Beer and Baroque – A High Brow Brew and Bites Tour

Tour is 5 hours including a light lunch, 10 minute tram ride to site.

“Bohemia is … the fountainhead … of most beer in the world,” says Garret Oliver, an award-winning brew master of the Brooklyn Brewery and the leading beer critic in America. “Czech beer is phenomenal” and “Czech beer standards are the best in the world. There’s simply nothing to compare, in terms of lagers,” says the New York Times food and drink writer Evan Rail. Czech lager is best fresh and it doesn’t come fresher drawn than right where it’s brewed and a few of Prague’s newly re-opened microbreweries, set in 18th century ambience, are resurrecting the 1000- year old tradition of brewing in Bohemia. This tour is designed for those who are interested in beer and don’t mind the Baroque as well as those who are interested in Baroque and don’t mind a beer. You will visit two of the oldest breweries in Prague accompanied by Max Bahnson, one of Prague’s leading zymurgical authorities.

You will visit Břevnovský Klášterní Pivovar, a Monastery Brewery of the Black Monks, which is the oldest male monastery in Bohemia, founded in 993. The monastery’s church of St. Margaret, built (1708-1735) is one of the best architectural examples of the Czech Baroque. In the cellar of the church is a Roman crypt from 1040 and it is one of the most valuable Romanesque structures in the Czech lands. Beer was made here for 900 years, until the brewery closed by the end of the 19th century. But the tradition has been reclaimed; a new brewery was opened in mid-2012. Come along, taste their beers, see and learn how they are made and maybe even talk to the people who make it, all in the restored Baroque spaces of the old stables.

Also on the itinerary of this tour is Strahov Monastery of The Royal Canonry of Premonstratensians, one of the oldest of this Order in the world. It was founded in 1143 and the first documentation of beer brewing comes from the beginning of the 14th century. Just beyond the walls of Strahov, located on the hill over the Prague Castle, are breath-taking views of the city, which will be that much more picturesque after a glass of the monastic St. Norbert’s micro-brew. The Baroque Strahov Library contains book collections numbering approximately 200,000 volumes.

Return to KENT STATE PRAGUE 2019 Home