Helles — short for Helles Lagerbier, “pale lager” — is what Munich brewed when it got tired of staring down the Pilsners from Bohemia and decided to do its own thing. It first appeared in 1894 at the Spaten brewery, a deliberately softer, less hop-bitter answer to the Czech-style Pils that was busy taking over Europe. The result was a beer that’s still the unofficial bloodstream of Bavaria today.
A proper Helles is pale gold, clear, around 4.7% to 5.4% ABV, with a malt-forward character — think soft bread, light honey, a whisper of grain — and just enough noble-hop bitterness to keep it from being sweet. It’s a beer that doesn’t argue. There are no extreme flavours, no bold gestures, no marketing department interventions. It’s designed to sit on a wooden table in a Munich beer garden while a brass band plays badly nearby and you forget what time you arrived.
Notable examples: Augustiner Lagerbier Hell (the cult favourite), Spaten Münchner Hell (the original), Tegernseer Helles (the chalet-day version), Andechser Vollbier Hell, Weihenstephaner Original. Schlenkerla makes one too, with a ghost of alder smoke that makes it feel slightly haunted.
A good Helles is the beer-drinker’s equivalent of a perfectly fried egg: nothing fancy, very hard to fake.