500 Years of the Reinheitsgebot, the German Beer Purity Law (2024)

It’s the foam-topped pride of a beer-loving nation. The German Reinheitsgebot, or purity law, which is the world’s oldest food safety law still in existence, celebrates its 500th anniversary this year. The statute limits German beer brewers to just four ingredients: malt, hops, yeast and water.

The original 1516 Bavarian law governed that the only ingredients allowed were malt (germinated, dried barley), hops and water. The properties of yeast were unknown at the time, but it was later allowed, as was wheat, which was initially reserved for baking bread.

The law was enacted because unscrupulous brewers would use unsavory and even dangerous ingredients to adulterate and stretch what was then seen as a basic foodstuff. The regulations were later adopted across Germany, and have survived numerous iterations since.

All traditional German beers are brewed within the law. Some exceptions are made for regionally historic styles, though according to the Brauer-Bund, the German brewery association, these exceptions “merely prove the rule.” Such beers include the slightly sour Berliner Weisse and witbier from Thuringia that use orange peel and coriander seed.

Marc-Oliver Huhnholz of the Brauer-Bund says that 89% of Germans are aware of the beer purity law, 85% support it and 79% deem it “worthy of protection” and “precious.”

Huhnholz says that this “puts beer ahead of wine and even milk in Germans’ minds. The law may be old, but has lost none of it relevance.”

“It stands for transparency, clarity and purity,” he says. “Artificial aromas, colorants, stabilizers, enzymes, emulsifiers or preservatives are not allowed. German brewers must master the art of brewing from four natural ingredients alone. This takes knowledge and skill.”

With annual exports of in the neighbourhood of 400 million gallons, Germany sends more beer to the world than most other countries produce.

“The art of creating around 6,000 different German beers from merely four ingredients inspires people across the world,” says Huhnholz. “Brewers from around the globe flock to Germany to train here.”

The law may be famous and popular, but it’s not without its critics. Bernhard Vötter, head brewer at Privatbrauerei Waldhaus in the Black Forest, doesn’t like the overwhelming and widespread use of hop extracts and pellets. Processed from nothing but hops, these follow the law but lead to rather hom*ogenous, predictable flavors. Waldhaus only uses dried, natural hop umbels.

“This takes more experience and intuition,” says Vötter. ”Beer lives off its wonderful diversity, and a lot of that has been lost by using such standardized [derivatives]. That’s a huge pity.”

Germany boasts approximately 1,350 breweries, but like elsewhere, consolidation has fueled the desire for individual styles. Philipp Brokamp of Hausbrauerei Hops & Barley, a microbrewery in the hip Friedrichshain district of Berlin, was a trailblazer when he opened in 2008.

“Back then, nobody was interested,” says Brokamp. “Initially, people wanted classic styles like pils and weizen. Now there’s real demand for unusual beers.”

When it comes to the purity law, he lets out a rueful sigh.

“That’s a difficult subject,” says Brokamp. “I’ve come to view it as a kind of restriction. I have colleagues who demand a law of natural ingredients. Lots of synthetic processing aids, say for filtration, are used in brewing, even within the purity law, but they don’t counts as ingredients. I think the Reinheitsgebot needs a revision.”

Beers brewed with more ingredients cannot legally be called bier. Thus, Brokamp avoids the term. He stays on the right side of the law with descriptively named “Lemon Drop Ale” and “Orange Mojito.”

In the U.S., brewmaster John Maier at Rogue Ales in Oregon has used Sriracha, coffee and chipotle peppers in his beers. As you might imagine, he finds Germany’s purity law restrictive.

“You can do a lot with those four ingredients, but we have a ‘dare, risk, dream’ philosophy at Rogue,” says Maier. “The German purity law is antiquated and needs to go away or be updated. It’s like brewing with handcuffs!”

Sam Calagione of Dogfish Head Brewery in Delaware (winner of Wine Enthusiast‘s 2015 Wine Star award for Brewery of the Year) sees the purity law as a kind of “art censorship.” If forced to work under it, he says, “I think my inclination would be to get as innovative and experimental as possible with the four allowed ingredients.”

But he also credits the Reinheitsgebot. While it only is enforced in Germany with its domestically produced beers, it created a worldwide brewing ethos. Calagione’s reason for opening Dogfish Head was to make beers outside these widely respected rules.

“When I started out in the very underdeveloped craft-beer market of the 1990s, my reaction to the law was hatred,” he says. “Today, it’s a sense of fondness for something I could rebel against.”

Many German craft brewers might feel the same. Huhnholz, however, sees no need for change.

“Around 98% of so-called craft beers are brewed according to the purity law anyway,” he says. ”Creativity is in no way restricted. There is huge diversity within four ingredients.”

Last Updated: May 4, 2023

500 Years of the Reinheitsgebot, the German Beer Purity Law (2024)

FAQs

500 Years of the Reinheitsgebot, the German Beer Purity Law? ›

The decree known as the Reinheitsgebot, issued in Ingolstadt in 1516, had three aims: to protect drinkers from high prices; to ban the use of wheat in beer so more bread could be made; and to stop unscrupulous brewers from adding dubious toxic and even hallucinogenic ingredients as preservatives or flavourings.

What was the German beer brewing purity law? ›

The German Reinheitsgebot, or purity law, which is the world's oldest food safety law still in existence, celebrates its 500th anniversary this year. The statute limits German beer brewers to just four ingredients: malt, hops, yeast and water.

Do all German beers follow the Reinheitsgebot? ›

Since 1906, the purity law governs beer brewing in all of Germany. A variety of other beer regulations also existed in Germany during the Middle Ages, such as Nuremberg in 1293 and Erfurt in 1351, but only Reinheitsgebot has been enforced until today.

What was the beer purity law in Germany in 1516? ›

In April 1516, the Bavarian Duke Wilhelm IV issued his Beer Purity Law, stipulating that only water, barley and hops were allowed to be used as key ingredients for beer production.

When and for what purpose did the Germans implement the purity law also known as Reinheitsgebot? ›

Origins. The Reinheitsgebot Law, or German Purity Law, was enacted in 1906 and served to limit the ingredients used in beer making. Its origins date back much further, however, starting in Bavaria in 1516.

What ingredient was not allowed by the original German purity law? ›

According to the 1516 Bavarian law, the only ingredients that could be used in the production of beer were water, barley and hops. The text does not mention yeast as an ingredient, although yeast was at the time knowingly used in the brewing process.

Does Becks follow German purity law? ›

For more than 140 years, Beck's has been brewed with only 4 ingredients, in accordance with the legendary German Purity Law. Founded by Heinrich Beck in 1873 on the banks of the river Weser in the free Hanseatic city of Bremen, Beck's is a characterful Pilsner.

When did Reinheitsgebot end? ›

On 12 March 1987, the European Union ruled that the Reinheitsgebot was a restraint of trade, and as a member, Germany was forced to allow nonconforming beers to be sold in Germany.

Is Weissbier a Reinheitsgebot? ›

But Weissbier—German wheat beers—were well enjoyed in the 16th Century by a Bavarian royal family, the Dukes of Wittelsbach. This royal family was able to use its influence so that just a single brewery in the village of Schwarzach would be permitted to make Weissbier in Bavaria despite the Reinheitsgebot.

Where did the Reinheitsgebot come from? ›

One of the reasons that Germans drink so little of anyone else's beer can be traced back to the Reinheitsgebot, usually translated into English as the German Beer Purity Law, which was first adopted in Bavaria, the country's most prodigious brewing region, in April 1516, according to the wishes of Bavaria's ruler, Duke ...

How old is the German Beer Purity Law? ›

Duke Wilhelm IV's beer purity regulation of 1516, which was preceded by earlier rules on beer production, was gradually implemented in other parts of southern Germany. It eventually became law in the north and thus the whole country in 1906.

Which country still recognizes a beer brewing purity law? ›

The German Beer Purity Law was introduced by the Bavarian Duke Wilhelm IV in 1516. It continues to dictate how beer is produced in Germany to this very day, making it the oldest surviving food and drink law in the world.

What is naturally brewed according to the German purity law? ›

In Germany, four natural ingredients may be used for brewing beer – water, malt, hops and yeast. This is governed by the Purity Law of 1516, the oldest, valid consumer protection law in the world that is still unchanged. It stands for transparency, naturalness, clarity and purity.

Is the Reinheitsgebot still in effect? ›

It was first enacted in 1516 and is one of the oldest food and beverage regulations in the world that is still in effect, albeit with some modifications. The Reinheitsgebot stipulates for German brewers that beer can only be brewed using four primary ingredients: water, malted barley, hops, and yeast.

What are the 4 ingredients in German beer? ›

With over 10,000 years of freshness since 1634 the beer is made up of 4 major ingredients that never ever change. Water, malt, hops and yeast.

Can you get German beer in America? ›

While some German beer styles are seldom seen stateside, there are plenty of American breweries that have found inspiration in these traditional styles and are committed to introducing them to a new generation of drinkers. Below is a list our experts have curated to showcase the best German beers to drink right now.

What is the German Beer Purity Law Hefeweizen? ›

The style originated around the 1520s in the breweries of Bavaria, Germany. When Hefeweizen was first brewed, the German regulations did not allow it to flourish. In 1487, Germany proposed the Reinheitsgebot or Purity Law which states that the only allowable ingredients in making beer were barley, hops and water.

What is the Commission v Germany beer purity law? ›

The Biersteuergesetz (Beer Tax Act, often referred to as the Reinheitsgebot or Beer Purity Law) originally from 1516, banned marketing of beer with any additives. It also reserved the name 'Bier' for malted barley, hops, yeast and water only. Maize and rice being used meant the product could not be called 'Bier'.

When was yeast added to the German purity law? ›

This came to be known as the “Bavarian Reinheitsgebot”. Yeast was not yet used for fermentation and therefore was not added to the list of allowed ingredients until 1906.

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