Belgian monks resurrect brewery after two
century break
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[May 23, 2019]
By Philip Blenkinsop
GRIMBERGEN, Belgium (Reuters) - Belgian
monks at the Grimbergen abbey are on the verge of brewing beer again
after a break of more than 200 years.
The abbey, whose emblem is a phoenix with the Latin motto "Ardet nec
consumitur", meaning "Burned but not destroyed", was ransacked and had
its brewery smashed in 1795 by French troops.
But a tradition of beer making that had dated back to the 13th century
will be revived with plans to build a new brewery at the monastic
complex in Grimbergen, a town north of Brussels.
It expects to produce its first ales in late 2020.
"For us, it's important to look to the heritage, to the tradition of the
fathers for brewing beer because it was always here," Father Karel
Stautemas told Reuters on Tuesday, a day after the local council
approved the brewery plan.
"Brewing and religious life always came together," said Karel, one of 11
Norbertine canons living in the abbey.
After a course at the Scandinavian School of Brewing in Copenhagen begun
this year, he will become one of five to six workers in the new brewery.
Marc-Antoine Sochon, an expert at Carlsberg who will be the project's
brewmaster, said the 10,000 hectolitre-per-year facility aimed to make
limited edition versions of beer already brewed on a commercial scale
under the Grimbergen name.
"We will keep the same yeast, which will bring all the fruitiness and
spiciness and we will start to dig into more innovations, such as
barrel-ageing, dry-hopping," Sochon said, adding special edition batches
could be just 60 hectolitres.
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Norbertine Father Karel toasts with a Grimbergen beer, symbolised by
a phoenix, at the Belgian Abbey of Grimbergen after announcing that
the monks will return to brewing after a break of two centuries, in
Grimbergen, Belgium May 21, 2019. REUTERS/Yves Herman
The abbey, founded in 1128, has been tied to commercial brewers
since the 1950s when local brewer Maes asked the monks to use the
Grimbergen name and emblem on its "abbey beer".
About 1.5 million hectolitres of that brand are now produced
globally, with Heineken unit Alken-Maes making and selling it in
Belgium, while Carlsberg brews it largely in France for other
markets. The abbey earns royalties.
The project, which Carlsberg will finance, aims to focus on using
locally produced crops. The abbey has planted hops in its garden.
There will also be a visitors' center.
Grimbergen's monks will follow the rules of Belgium's Trappist beer
makers, even if they are not a Trappist order, requiring them to
brew within the abbey walls, control the brewing and steer profits
toward maintaining the abbey and supporting charitable causes.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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