St.
Catherine's Church, by the city's increasingly gentrified
canalside docks, partnered with a local brewery to create Ste
Kat', a strong, fruity pale ale that uses the affectionate local
name for the church.
"You could say that it's an image of the church, that it's
effervescent, full of life," Father Jeremie Schaub, the Roman
Catholic priest who helped create the beer with a local brewery
which is itself a recent start-up, the Brussels Beer Project.
"It's also a little bit the image we want to portray of St.
Catherine's Church."
The beer will be sold to fund renovations to the 19th century
structure, which Brussels city council considered knocking down
a few years ago, thinking to build a market or housing. A parish
outing to a theme park is also on the cards.
The beer will be sold through a church shop and will also be
available at restaurants and cafes in the resurgent nightlife
quarter around the neo-Gothic church in central Brussels.
Ste Kat' is based on the local tradition of abbey beers and
Trappist breweries, a brewing process based on the type of yeast
used by Trappist monks since the 1800s. The beer has more exotic
flavors and hops than the traditional Belgian style.
At 7-percent alcohol it is less potent than some of its local
competitors -- but still packs nearly twice the punch of a
typical international lager.
The Brussels Beer Project will brew about 50,000 bottles in a
first phase, to see how well it sells.
(Writing by Lily Cusack; Editing by Alastair Macdonald/Jeremy
Gaunt)
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