Franconian beer styles have clear pairing principles: Kellerbier pairs with Brotzeit and Weisswurst, Rauchbier with smoked meats and ham, Ungespundetes with fatty dishes like Schäufele. Bockbier and Doppelbock work as a finish alongside sweet dishes. The core principle: the beer should either reinforce similar flavours or balance contrasting ones.
Classic Pairings
| Beer | Food | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Kellerbier | Obazda with farmhouse bread | The freshness of Kellerbier cuts through the fattiness of Obazda. The classic beer cellar combination. |
| Ungespundetes | Schäufele, Sauerbraten | Low carbonation means the beer doesn't compete with the food. The full body complements rich braising sauces. |
| Rauchbier | Pressack, smoked cheese, Schinken | Smoke to smoke — the smoked aromas in the beer harmonise with smoked or cured meats. |
| Märzen | Nürnberger Rostbratwurst, Bratwürste | The balanced Märzen is the universal companion — neither too strong nor too light for sausages. |
| Rotbier | Leberknödel, Blutwurst | The malt sweetness of Rotbier balances the intensity of offal dishes. |
| Bockbier | Zwiebelkuchen, strong cheese | Strong beer needs strong counterparts. Zwiebelkuchen at Bockbier season is a Franconian tradition. |
| Weißbier | Laugenbrezel (pretzel), light salads | The fruitiness of Weißbier harmonises with lye bread and fresh dishes. |
| Zoigl | Brotzeit, cold cuts | Zoigl is a food companion — its character without CO₂ sharpness suits rustic bread-and-sausage plates. |
The Beer Cellar
Many beer cellars have no full kitchen — but almost all offer Obazda, Brotzeit platters and Laugengebäck (lye pastries). This is not coincidental: these foods were developed as companions to Kellerbier, not independently. The Brotzeit tradition emerged as accompaniment to beer.
The Brewery Pub
In a brewery's Gasthof, full meals are usual: Schäufele, Sauerbraten, Leberknödel, Bratwürste. Only the brewery's own beer is served — and the kitchen is designed around that one beer. The Schäufele paired with Mahrs Bräu's Ungespundetes is not accidental — it is the result of kitchen and beer being developed together over decades by the same family.