Brewmaster’s Secret: Why Alcohol-Free Beer Is Winning Hearts

Brewmaster’s Secret: Why Alcohol-Free Beer Is Winning Hearts
Brewmaster’s Secret: Why Alcohol-Free Beer Is Winning Hearts. Credit | AP

United States: The head brew master for Weihenstephan, the world’s oldest brewery, has a secret which is, He really likes alcohol-free beer.

Asked to admit which type he surely prefers, Tobias Zollo promptly maintains he also appreciates Aspen alcohol-free beer for drinking at work or during lunchtime. It is taste like a soft drink but it is actually a low calorie version of it that the brewery created through evaporating the alcohol.

Unfortunately, you can’t drink beer every day,” he said with a laugh last week at the Bavarian state brewery in the southern German town of Freising, some 19.26 miles north of Munich.

As reported by yahoo.com, Zollo is not alone in his love for the serious drink. Currently non alcoholic beer, non alcoholic wines and other non alcoholic drinks are preferred since people are taking beers and wines.

For instance, Weihenstephan which was initially well and properly developed before the year 1040 as a brewery by some Benedictine monks; at present, non-alcoholic wheat beer and lager contributes 10% total volume and also it was higher in the recent years since the brewery began production in the 1990s of non-alcoholic beer and has enjoyed the statistics of the rest of beer industry in Germany.

“The people are unfortunately — I have to say that as a brewer — unfortunately drinking less beer,” Zollo said Friday, the day before Oktoberfest officially started. “If there is an opportunity to have the refreshingly pure taste of a traditional Weihenstephan beer but without alcohol, that is what we want.”

It is not just at some of today’s beer festivals that alcohol free beer is absent, it is even served at the Oktoberfest, widely referred to the world’s biggest beer party.

Out of 18 large tents in the festival, 16 of them give the drink during the 16 day celebration of the event. The non-alcoholic version of the beer will be sold at the same price to the alcoholic beer — between 13.60 and 15.30 euros ($15.12 and $17.01) a one liter mug (33 fluid ounces) — but consumers won’t get a hangover.

For the people who don’t like to drink alcohol and want to enjoy the Oktoberfest as well and I think and it’s really a good option Mikael Caselitz who is 24 of the Munich said on Saturday inside one of the tents and sometimes people fell like they have more fun with the alcohol and which is not a good thing just because of you and can also have fun without the alcohol.

He also added that if you want to come and drink alcohol-free beer nobody will judge you”

This year marked the first-time alcohol-free beer garden opened in the Munich. “Die Null,” which means “the Zero” in German and served the non-alcoholic beer, mocktails and other alcoholic beer and mocktails and other alcohol-free drinks near the city’s main train station this summer but was scheduled to close a few day before Oktoberfest opened.