I recently found a table with an overview of the number of breweries of 11 of 25 German States, split by top- and bottom-fermenting breweries, and total production volumes, again divided by top- and bottom-fermenting breweries.
I found it interesting because these statistics gave some insight into how prevalent bottom fermentation had become in some states, and which states’ breweries managed to brew on a larger scale than others.
So here are the raw numbers:
Breweries | Production Volume [hl] | |||
State | TF | BF | TF | BF |
Prussia | 4,594 | 1,983 | 6,064,756 | 16,220,485 |
Saxony | 583 | 172 | 1,987,481 | 2,393,978 |
Hesse | 17 | 210 | 1,097 | 998,493 |
Mecklenburg | 351 | 46 | 129,254 | 412,878 |
Thuringia | 345 | 656 | 323,738 | 2,131,323 |
Oldenburg | 70 | 17 | 33,493 | 145,443 |
Braunschweig | 43 | 34 | 25,498 | 450,966 |
Anhalt | 55 | 18 | 95,406 | 316,109 |
Lübeck | 26 | 6 | 38,498 | 105,175 |
Bremen | 8 | 10 | 23,389 | 210,752 |
Hamburg | 20 | 10 | 266,661 | 743,176 |
Now let’s look at the ratio of bottom- to top-fermenting breweries per state:
State | BF / TF |
Prussia | 0.43 |
Saxony | 0.30 |
Hesse | 12.35 |
Mecklenburg | 0.13 |
Thuringia | 1.90 |
Oldenburg | 0.24 |
Braunschweig | 0.79 |
Anhalt | 0.33 |
Lübeck | 0.23 |
Bremen | 1.25 |
Hamburg | 0.50 |
What’s very noticeable is that there are only three states with more bottom- than top-fermenting breweries: Hesse, Thuringia and Bremen. Hesse stands out especially because are over 12 times more bottom-fermenting breweries than top-fermenting breweries. Interestingly, most states still had a relatively large number of top-fermenting breweries. But once we look at the average production volumes per brewery of top- vs bottom-fermenting breweries, we’re getting a different picture:
hl / Brewery | |||
State | TF | BF | BF / TF |
Prussia | 1,320.15 | 8,179.77 | 6.20 |
Saxony | 3,409.06 | 13,918.48 | 4.08 |
Hesse | 64.53 | 4,754.73 | 73.68 |
Mecklenburg | 368.25 | 8,975.61 | 24.37 |
Thuringia | 938.37 | 3,248.97 | 3.46 |
Oldenburg | 478.47 | 8,555.47 | 17.88 |
Braunschweig | 592.98 | 13,263.71 | 22.37 |
Anhalt | 1,734.65 | 17,561.61 | 10.12 |
Lübeck | 1,480.69 | 17,529.17 | 11.84 |
Bremen | 2,923.63 | 21,075.20 | 7.21 |
Hamburg | 13,333.05 | 74,317.60 | 5.57 |
Very clearly, bottom-fermenting breweries were producing significantly more beer on average than top-fermenting breweries, across the board.
Again, the most noticeable is Hesse, but for a different reason: their average production volume per top-fermenting brewery is just 64 hl. Given that the number of top-fermenting breweries was tiny to begin with, this looks as if the last few remaining top-fermenting breweries were glorified home-breweries, not unlike what we had with Carinthian Steinbier in the decades before its demise.
The only state where top-fermenting brewing was still relatively strong was Hamburg, as it’s the only one with an average 5-digit hl production volume.
The main takeaway from these statistics is certainly that even though bottom-fermenting breweries were generally more industralised and at a more modern technical level with the capabilities to produce larger volumes of beer, many of the less mechanised top-fermenting breweries still seem to have hung around for a while. Unfortunately, these statistics don’t give any insight into what beer styles were brewed. A lot of them may still have been the old local beer styles.
Fascinating. “Prussia”, of course, was much more than “core Prussia” at this time, and includes, I’m assuming, Hanover and much of the Rhineland: I wonder if there was much of a difference between the western and eastern parts … Also, of course, it raises the question: were those brewers emigrating from Germany to the Americas in the 19th century from top-fwrmenting or bottom-fermenting parts, and how did this alter as the 19th century progressed? I’m guessing most before 1840 would have been top-fermenters …
Indeed. The complete statistics include more detailed data for Prussia, including the Rhineland. My plan is to further discuss this in a followup post.
Excellent stuff. There’s been far too little detailed work on the expansion of lager, so this is very valuable. Looking forward to the next post.