Maredsous 8 Bruin
On Saturday night my wife and I headed out to Richmond to catch up with some friends over dinner and drinks. The venue, which I discovered much to my delight was a new Belgian place called Brouge. Unlike other pseudo Belgian café's in London, Brouge is classy and is on par with any number of fancy/posh restaurants that my wife like to drag me too. The service was as good as the leather bound 'volume' which was the beer menu. I opted to initially try the draught serving paddle, which consisted of 8 x 50mL tasters of their draught beer products. I won't go into too much detail about these, but they were Hoegaarden, Leffe Blonde, Stella 4%, Fruli, Belle-Vue Kriek, Franziskaner Hefe-Weiss, and two others which I can't recall right now (a framboise and a bruin).
Anyhow, for my first 'proper' beer I ordered a Maredsous 8 Bruin (8% abv), which I thought would be a good accompaniment to a steak. The beer is nice and is actually quiet drinkable for its strength and I actually enjoyed this beer. As a few may have gathered, I really do not appreciate beer just because it is from Belgium, and think that beers such as Chimay, Duvel and Orval are highly over-rated. Anyway halfway through the beer, I decided to change my mind from the steak to the Moules Frites with garlic croûtons. it was delicious.
Maredsous is a Trappist monastery and the monks of the abbey used to make beer. This can be seen as a good thing, however the greedy souls at the Duvel Moortgat brewery started brewing Maredsous beers under licence in 1963.

3 Comments:
Go Tymmy!! I'm not a big on Belgians either. Rather have a pint of local IPA if I'm not driving.
I tend to agree Sausage and as I don't drive (well here in the UK anyway), I always drink!
The problem with your local IPA's is that they are loaded with American hops and are usually unbalanced and called double this or Imperial that. The prohibitionist attitudes of the US has killed the session quaffer, and also the notion of drinking more than one pint in an evening.
Jesus Christ, we're in agreement!! I just mentioned on Bell's blog that I was drinking Pliny The Elder on Saturday. Great beer, with 2 being the maximum, unless you're walking. It's the difference in drinking culture. I'd rather have a pint in my hand all night, not just for an hour and have to go home because my head caved in. There are some kill IPA's that are all about hops, but do have a great malty backbone. Stone IPA comes to mind, as does Russian River's Blind Pig. You basically adapt to your surroundings. If I lived in England, I'd drink Bitter. Being I live here, I generally drink Pale Ales. But I generally agree with your comments. There's too much Extreme in the US beer scene.
Post a Comment
Comments welcome, however if you are a ticker, weird beard or anonymous spammer expect to have your comments edited or removed.
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home