We left it until our final day in Bamberg
to visit what I regard as one of the city’s best pubs, and one of my favourite drinking
establishments as well. Situated slightly out of the city centre, on the old
road to Würzburg and right on the summit of the Kaulberg, Greifenklau is a
lovely old pub and it is well worth taking the bus (or walking, if you’re fit
enough), in order to spend a few hours there.
Greifenklau was the nearest pub to the rented apartment which
Matthew and I stayed at back in 2010, when made our initial visit to Bamberg.
We called in on our first night and sat out in the attractive and shady beer
garden behind the pub, and put away a few mugs of the tasty Lagerbier brewed on
the premises.
The pub, and brewery, is named after its founder, Freidrich
von Greifenklau, and the present building dates back to 1719. The name
Greifenklau, comes from the founder’s coat of arms, which depicts a griffin’s
claw. Much to son Matthew’s annoyance, I sometimes refer to the pub as
Gryffindor, after the Harry Potter novels.
Greifenklau has been owned by the Brockard family since
1914, and is now run by the fourth generation of the family. Until the opening
of the Ambräusianum brew-pub in 2004, Greifenklau was for many years, the
smallest brewery in Bamberg. The
brewery itself was re-built in the 1950’s, and whilst Rauchbier was produced up
until the 1930’s, this is no longer the case – or at least it wasn't until just a few years ago.
Greifenklau produce a very tasty pale Lagerbier, and also
brew a Weizenbier and a Bock. The latter appears for a short season from
November to December. As mentioned above, they have just re-introduced a smoke
beer, known as Grief-R, and we were able to enjoy a couple of glasses on our
recent visit.
As mentioned above, we left that visit until our final day in
Bamberg, stopping off there on a
bus journey back into town. We’d travelled out to the village or Bug, about
three kilometres from the city centre, in order to visit the Buger Hof
Gasthaus. Like many Brits, we found the name of this establishment highly
amusing, but it’s the setting of this pub, overlooking the River Regnitz, which
is the main attraction; that and the beer from Schlossbrauerei Reckendorf.
The threat of rain had been in the air all morning, and when
we reached Greifenklau’s beer garden, the waitress advised us to sit at the
tables closest to the pub, as these were protected with some large umbrellas.
Her advice was well heeded, as shortly before finishing our meal (Bratwurst mit
Pommes), the rain began and we had to move, taking our mugs, plates and
thoughtfully provided cushions with us.
The garden can accommodate up to 500 people, and is very popular on warm summer evenings. I find it particularly pleasant as there are a
number of mature trees, which provide just the right amount of shade, and the
garden overlooks a wooded valley behind the pub. From your table, you can see
right across the valley to the picturesque, old Altenburg
castle, on the other side, right on the crest of the hill.
To sum up, if you ever find yourself in Bamberg and have visited all the "must-do" beery attractions the city has to offer (Schlenkerla, Mahrs, Spezial, Klosterbräu etc), do make time for a visit to Greifenklau. If you do, then I’m sure that just like me, you will be smitten with the place.
Apart from walking through the hallway, in order to access
the garden, I have only once actually drunk inside the pub. That occasion was
during my visit to Bamberg in late
December 2010, when the snow was several inches deep and temperatures were well
below freezing; definitely not beer garden weather!
After finishing our meal and our drinks, we reluctantly
left. There was one other Bamberg
brew-pub that I wanted to re-visit, and I also desired to pick up some bottles
of Rauchbier, from Schlenkerla, to take home with me. Before we paid the bill,
I bought a couple of Greifenklau from our friendly waitress. One was the
brewery’s standard Lagerbier, whilst the other was a bottle of their recently
introduced Helles. I haven’t opened them yet, but I’m sure I will do soon.
To sum up, if you ever find yourself in Bamberg and have visited all the "must-do" beery attractions the city has to offer (Schlenkerla, Mahrs, Spezial, Klosterbräu etc), do make time for a visit to Greifenklau. If you do, then I’m sure that just like me, you will be smitten with the place.
3 comments:
"(or walking, if you’re fit enough), in order to spend a few hours there."
43 minutes from the train station according to Google. If the weather was nice that would be ideal. (thumbs up)
"Much to son Matthew’s annoyance, I sometimes refer to the pub as Gryffindor, after the Harry Potter novels."
LOL. Given enough time, I would have thought of that as well. :)
"Like many Brits, we found the name of this establishment highly amusing,"
Ok, I'll bite (and apologies ahead of time). Is it because it reminds you of burgers, or (wait for it), of boogers. ;)
"definitely not beer garden weather!"
You haven't been to the Yukon. (j/k) (LOL)
"if you ever find yourself in Bamberg"
Thanks to your posts, it's moved up on my to-do list. :)
As I mentioned before, there is a chance of our youngest going to Germany with his g/f for her Masters degree. If that works out, my wife and I will definitely head over there.
If not, I may try to talk my brother into taking me the next time I visit him (it's under 8 hours drive from where he lives in France).
Cheers
PS - "and is very popular on Altenburg castle, on the other side, right on the crest of the hill." and "warm summer evenings"
I think that bit needs to be revised... a bit. ;)
"you can see right across the valley to the picturesque, old"
See above. These bits got mixed up somehow.
Hi Russ, I have sorted out the mixed-up text issue. The Blogger Dashboard, which you use to compose and edit the text, sometimes has a habit of swapping the odd line of text around, particularly when you add photos. It's not always the friendliest format to work in; either that or I've been doing it wrong for the past 10 years!
"Buger Hof" can be read as "Bugger off", in best colloquial English parlance. Hence the amusement for us Brits. A pleasant enough place, although the woman sitting out on the balcony, smoking a cigarette, when we arrived wasn't exactly the friendliest of souls. (Perhaps she wasn't best pleased at having to fetch us a beer each?)
Pleased to hear that I've tempted you to visit Bamberg, and whilst eight hours drive is still a fair distance, I'm sure that compared to North American distances, it's nothing.
""Buger Hof" can be read as "Bugger off", in best colloquial English parlance. Hence the amusement for us Brits. "
Good Lord. How did I miss that?
(hangs head in shame) :)
Cheers
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