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Three Boozy Beverages Beyond Beer at Munich's Oktoberfest 2012

Where: Munich, Germany
August 21, 2012 at 1:02 PM | by | Comments (0)


Schnapps!

Prost! There's one more month until the start of the 179th Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany. Running from September 22 - October 7, the celebration of beer and the autumn harvest returns with its 14 Big Tents, an amusement park, and all the sausages under heat lamps you can handle.

Naturally the focus will again be beer, but we're here to say that, yes, we've been to Oktoberfest before and, yes, there's more than just heading for the hops. If you haven't made your beer tent table reservations yet, good luck (they're usually booked up as early as February), but drinking other beverages can still yield you a seat.

Here's three other liquids to guzzle during Oktoberfest 2012:

· Champagne!
Nymphenburger Sekt (champagne) is the beverage of choice within the Weinzelt tent, though other champagnes and even wines also make up the menu. After hitting two of the main beer tents in one day, we stumbled upon this tent and it quickly became the favorite for its food variety (more gourmet than half-chickens and pretzels) and lack of drunken teenagers. The atmosphere is more mature, the "tent" itself is beautiful (it's mostly made of wood) and you've got the best chance at holding down a table.

· Schnapps!
One simply does not do shots at Oktoberfest. One does Schnapps.
Sprinked around the Wies'n are round kiosks much like snack stalls, except they specialize only in a variety of Schnapps flavors. A stop at one or two serves to fortify drinkers on long walks from the beer tents to the roller coasters to the gingerbread cookie vendors. Your Euro pocketchange usually buys a tiny glass. Kirsch (cherry), Apfel (apple) and Pfefferminz (peppermint) are popular, but asking the bartender to surprise you is the best route.

· Radler!
Okay, we cheated. Radler is technically beer, but it earns its own entry on menus, so we're including it here. Radler is otherwise known as a Shandy, or a mix of light beer with either Sprite or Lemon Soda. Not only does it increase your ability to drink before getting completely sloppy drunk—very important considering a day of Oktoberfest drinking runs from 11am 'til sundown—but it's extra refreshing in a hot tent on a warm day.

Oh yeah, and don't forget to drink water too. ;)


The Weinzelt "tent"

[Photos: deemikay & Otis Driftwood]

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