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972 881 0705

or e-mail us

 

The Bavarian Grill is located at

221 West Parker Rd  Plano, Texas 75023

In the Northwest Corner of US 75, Central Expressway, and West Parker - in the Ruisseau Village Shopping Center

 

Please feel free to use these shortcut keys to our website bavariangrill.com

 
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Would you like to see our

Bavarian Bier collection

 
 
Find the large map at the bottom of the Bavarian Grill
Neueste Nachrichten.
 

Free wireless network service

and access to the internet is available now in the Bavarian Grill Biergarten.

You can also check  your emails, while enjoying a great Bavarian Bier and a snack from our Biergarten Menu. Please ask your friendly team member for instructions - and enjoy the www. And the best part:

IT'S FREE!

Your
Seasonal Bier
Picture

This is not an April Fools Joke

Join us for Bavarian Bier 103 today and sample six different Pilsner style Biers.

 

Live Musik

    Restaurant

1-Apr   Alan
2-Apr   Jim Rommel
3-Apr   Jim Rommel
4-Apr   Closed
5-Apr   Closed
6-Apr   Alan Walling
7-Apr   Alan Walling
8-Apr   Alan Walling

 

 

Biergarten

1-Apr    
2-Apr   Chett Warzusen
3-Apr   Bavarian Bier Jazz
4-Apr   Closed
5-Apr   Closed
6-Apr   Bavarian Bier Jazz
7-Apr    
8-Apr    
9-Apr   Chett Warzusen
10-Apr   Kleine Blasmusik

 
In this issue:

April 1, 2004

 

  • 1. "Entenbraten" Special Picture and Offer

  • 2. Your replies to our "Schloss Linderhof" Quiz

  • 3. This is not an April Fools Joke - see below

  • 4. Bier Lovers Corner: The History of Weissbier

    Center: Your Updated Bavarian Grill Seminar Schedule

And always in the sidebar:

  • 5. Live Musik Schedule

  • 6. Your Seasonal Bier Picture:

 
 
Entenbraten - Your treat for Lent

One-half of a oven-roasted Duck with a crisp, crunchy skin, flavored with our special rotisserie Herbs, on its own juices, served with a Potato pancake and the spring vegetables

Enjoy this light Spring special, bring the picture and we will pour you a shot of Schladerer Himbeergeist, the clear Raspberry Brandy from the Black Forest, on the house for you.


This is not an April Fools Joke:

Enjoy the nice spring weather with us!

Buy a Paulaner Pils - get the second Pils free and keep the authentic Pilsner glass! All day in the Bavarian Grill Indoor and Outdoor Biergarten - April 1st, 2nd and 3rd only!
 

Thank you for making the Bavarian Grill

part of your birthday celebrations.

Let us play the cowbells for you and your family.


Quiz Question:

Where are we?

 

This postcard shows a famous Bavarian tourist attraction, what is the name of the town it is located in?

 

 

 

Your hint:

You should be there at 11 am to hear it.

 

 mailto:bavarian@bavariangrill.com

before the next issue is published and you can win a

Bavarian Grill Gift Certificate for $ 25

 

Congratulations to:

Paula Kindred

Your name was drawn from all the correct answers!

 
 
Paula correctly answered the last quiz question:  

 
I lived in Germany from 1974-76 and spent much time admiring the many castles there.  This one is the Linderhof castle, named after the Linder family that farmed there.  As I recall, it was modeled after the Petit Trianon in France.

I love your trivia contests.  It brings back such wonderful memories!

Paula

Thank you for your many correct responses, since we had a record number of answers, here are some samples: 

 

 

 
The picture is the lovely Schloss Linderhof, which  was used as hunting lodge by King Ludwig and is located in the beautiful Bavarian countryside.  We visited the castle in the late 80's when my husband was stationed in Spangdahlem, Germany with the US Air Force.  The grounds of the castle were absolutely gorgeous.
 
Brenda
 
The castle pictured is the Linderhof---we took my parents to tour this beautiful place.  The music played in the grotto is from Wagner, King Ludwig's favorite composer.  I wish I could live at the Linderhof.
 
Thanks for a wonderful dinner last night!
 
Angelyn

 

 
The Linderhof--The castle of Romance.  Built between 1869-1879.  Linderhof is the most popular of all the three Ludwig Castles and the only one completed before his death.  Ludwig had a very beautiful groto built here

Irene

 
This is Linderhof Castle.  Ludwig II of Bavaria built Linderhof , in it's 120 acre park between 1870 and 1878 on the site of his own hunting lodge.  Linderhof is in the Graswang valley near Ettal.

David

King Ludwig's favorite castle, was built between 1870 and 1879, modelled on the Petit Trianon at Versailles, France. Its interior has characteristically lavish adornments, full of mirrors, painted ceilings and gilded cherubs, in a mixture of Renaissance and baroque styles. The surroundig gardens in french, italian and english style include a grand cascade, artificial grottos. The name of the castle is derived from the farmer family "Linder", who owned a farm at this place.
In the park you should visit the Moorish Kiosk and the famous grotto, inspired by the Venus Grotto from Wagner's "Tannhäuser" and the Blue Grotto.

Thomas M.

 
  Neben dem durch Kindheitserlebnisse vertrauten Schwangau war es vor allem das "Graswangtal", das Ludwig schon als Kronprinz wiederholt bei Ausflügen von Hohenschwangau aus kennengelernt hatte. Sein Vater, König Maximilian II. besaß dort in "Linderhof" ein Jagdhaus.  Mit dem 1878 fertiggestellten Schloß, dem einzigen, das Ludwig II. vollendet und bewohnt hat, wurde der Geist des Rokoko wieder lebendig. Hinter der reich ornamentierten Fassade des relativ kleinen Schlosses schwelgt die Üppigkeit: glitzernde Spiegel, glänzendes Gold, Wandbehänge und Gemälde, Samt, Plüsch und Kristalleuchter, Lapislazuli, Malachit und Porzellan.  Zu den wichtigsten Sehenswürdigkeitendes kunstvoll angelegten Landschaftsgartens gehören das "Königshäuschen", die alte Königslinde auf deren Hochsitz der König zuweilen frühstückte, der Maurische Kiosk mit dem Pfauenthron, das Marokkanische Haus sowie die Hundingshütte. Ein "Sesam-öffne-dich-Felsen" führt zu einer künstlichen Grotte mit Wasserfall und See. Die Grotte konnte beheizt und elektrisch beleuchtet werden. Auf dem See wurden künstliche Wellen erzeugt. Modernste Technik, um die königlichen Träume zu verwirklichen! 

Thomas W. from Germany

 
Please click here to get more info on Schloss Linderhof:  

http://www.germanworld.com/lind.htm

 
 
Join us at either of our Bars any time of the evening
  • Over 50 different German Biers 
  • Over 20 different German Weins Full International bar
  • German and Austrian Shots
  • Biergarten Schmanker'l, snacks and
  • the Full Restaurant Menu  
 

Your updated Bavarian Grill Seminar Schedule

Bavarian Bier

  • Bier and Brats 101 – $ 12.50

    • Every 3rd Thursday,

    • Next on April 15, 2004

  • Bier - 102 - Grain: Weizen and Wiener Schnitzel - $ 15.50

    • Every 4th Thursday,

    • Next on April 22, 2004

  • Bier - 103 - Hops – Pils and Pilz - $ 17.50

    • Every first Thursday,

    • Next on April 1, 2004

German Wein

  • Wein - 101 - $ 12.50

    • Every 1st Wed.,

    • Next on April 7, 2004

  • Wein - 102 Grapes - $ 15.50

    • Every 3rd Wednesday,   

    • Next on April 21, 2004

  • Wein - 103 Regions - $ 17.50

    • Every 4th Wednesday,

    • Next on April 28, 2004

The educational and entertaining Bier and Wein seminars include authentic food and beverage samples during a Power Point presentation in the Jäger Stube of the Bavarian Grill at 7:30 pm. Space limits us to 40 students, and it is first come – first serve, reservations suggested.

Please call 972 881 0705 for reservations.

Bier Lovers Corner: The History of Weissbier

"When people think of Weissbier (“white beer”) nowadays, they invariably think of Bavaria — and rightly so, because the Bavarians not only put Weissbier on the map, they perfected it! Bavarian Weissbiers are wheat-based beers brewed with top-fermenting yeast, which means they are ales. As wheat ales, they stand apart from all other Bavarian beer styles, which are barley-based beers brewed with lager-making, bottom-fermenting yeast.

The first wheat beers in history, however, were not brewed by Bavarians. Rather, they were made far from the foothills of the Alps by Stone Age people who lived about six or seven thousand years ago along the Euphrates and Tigris rivers in what is now Iraq. Archaeologists call this early civilization the Sumerians. They were eventually conquered, around four thousand years ago, by the Assyrians, and then by Babylonians. But these conquerors brewed wheat beers, too — as did the Egyptians under the pharos, around the same time.

The oldest archeological proof of wheat-beer brewing in Germany dates from the Bronze Age. It comes from a 2,800-year old earthenware amphora that was discovered in 1934 in a tribal grave near the small village of Kasendorf, not far from Kulmbach in northern Bavaria. The amphora can now be seen in the Kulmbach Beer Museum. Scientists have determined that the residues in the amphora are from dark wheat beer.

Ever since those beginnings in the Bronze Age, however, Bavarian wheat-beer making had its ups and downs. More often than not, Bavarians made their beers from barley, mostly because the wheat harvest tended to be less reliable. There were frequent wheat crop failures in Bavaria throughout the ages. Authorities in Bavaria, therefore, were always anxious to restrict the use of wheat for bread-making only and to limit the brewing of beer to barley. They knew their subjects well and feared that, if given half a chance, the Bavarians would rather go without wheat bread than without wheat beer! In 1447, the Munich city council even felt it had to forbid wheat beer brewing altogether. The councilors decreed that, within their jurisdiction, brewers could henceforth use only barley — a rule that Duke Wilhelm IV extended to all of Bavaria 69 years later, in the now-famous Bavarian Beer Purity Law of 1516.

In theory, the barley-only provision of the Beer Purity Law should have been the death knell of Weissbier-making in Bavaria ... but it wasn’t! This is mostly because the medieval Dukes of Wittelsbach, the rulers of Bavaria, had more than just selfless concerns for their subjects’ health to guide them in their beer-political decision-making. They were also guided by purely fiscal calculations. And these drove them in the opposite direction from the goals of the Purity Law, as is evidenced by their strange dealings with the Dukes of Degenberg, in the remote village of Schwarzach, deep in the Bavarian Forest, near the Czech border.

Just four years after the passage of the Beer Purity Law, in 1520, the Dukes of Wittelsbach, nicely ensconced in their cosmopolitan capital of Munich, granted their vassal from the hinterland, Sigismund von Degenberg, the exclusive privilege to brew and sell Weissbier in his home region — for a hefty fee, of course. The Dukes of Wittelsbach explicitly confirmed the Weissbier ban earlier in 1567, and even derided the brew as a “useless drink” that wastes wheat and encourages nothing but public drunkenness. The Degenbergers, however, were once again exempt from the law — only their fee for the privilege went up. The last Duke of Degenberg died in 1602 without leaving an heir, which was a fortuitous event for the Wittelsbach Duke Maximilian I, because he now found himself the owner of all the Degenberg clan’s assets — including their Weissbier privilege. Such were the rules of inheritance in feudal Bavaria.

Instead of letting the privilege die, Maximilian quickly seized upon it for himself by extending it to all the lands of his realm. Henceforth, only he would be allowed to brew it, and he would reap handsome profits from his monopoly. To ensure the proper transfer of brewing knowledge, he ordered the Degenberger’s former Weissbier-brew master, Siegmund Bettl, to come to Munich. There, Master Bettl built the Wittelsbachers’s first “white” brewery. It stood smack downtown on the location of the current Hofbräuhaus pub. Innkeeper Maximilian opened shop in 1605 and never looked back. During the Thirty Years War (1618 – 1848), only the revenues from the insatiable Weissbier thirst of the Bavarian subjects allowed the Catholic House of Wittelsbach to raise the armies needed to fight off the invasion of the Protestant King Gustaf II Adolph of Sweden.

Soon every little town and village in Bavaria had its own Wittelsbach Weissbier brewery, and the profits from the monopoly rose to almost one third of the entire state revenues. The fiscal bonanza lasted for almost a century and a half, when, by the end of the 18th century, “white beer” gradually fell out of favor, Weissbier revenues declined, and the House of Wittelsbach lost interest. In 1798, therefore, it allowed any nobleman and monastery to brew Weissbier. The measure did not save the wheat brew, however, and, by 1812, only two breweries were still making it. For all practical purpose, Weissbier had disappeared from the Bavarian beer menu — until, miraculously, it made a revolutionary comeback in the 1960s. With more than 35 percent market share today (and growing every year), Weissbier has become Bavaria’s best-selling style, surpassing even the traditional Bavarian signature beer, the Helles"

 

In the next issue: Rauchbier - a smoky story

This information comes from the webpage of the

Bavarian Brewery Association, please visit them at:

http://www.bayerisches-bier.de

Learn more about Weissbier on April 22 in Bavarian Bier 102!

HAVE A GREAT TIME:

Tuesday thru Saturday

Lunch: 11:00am - 4:00pm

Stein Hour: 4:00pm - 7:00pm

Dinner: 4:00pm - 10:00 pm