Pronunciation
guide for English-speakers:
"Bee-o-beer"
Definition:
One
of two terms for certified organic beer. The other term is Ökobier.
Organic beers
must be brewed
entirely from organically grown
and processed raw materials. Only grain and hops from organic
farmers and processed by certified organic
companies may be used in Biobeer. Likewise
yeast breeding for Biobeers requires the use only
of organic propagation
substrata. The
entire beer-making chain, from the farm to the bottle or keg, is subject
to government inspection and certification. Certification is handled either
by government institutions or by specially licensed audit firms. In Germany,
such firms are called Ökokontrollstellen (ecological audit stations).
They are empowered to certify a product as "generated from ecological
plantings."
The
Neumarkter Lammsbräu
brewery of Neumarkt in Bavaria is Germany's (and the world's) largest
Öko-brewery. Pinkus Müller brewery of Münster
in Westphalia claims to be "the oldest bio-brewery in
the world." While Lammsbräu is currently not imported into the
United States, three of Pinkus Müller's brews are: Altbier, Hefeweizen,
and Ur-Pils. These are distributed by Merchant
du Vin.
Products
that comply with all organic certification requirements may carry the
European BIO-Mark (top left),
which
is the equivalent of the United States Department of Agriculature Organic
Mark (top right). Compliance with European
Bio regulations
also implies compliance with National Organic Program (NOP) regulations.
NOP is a program adopted
by many countries, including
the
United States and
Germany, whose
guidelines set a rigid
standard defining which
products may
be termed "organic." It also provides the certification rules
and regulations for organic-compliant food producers.
Importantly, NOP guidelines define which pesticides and fertilizers may
be used by farmers of organic products. They prohibit the use of any chemically
manufactured or modified substance in or near an organic field. To prevent
inadvertent contamination from pesticides and fertilizers in the vicinity,
adjacent fields, too, must meet organic requirements, and the farmer must
maintain
minimum distances between organic and conventional fields. The farmer
must also document in writing which previous crops have been planted on
soils used for certified-organic products. Every batch of raw materials
received at an organic brewery's
loading dock must be accompanied
by its NOP certification from the
farmer.
To
obtain an organic certification, a food processing company must (excerpted
from the official EU text) ... "establish, implement, and update
annually an organic production or handling system plan that is submitted
to an accredited certifying agent; ... permit on-site
inspections with complete access to the production
or handling operation,
including non-certified production and handling areas, structures, and
offices by
the
certifying agent; and ... maintain all records
applicable to the organic operation for not less than five years beyond
their creation and allow ... the certifying agent access to such records
during normal business hours for review and copying to determine compliance."


