On the Sunday, which was the first full day of our stay in Bamberg,
our party visited the town of Forchheim.
This small Franconian town lies to the south of Bamberg
and is approximately 15 minutes away by rail.
For the majority of the group, this was their first visit to
a town which boasts four breweries, but for Matthew and I it was second time
around. We spent a week in this pleasant little town, back in July 2013, in
order to experience Annafest; a beer festival of legendary proportions, but we
also took the opportunity of visiting a few other places in the area as well.
Annafest is held over a 10 day period around the 26th
July; the feast of St Anna, the mother of the Virgin Mary. It takes place at the Kellerwald, a wooded
hillside on the edge of Forchheim, where there are a series of natural
rock cellars cut into the hillside. The cellars were originally constructed for
the storage and maturation of beer, in the days before refrigeration. Today
there are two dozen such “Kellers”, the majority of which are just open for
Annafest, although a handful remain open all year.
During the summer evenings the Kellerwald is the perfect
location for a cool beer in the shady woods. The local Forchheim breweries Hebendanz,
Greif, Eichhorn and Neder all brew a strong beer especially for this
festival, the so-called Annafestbier, and a number of other local breweries
also supply brews of their own as well.
As well as plenty of beer drinking there are other
attractions such as fairground rides, various stalls, plus six stages which
feature a wide range of different musical acts. With
seating for about 30.000 people, the Kellerwald provides sufficient
accommodation for the 450,000 – 500,000 visitors who come each year over the
course of the festival.
During our stay we found it quite difficult to get a drink
plus an evening meal in Forchheim itself. The trouble is most pubs and
restaurants close early whilst Annafest is on, with some not bothering to open
at all, as it seems everyone in the town it seems wants a piece of the action up on the
Kellerwald. The landlord of our rented holiday apartment had warned us about
this on our first evening in the town, but we did manage to find a few places
open.
Five years on, we met up with the rest of the group at Bamberg
station shortly after 1.30pm. We had
all spent the morning doing a spot of sight-seeing, which for Matthew and I involved
a look around the cathedral area and the Old
Bridge. With the Rathaus, or town
hall, hanging precariously over the River Regnitz, on a pier of the bridge,
this is by far and away the most photographed building in Bamberg.
We took a few of our own, just for completeness, before making our way back to
the station.
Our tour leader had bought a group ticket for us all, so
once we were all assembled we walked under the subway and boarded our train to Forchheim.
The station has been enlarged since our last visit, with a couple of new
platforms installed. This is because a new high-speed rail line has been built
alongside the original tracks. This will enable high-speed trains to complete
the journey between Munich and Berlin
in under four hours.
Although it is a relatively short walk from the station,
into the centre of Forchheim, we waited for a bus as one member of our group is
partially disabled, as the result of a particularly nasty motor-bike accident,
and finds walking both difficult and painful. Our rail tickets were valid on
the bus, which is the beauty of public transport in this part of Germany.
Our bus dropped us close to Brauerei Eichhorn, which was our
first port of call. Eichhorn is the smallest of Forchheim’s four breweries, and
uses a squirrel as its emblem. This was my visit to their actual pub, as the
place had been closed during Annafest.
We sat inside, due to the onset of a thunderstorm, and had the place
virtually to ourselves.
The landlady looked slightly bemused as all 13 of us filed
in, but brought us our beer in a friendly and efficient manner. Vollbier Hells
was the offering on tap, a pleasant enough dark golden lager, but spoilt by
being rather gassy. One member of our party resorted to giving his beer a good
stirring with a fork, in order to dispel some of the CO2!
We decided to move on to the Brauerei Neder, the next
brew-pub situated a short walk away in the town’s main square. Matthew and I
had definitely been there before, recognising it as the place we drank a toast
to Prince George, with several
rather inebriated locals. (Our arrival in Forchheim five years previously, had
coincided with the birth of William and Kate’s first child).
The beer in Neder was much more to everyone’s liking; in
fact some people thought it the best beer of the entire trip. Served direct
from a cask, perched up on the bar, and dispensed into stoneware Krugs, Neder
Kellerbier certainly took some beating, and I could quite happily have stayed
for another mug.
Onward and upwards though, and just a couple of doors away
was Brauerei Hebendanz. Like Eichhorn, this brew-pub had also been closed
during Annafest. It was an old-fashioned looking place, and for some reason we
sat out in the corridor to begin with, before moving into the front bar. We
tried the Dunkles, but most of us found it rather disappointing; I couldn’t
even find the beer listed on the Hebendanz website.
Because of its location, outside the town centre, we gave Brauerei Greiff, Forchheim’s fourth brew-pub, a miss. I’m pretty certain
that the bus we caught into town earlier
would have taken us there, had we not decided to alight at Brauerei Eichhorn,
but no matter, as Matthew and I had consumed plenty of Greiff beer at Annafest
five year’s previously.
On leaving Brauerei Hebendanz, we caught the bus to the
station, and then a train back to Bamberg.
It had been something of a whistle-stop tour of Forchheim’s pubs, and with
hindsight I would have preferred to have spent a little longer in the town. The
fact that this rather fleeting visit brought back memories of Annafest, has
persuaded me that a return trip to Forchheim should be planned to coincide
with that event, so maybe next year?