This is wrong on just so many levels....
-----Original Message-----
From: Chicago Beer Society Home Brewer List [mailto:CBS-HB@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU]
On Behalf Of Zemo
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2006 7:55 AM
To: CBS-HB(a)LISTSERV.UIC.EDU
Subject: Beer's for drinkin', dammit!!
[Reprinted from the NYTimes w/o permission...]
April 30, 2006
Beer Spas: Yeast of Eden
By EVAN RAIL
THERE is something perversely satisfying about soaking in a tub of beer.
First there is the yeasty aroma of malt and hops, followed by a warm and
sticky sensation as the brown liquid envelopes your body. You think to
yourself: this must be every lad's dream. Whatever comes next will surely
have to involve a supermodel, an Aston Martin and a fat cigar.
But bathing in beer is much more than just a fantasy made real. During the
last decade, a pack of beer spas have opened in the hills and lowlands of
Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic, promising health, wellness and the
chance to bathe in your favorite suds.
The Chodovar brewery in Chodova Plana, in the Czech Republic
(420-374-794-181;
www.chodovar.cz) started offering beer spa therapies in
March using the brewery's celebrated dark lager. At the Kummeroer Hof in
Neuzelle, Germany (49-33-652-81-111;
www.klosterbrauerei.com) customers
have been slipping into beer baths tapped from the nearby Klosterbrauerei
Neuzelle brewery since 1997. Spa prices start at about 42 euros ($52.50 at
$1.24 to the euro). But it is in neighboring Austria that the beer spa seems
to reach its alpine pinnacle.
One brewery, Starkenberg (43-5412-66201;
www.bierschwimmbad.com) in
Tarrenz, even fills a swimming pool with barrels and barrels of its own
Pilsner. And just outside Salzburg, the Landhotel Moorhof in rustic
Franking, Austria (43-6277-8188;
www.moorhof.com) offers what may be the
most complete beer treatment, from the spa to the dining table.
In the cellar, four couple-size wooden tubs are filled with a special brew.
The Moorhof also offers milk baths, but Hedwig Bauer, who owns the hotel
with her husband, Karl, believes that beer has certain advantages. "Beer is
very good for the skin, because of the vitamins and the yeast," Ms. Bauer
said. "It's cleansing and drying."
That may be true, but it's worth noting that the half-hour treatment, which
starts at 44 euros, is also mildly intoxicating. The Moorhof's therapeutic
brew is composed of a 2 percent-alcohol lager made for it by the local
Schnaitl brewery, fortified with brewer's yeast, malt and two scoops of
hops, all thrown into a barrel-shaped tub and topped with warm water.
Bubbles rise from the bottom, stirring the mix and causing a head to form -
much like a Jacuzzi or giant mug.
During the soak, a few pints of Schnaitl's beer are offered for imbibing,
suggesting that the relaxation is chemically rather than therapeutically
induced. After about 20 minutes, you're wrapped in a starched white sheet
and led to a four-poster bed piled with toasty alfalfa hay. The curtains are
drawn and you're left to have a mild sweat. Go ahead, just try to stay
awake.
When you finally come to, you're invited to take a cool dip in the indoor
swimming pool, provided, of course, you rinsed the green hops flakes from
your body; they stick just about everywhere.
If the whole thing sounds somewhat masculine, Ms. Bauer was surprised that
many of the beer bath's customers are women, a number of whom also splurge
on a brewski facial - a gooey mask made from ground hops, malt, honey and
cream cheese. The concoction tickles furiously when it slides down your
cheeks, and it smells remarkably like breakfast.
Couples are welcome. A beer-bath weekend for two at the Moorhof costs 198
euros a person, and includes two nights at the hotel, breakfast and two
four-course dinners. The menu recently featured a yeasty beer soup,
beer-battered broccoli and chicken schnitzel with sour beer gravy. Dessert
was beer crepes, which you can wash down with a choice of four local brews.