Today we left Prague in search of the Herold Brewery in Březnice.We had carefully mapped our route and were confident that we could get there without a problem. When we finally found the little village of Březnice we discovered it to be a small farming village with no sign of a brewery. Since we couldn’t find the brewery on our own, we called our contact, David, at the brewery and asked where it was exactly. He asked if we could see any landmarks. I could clearly see the distinctive cooling stacks of a nuclear power plant off in the distance so I relayed that bit of information to him. He responded by saying that there was no nuclear power plant anywhere close to Březnice. Turns out there are three towns called “Březnice” in the Czech Republic and we were clearly in the wrong one. We were in southern Bohemia close to České Budějovice and the Březnice we were looking for was in western Bohemia closer to Plzeň. Opps. A quick drive across the country brought us to the slightly larger Březnice and home of the Herold Brewery.
The brewery was founded in 1503 and has been constantly brewing uninterrupted since. Under the Communists, the brewery was used mainly as a laboratory where it received some hand-me-down parts now and then, so the brewery’s equipment is ancient. Most of it is steam-powered by a large coal-fired boiler. They cannot operate their bottling line, brewhouse, and malting area at the same time because there is simply not enough steam power to drive it all. The brewery is now owned by a group of American investors who are trying to turn it around and make it profitable which is no easy feat.
It was very interesting to see a small Czech brewery like Herold operating in comparison to a incredibly large brewery like Pilsner Urquell. When you see the equipment at Herold and you taste the end-product, it really makes you wonder how they extract such a wonderful product out of such “well-used” equipment. The brewhouse was last refurbished in 1952 and the kettles in the room are clearly a decades, upon decades older. Most of the historical papers about the brewery were destroyed by the Communists. Walking through their cellars, which are currently undergoing a maintenance cycle, you find it amazing that the lagering tanks don’t have leaks from the all the rust that forms in the damp cellars.
David, the brewery director, told us he would love to install a new brewhouse with half the capacity the current brewhouse has so he could produce some more novel beers for the Czech market. Currently, Herold produces basically four beers; two traditional Czech blond lagers and two dark Czech lagers. They are known for their dark lagers as it is virtually unknown for a Czech brewery to bottle or keg dark beer. The Czech beer market is just beginning to open its eyes to the wider variety of beer styles in the world and Herold wants to be on the forefront of that awakening.
Right next to the brewery is a castle. In fact, the town of Březnice used to have two breweries. Herold was the castle brewery and the other was the municipal brewery. The castle was closed by the time we finished touring the brewery, but he assured us it was certainly worthy of a stop if we could find the time.
We are spending the night at the Equitana Hotel Resort 2 km outside of Březnice. It is a modern hotel with modern amenities like a pool, whirlpool, bowling alley (bowling is big in the Czech Republic), high-speed Internet access and horse riding. We had dinner in the hotel’s restaurant (more pork) where I finally managed to get a salad that consisted of more than a few carrot shavings and some cabbage. I also learned the word for non-alcoholic beer the hard way. I didn’t know the Czech people would even attempt to make such a foul-tasting liquid. After two sips I ordered a Pilsner Urquell. Surprisingly, they didn’t serve Herold beer. David said that there is a very strong relationship between pubs, restaurants and breweries with the breweries giving the owners of the eating and drinking establishments significant cash payments to insure exclusive serving rights for their products. Herold, being a smaller brewery, simply cannot afford those cash payments.
After being immersed in Czech culture for a total of five days now, I can now understand why Bohemians are the brunt of so many jokes around the world. Between the quirky language that has very few similarities to other Slavic languages, bribes that grease the wheels of government and business, and a laid-back attitude about life in general, it is amazing to both Doug and I that this country has made the great strides it has since 1989. We really can’t complain that much. The beer is good, the food tasty, and the people are nice. What more do you need?
Tomorrow, we are on the road again to the Želiv monastery which I’m sure promises to be an interesting experience. It might be a couple of days without a new post as I don’t think we’ll have Internet connectivity until we reach our hotel in České Krumlov on Sunday.
See photos from today’s wanderings around Bohemia