beelsebob wrote:AnthonyG wrote:Rochefort 10 was created by the same monk that brewed Westvleteren, he also did Sint-Bernardus, the Chimay blue (my absolute favorite Trappist) and I'm not sure, but he also did Orval and Achelse kluis.
Orval being too "herby" for me and the Achelse kluis not bad, but still only a simpler version of the Rochefort 10.
Yep, many of them are, Belgian brewing is a surprisingly recent thing – last couple of hundred years. Also, Orval lives up to it's name – it's Awful.
Beers I like to drink often are
*Chimay blue
Good choice – The white is also pretty damn good, not a fan of the red so much.
*Maes
*Duvel (best lager in the world, period)
Not a fan of either, but I'm not a fan of Lager.
*Delerium Tremens
A very good choice – and that actually makes me surprised you don't like triple karmeliet, they're both very malty saaz based triples.
*Celis White (a better version of Hoegaarden, hard to come by)
If I feel like a white beer I tend to have Grimergen White.
*Rodenbach
*Ciney
Now on my list of to try
*LaChouffe (brewery isn't that far from Spa I think)
I'm not a huge fan.
*Kriek Liefmans (fruity cherry beer, hard to come by)
Blech, it's like drinking overly sweet cherry coke.
And a little tip: never empty the full bottle in your glass, always leave the bit with residu in the bottle; it changes the taste of your beer completly. (more bitter)
Depends on the beer. The reason you don't want to do this with some beers is because they're "bottle conditioned". Meaning that they put the beer into the bottle before all of the yeast is dead, add a little syrup to feed the yeast, and let the carbon it produces pressurise the beer and make it fizzy. Other beers meanwhile, they let the yeast all die, and then manually carbonate the beer (effectively with an industrial soda stream). When the beer is bottle conditioned, the yeast eats the sugar, and then dies and flocculates. What remains settles at the bottom of the bottle. You very much don't want to pour that yeast into your glass (it's bitter, and can actually give you a yeast infection), so yeh, with those beers, let the bottle stand upright for a few days before pouring, pour in one smooth motion (not tipping back and forwards), and leave the last little bit in the bottle.