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

BeerFoodWhy it works
KellerbierObazda with farmhouse breadThe freshness of Kellerbier cuts through the fattiness of Obazda. The classic beer cellar combination.
UngespundetesSchäufele, SauerbratenLow carbonation means the beer doesn't compete with the food. The full body complements rich braising sauces.
RauchbierPressack, smoked cheese, SchinkenSmoke to smoke — the smoked aromas in the beer harmonise with smoked or cured meats.
MärzenNürnberger Rostbratwurst, BratwürsteThe balanced Märzen is the universal companion — neither too strong nor too light for sausages.
RotbierLeberknödel, BlutwurstThe malt sweetness of Rotbier balances the intensity of offal dishes.
BockbierZwiebelkuchen, strong cheeseStrong beer needs strong counterparts. Zwiebelkuchen at Bockbier season is a Franconian tradition.
WeißbierLaugenbrezel (pretzel), light saladsThe fruitiness of Weißbier harmonises with lye bread and fresh dishes.
ZoiglBrotzeit, cold cutsZoigl 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.

Franconian Food Guide → All Beer Styles →