger version):

Some beers were from large firms and are available all over Germany (and beyond).  Others were local.
Some beers were expensive, but one Munich helles costs just € 0.39 a bottle - much cheaper than water! 

For a little background, we wrote posts to introduce some of the styles and specific beers in the bracket:
- This was the very first post to kick things off
- Here we explain the differences between a Munich helles (a lager) and weissbier (an ale)
- In this post and this post we match beers with well-known universities/teams in NCAA basketball

So, with our faithful friends, we would test four beers per evening.  Each of the two pairs was tasted blindly.
The two winners were then pitted against each other -- basically Round 1 and Round 2 run back-to-back.
(In this case, "winner" simply meant "the beer I liked the best" - a subjective voting, but good enough.)

And yes, this tournament also had strong favorites, underdogs, and upsets along the way.
You can relive the action in our posts below:


Rounds 1 and 2


Helles Region
                                                                       Weissbier Region

Day 1                                                                                          Day 1

Day 2   (featuring Paulaner and Hacker-Pschorr)       Day 2  ("kristall" weissbiers)

Day 3   (featuring Andechs monastery beers)               Day 3  ("naturtrub" style beers)

Day 4                                                                                          Day 4  (weissbier vs. Oktoberfest)


Pilsner Region                                                                     Dunkel / other Region

Day 1                                                                                          Day 1

Day 2  (the "Power Pils")                                                       Day 2

Day 3  (featuring "export"-style beers)                            Day 3  (featuring the higher-alcohol "starkbiers")

Day 4                                                                                          Day 4  (also includes Oktoberfest style beers)

 

Sweet Sixteen round

Helles  and  Pilsner regions

Weissbier  and  Dunkel/other regions


The Elite Eight, Final Four, and the Final


This is what the final bracket looked like (again, click for full size version):


We had a blast doing this "beer tournament" and hope you enjoyed reading about it.

For more interesting posts about Germany & beer, click our Navigation categories on this page's top/right side.

Thanks for visiting!

 

Saturday
Nov052011

Have you seen... [Newton's beads and Newtonian liquid]

There are more interesting phenomena with "newtonian" materials...

First, "Newton's beads" (and goopy liquid molecules) use gravity for all it's worth:


Second, a Newtonian liquid creates an unexpected effect when being poured into a different flowing liquid:

I would love to be one of those guys that does fun science demonstrations in schools, on TV, etc.!

Friday
Nov042011

Lamplbräu Beer

At the end of our tour of the Lamplbräu brewery, Herr Stanglmayr kindly gave us a 6 pack with three of his pils and three of his weißbier to try, and we picked up some helles at the Deutsches Hopfenmuseum.

The helles was quite good. A smooth, classic helles style beer. Easy to drink, but with a good light hoppiness (from Hallertau hops, of course!) and just the right carbonation. When we visited the brewery, he had already sold his last batch of helles (apparently it goes quickly!), but we were able to pick up a six-pack at the Hopfenmuseum.

We'll have to try it up against Tegernseer and some of the better Munich helles, but we think it would stand up quite well in another beer tournament!

The pils was also much to our liking, not surprising for a southern Bavarian pilsner-style beer. It was a more hoppy beer, but not at all bitter. Very enjoyable.

Note the different bottle style - he had had some trouble with the bottles he normally used for pils and ended up having to use a different one. So it may be that this batch will be in a different bottle than ones we would get at another time.  

As you can probably tell from the lights, rides, and people passed out on the hill, we tried these at Oktoberfest (as part of our engagement picnic).

On a later day, we tried the Weißbier.

We are big fans! This is a great weißbier, and one that will please both weißbier lovers and those who find it too sweet. While it does have hints of the weißbier flavors, it is not at all sweet and is very subtle (but complex) in the flavoring. No one aroma or taste overpowers the others - it's quite a nice balance. Also an unfiltered weißbier, and one that is not too fizzy. We'll have to get some more of this!