Locals and expats chug.
Tens of thousands of (mostly) Chinese tourists will
be at the Qingdao International Beer Festival for the next two weeks, singing
karaoke, eating spicy seafood on sticks, shouting ganbei and draining their
glasses as if drinking beer were a custom as old as Spring Festival.
An
observer might imagine that it was draft beer that hard-drinking Tang Dynasty
poet Li Bai was imbibing as he danced "A toast to invite the moon, on the shadow
into three". So it may seem surprising that beer is just as foreign to China as
the German architecture that makes the coastal city of Qingdao so distinctive.
The Germans are coming!
German colonists first
opened the Tsingtao factory in 1903, six years after their navy seized the land,
formerly occupied by a small Chinese military base and tiny fishing village.
The new arrivals laid out wide streets, grand stone buildings, and an
advanced sewer system and electrical grid, as German banks and businesses opened
shop in the town (to this day, the local government is partly housed in a former
German office building).
This era is nicely captured by photos,
blueprints and city plans on display at the original Tsingdao factory's Beer
Museum, which also traces the story of the drink's evolution from comfort "food"
for homesick colonists to the laobaixing's beverage of choice.
One of
their most interesting artifacts is an old electric motor made by Siemens in
1896 and used for stirring the beer vats until as recently as 1995. "Siemens
wanted to buy it back," a tour guide said with pride.
But there are some
items the Germans probably don't want back, such as the old labels prominently
featuring the slogan "Absolutely Pure" alongside a swastika (actually, this was
the original Buddhist symbol, our guide assured us, not the inverted swastika
the Nazis employed, while the phrase is apparently a reference to beer, rather
than racial, purity).
This way to Beer
Street
Mad Men, China-style
Eventually, the Germans were pushed out of Qingdao at the start of World
War I by the invading Japanese, who bought the plant in 1916, and continued
producing Tsingtao, along with their own Asahi and Kirin beer, until the end of
World War II.
The Nationalists then handed the factory over to a Chinese
businessman, who, with the help of the Germans, created in 1947 the first film
ad in China.
This newsreel, played continuously at the museum, features
beer bottles rolling down the factory's modern assembly line conveyor belt,
before being packed into wooden crates by beautiful women, to be sent around the
country by air and sea.
But their hopes of marketing Tsingtao to the
common people were smashed by civil war and the Communist takeover of both the
country and the company. Production plunged as the government scrambled for
hops, urging farmers to grow the climbing plant essential for making beer.
From 1949 until 1993, 98 percent of Tsingtao sold was export. For
regular Chinese Joes, cash could not buy a Tsingtao - only ration coupons could.
After the open-and-reform policies of the late 1970s, the company slowly
started advertising again. Ads from this era show Chinese people drinking draft
beer from bowls and jars; ice-cold pint glasses, of course, clash with the
Traditional Chinese Medicine theory that cold drinks are bad for health. As part
of this marketing push, the Qingdao Beer Festival was launched in 1991.
Qingdao's sculpture park honors the town's
favorite drink.
Drunk-o-Vision
The
museum is not all history - a unique "drunken room" uses a slanted floor and
optical tricks to cause visitors to stagger and occasionally fall. Afterwards,
tourists are given a glass of murky, fresh draft beer, which tastes much better
than the "fresh" stuff available throughout the city (fresh draft, which is
unpasteurized, goes off after 24 hours). Perhaps most importantly, visitors are
also given Tsingtao's special beer nuts - addictively delicious but with a lot
of chemical additives.
In the last room of the museum, Chinese tour
groups sing, yell, chant, and try to drink each other under the table. The
Chinese toast ganbei means "drain glass", and is a call for you to chug-a-lug.
Sadly, today's Tsingdao ads, ubiquitous on the airwaves and landscape
across the country, follow the stale mold of branding around the world. But
visitors stumbling out of the museum, and onto Beer Street (which, the city's
German architects might be pleased to note, is conveniently dotted with clean
public restrooms), can see the company has tried various other approaches in the
past. A series of old paving stones, featuring cute animals from the Chinese
zodiac raising a mug, seem lifted straight out of the Joe Camel advertising
playbook.
Meanwhile, an aging neon sign on the Tsingdao factory shows
two incredibly slim women with beehive hairdos, and the slogan, "TsingTao Beer
can give you passion and happiness" (reminiscent of a promise from the 1947
newsreel that drinking Tsingtao regularly can cure diseases).
Outside,
the beautiful tree-lined neighborhoods along the seafront are flooded with
wedding photographers, ferrying van-loads of young couples from point to scenic
point. Young women in rented white dresses sit on curbsides, waiting for their
chance to pose in an authentic European neighborhood.
Such quaint scenes
are less likely to be found at this month's Festival, however, which is modeled
after Munich's Oktoberfest - albeit with karaoke replacing oompah-pah bands.
With street food galore and over a dozen tents featuring beers from around the
world, the Festival is "International" in the sense that the Chinese will
welcome any foreigners there to chug a beer or share some food with them. But
then, in light of Qingdao's history of colonialism, invasion and isolation,
perhaps that's the best kind of international there is.
Sidebar
Date: The 20th Qingdao International
Ber Festival runs from August 14 to August 29
Getting there: 5.5 hours
by fast train; frequent flights from Beijing airport as low as 530 yuan one-way
(try www.ctrip.com)
Other highlights: German architecture, beaches,
seafood treats (sample the spicy fried clams). Redstar, the local expat listings
magazine, is helpful, with a handy map highlighting tourist attractions, bars
and restaurants
Hangzhou Jiaoyu Science and Technology Co.LTD.
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