The Beer Topic!
- Comet
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The Beer Topic!
Seeing as some people seem to object to beer being mentioned on other threads, here is one topic where we can talk about beer as much as we like without ruining other threads, and in the Luchtzak Pub it can't be off topic, can it?
Sloeber is the best golden ale in Belgium, end of argument.
Orval tastes like oral polio vaccine without a sugar lump.
Rochefort 10 is to dark beers what Sloeber is to goldens (ie the best!)
Stella Artois is brewed in Leuven and nowhere else!
Brugs is better than Hoegaarden, which tastes like soapy water.
The best Abbey-style beer is Ename, followed by Tongerlo and Ciney.
Ara Bier is nice but not for beginners because it has a bitter aftertaste, provided in part by Goldings hops.
What does anyone else have to say about beer?
Sloeber is the best golden ale in Belgium, end of argument.
Orval tastes like oral polio vaccine without a sugar lump.
Rochefort 10 is to dark beers what Sloeber is to goldens (ie the best!)
Stella Artois is brewed in Leuven and nowhere else!
Brugs is better than Hoegaarden, which tastes like soapy water.
The best Abbey-style beer is Ename, followed by Tongerlo and Ciney.
Ara Bier is nice but not for beginners because it has a bitter aftertaste, provided in part by Goldings hops.
What does anyone else have to say about beer?
Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise
Re: The Beer Topic!
That's what you think !!!!!!Comet wrote: Sloeber is the best golden ale in Belgium, end of argument.
Just to remind you everybody has it's own tastes and thanks to the great variaty of beers in Belgium everyone can find one which he likes most.
Chris
Re: The Beer Topic!
Sloeber : no way!Comet wrote: Sloeber is the best golden ale in Belgium, end of argument.
...
Stella Artois is brewed in Leuven and nowhere else!
...
Brugs is better than Hoegaarden, which tastes like soapy water.
...
Stella : correct but you have to love the taste of "canal-water" to love stella!!!
Brugs misses the finishing touch that you can find in a Hoegie
:cheers:
Re: The Beer Topic!
Oooooooo so true Avro! :drink:Avro wrote:That's what you think !!!!!!Comet wrote: Sloeber is the best golden ale in Belgium, end of argument.
Just to remind you everybody has it's own tastes and thanks to the great variaty of beers in Belgium everyone can find one which he likes most.
Chris
Stella is my favourite...
After 3 months without belgian beer at all, I drank a 6 euro Stella in the airport in Hong Kong, this was divine... Like an angel pissing on my tongue
If I want something sweet I prefer a "Kriek"... Most sweet is Lindemans, best taste goes to Mort Subite, off course, all my personal opinion...
After 3 months without belgian beer at all, I drank a 6 euro Stella in the airport in Hong Kong, this was divine... Like an angel pissing on my tongue

If I want something sweet I prefer a "Kriek"... Most sweet is Lindemans, best taste goes to Mort Subite, off course, all my personal opinion...
I was only referring to the fact that CN-RAM=rel's intro was hijacked by the beer topic, I'm suggesting that we all stick to the particular topic in that part of the forum we are in; instead of goingcomet wrote: Seeing as some people seem to object to beer beeing mentioned on other threads



Re: The Beer Topic!
End of argument? Nothing is final, Louise. I prefer by far Leffe Blonde (and Luchtzak will agree with me on that one. Tripel Westmalle or Tripel Karmeliet or Chimay White alre by far more divine beverages than Slubber, or how did you name that almost unknown brand?Comet wrote:Sloeber is the best golden ale in Belgium, end of argument.
Orval tastes like oral polio vaccine without a sugar lump.
As for your opinion about Orval, it show that you know very little about Belgian Trappist beers. Take the time to enjoy it, and you will see that Orval (which has only one type of beer, contrary to all other trappist abbeys) is on the top of the Trappist league.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
- Comet
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Leffe Blond is merely a mass-produced Interbrew product (they'll be brewing a fake version over here soon I'll bet!) And don't imply that I know nothing about beer
Have you ever tasted neat oral polio vaccine? Because then you would see its strong resemblance to Orval, which doesn't even taste remotely like beer. This is not my view only - VC10 once bought a bottle of Orval and she said she had never drunk anything which tasted so bad!
As for Leffe, I prefer the brown version, it has a lovely roast-nuts hint in its taste. Has anyone here ever tried the Leffe Vieille Cuvee? That is very hard to find anywhere.
And don't insult Sloeber! It's not my fault it is hard to find, but that doesn't make it a bad beer. Westvleteren is not always easy to get, but that doesn't mean it is bad quality. Likewise for Rochefort 6, that is a very pleasing beer, admittedly not as great as the 10, but very nice nonetheless (so I know nothing about Trappist beer?
) I know that Westvleteren is sometimes available in shops and not only available if you go to the Abbey, like someone on here once said! I know that Orval uses hop types not found in too many other beers, the Goldings give it the bitter aftertaste, and there is a German hop type in there as well, and occasionally Styrian which would impart a slight orange aftertaste.

As for Leffe, I prefer the brown version, it has a lovely roast-nuts hint in its taste. Has anyone here ever tried the Leffe Vieille Cuvee? That is very hard to find anywhere.
And don't insult Sloeber! It's not my fault it is hard to find, but that doesn't make it a bad beer. Westvleteren is not always easy to get, but that doesn't mean it is bad quality. Likewise for Rochefort 6, that is a very pleasing beer, admittedly not as great as the 10, but very nice nonetheless (so I know nothing about Trappist beer?

Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise
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Re: The Beer Topic!
It is now known as Chimay Tripel to avoid confusion with white beers such as Hoegaarden (so people don't go thinking it is a "white" beer, but you only have to look at its strength - 9%- to know that it is a Tripel!)sn26567 wrote: Chimay White
And you cannot class Sloeber, which is in the same group of beers as Duvel, Hapkin, Judas, Piraat etc with Westmalle, Chimay and Karmeliet, which are all Tripels, and often have different hops to provide a completely different kind of taste ("harsher" than the average golden ale). It is like comparing Cantillon Lambic with Gulden Draak or Bush, you cannot because they are all different types of beers.
Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise
I am sure! Bart, it is called InBev now (after the merger with the Brasilian brewery AmBev).luchtzak wrote:are you sure Leffe is an Interbrew-product?
Louise, ever seen the Leffe abbey near Dinant?
Last edited by sn26567 on 05 Oct 2004, 16:36, edited 1 time in total.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Last week Interbrew-unions planned to go on strike as the management decided to replace the normal beer into a non-alcohol version during the employees lunchbreak.
American investors who visited the factory where very surprised to see that the workers where allowed to drink 2 beers during lunch and 2 beers after work. Apparently the American investors didn't agree with this kind of operations
Earlier the management dediced to limit the beer-consumption to 2 per lunch as before some workers already had 10 beers at lunch
Als je bij de bron zit
American investors who visited the factory where very surprised to see that the workers where allowed to drink 2 beers during lunch and 2 beers after work. Apparently the American investors didn't agree with this kind of operations

Earlier the management dediced to limit the beer-consumption to 2 per lunch as before some workers already had 10 beers at lunch

Als je bij de bron zit

- Comet
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No Andre, unfortunately I haven't, though I did see a sign for it whilst we were in Dinant, and also one for Ciney (I took a shot on video but unfortunately not a photo so I can't include it with the Dinant city guide - which will be a beauty because we had a perfect day for weather and Dinant is such a beautiful placesn26567 wrote:
Louise, ever seen the Leffe abbey near Dinant?

Surely Leffe beer should actually be called "Lesse"? If the abbey takes it's name from the river, which is Lesse, and the "f" in the beer logo is actually a medieval "s" (they wrote "s" like "f" in medieval manuscripts) then there is no such place as Leffe and the beer is also wrongly pronounced?
Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise
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Sorry Andre, I thought that the "f" in the name on the bottle was actually a medieval "s" because that is how they were written in that kind of script, I didn't know there was a Leffe as well as a Lesse.sn26567 wrote:No, Louise, the Lesse river does not flow in Leffe village, but at 15 km from there. These are two separate denominations. If I am not mistaken, there is also a Leffe river that flows in Leffe village. But this needs double-checking...
We bought a new beer to try, La Divine from the Silly brewery. That is the first time that beer has been sold in Scarborough. We haven't tried it yet, but looking at its strength (over 9%) it is a tripel abbey-style beer and therefore a golden colour.
In 27 days I will be able to go into a proper beer shop again, I haven't been in one since 15th September

Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise
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Re: The Beer Topic!
Is that why you see so many people drinking it in bars all over Belgium? I have only ever seen Orval being drunk four times in all the Belgian bars I've been in. I have seen more people drink Sloeber (which some people falsely regard as rubbish), Rochefort and Chimay than I have seen drinking Orval!sn26567 wrote:
Orval (which has only one type of beer, contrary to all other trappist abbeys) is on the top of the Trappist league.
Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise