Monday, January 24, 2011

Beer Nirvana

Excellent article in The New York Times last weekend about that beer nirvana known as Belgium. Here's a little taste:

ON a fog-dense spring afternoon in the Belgian countryside beer connoisseurs had flocked to Westvleteren, a far-flung town in the southwest corner of West Flanders, to sample what many of them consider to be the best beer in the world. The nectar in question was Westvleteren 12, a rich, brown-hued brew that has double the alcohol of most beers and a reputation to match, and that can be bought only at the In De Vrede cafe and across the street at the St. Sixtus Abbey. Cyclists in Spandex clattered about in cleats as Belgian families quietly nibbled on cheese plates and pâté. The only party missing was the monks who brewed the hallowed beer.

Nestled in this province’s verdant farmlands, the St. Sixtus Abbey houses one of six official Trappist breweries in Belgium. The monks have perfected their craft over more than 160 years, and despite closing the brewery to visitors, shunning advertising, retail outlets and even labels, their beer has taken top honors from enthusiast sites like RateBeer.com and BeerAdvocate.com. (The only sure way to bring home the brew — save the black market — is by calling the Abbey’s “beerphone” to reserve a case for pick-up. And even then the monks will supply only one case a person, a month; no resales allowed.)

You can read the rest of the piece here.

The video is from Jonathan Meades's early film on Belgium. Meades is a fan of the country and of its beers. The beer bit begins at 2.20.
... 
Every year around Christmas time I treat myself to a four pack of Westvleteren. I do not go to Belgium, instead, I, er, use the black market referred to in the article. I don't feel good about this and I appreciate that this is not what the monks want, however Westvleteren is as good as everyone says it is and, uhm, well, it is Christmas.

18 comments:

seana said...

"Far-flung town" sounds wrong somehow. Is it?

Lew Archer said...

The knockoffs are very good. I can only imagine the original.

Glenna said...

Well, I must say, you gotten me extremely curious.

genevieve said...

HEH, this is a curious antidote to my current reading (Thomas Merton's Seven Storey Mountain). *evil internet laugh*

seana said...

Genevieve, I know a bit about Merton, having taken a course on him in college and having remained friends with devotees all my life. I don't think the monks at the Abbey of Gethsemane in Kentucky understood their beermaking duties, which is why Merton had visitors smuggle him in a six pack now and then in his later hermitage days.

He probably would have loved the beer phone. Not in the Seven Story Mountain era, but later.

I'm sure he had some "Well, it is Christmas" kind of excuse ready too.

rob.james said...

One of the only occasions where I have lost time was in Bruges on a beer weekend. We had originally gone for the circus festival but my stilts broke so we just got pissed instead. We went to a bar near the big church and started working through the menu.
I can remember leaving the bar and waking up in a hotel bed covered with frites but nothing else.

adrian mckinty said...

Lew

The original is spectacular.

adrian mckinty said...

Glenna

Well its only a hop skip and a ten hour flight away.

adrian mckinty said...

Gen

I know exactly what you're talking about.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

"I don't think the monks at the Abbey of Gethsemane in Kentucky understood their beermaking duties, which is why Merton had visitors smuggle him in a six pack now and then in his later hermitage days.'

I would say that thats the best part of being a monk. Certainly the Belgian monks do that part ofthe job very very well.

adrian mckinty said...

Rob

All stories should begin this way:

"One of the only occasions where I have lost time was in Bruges on a beer weekend, we had originally gone for the circus festival but my stilts broke..."

Tales from the Birch Wood. said...

This brings me back... to warm days being offered "Blonde" or "Brune".

Thought you might like this Twitter thread... just noticed I misspelled your name but will sort it out tomorrow.

"http://twitter.com/search?q=%23IrishWriter"

Best regards from Dublin.

rob.james said...

adrian: You know what, I've got to write a short story for a creative writing course and I may just use it as my springboard

seana said...

Rob, you definitely should.

genevieve said...

go for it rob

genevieve said...

go for it rob

adrian mckinty said...

Rob

Listen to the consensus. We need that story.

genevieve said...

ecch I did not mean to post twice. Sorry.