Joe:
Thanks for the detailed information. With regard to the blending, one of the problems these days -- as I understand it in any event -- is that a lot of the lambic derivatives are made with only a little lambic. Consequently, some beers that are called geuze and kriek etc. do not have the sour but complex base that the traditional varieties had.
I moved to Belgium (Vlaams-Brabant) in 1980 and started drinking these beers soon after arrival. I feel pretty certain that the basic trend has been to make those that should have a sweet element ever sweeter, in some cases really losing the sweet-sour balance that was so interesting to me. As David says, there is a real appeal for many of the very sweet items such as Lindemans Framboise and once in a blue moon, as a sort of dessert beer (as nr706 aptly says), I too can understand the appeal.
But now to kriek, I suspect kriek is a product that has really undergone quite a bit of a change in basic taste profile, at least among the big producers. As I mentioned elsewhere,
krieken are specifically sour cherries (and as you added, the traditional variety used were the dark
Schaarbeekse krieken). Of course, Schaarbeek is hardly an agricultural centre these days but, as you say (something I hadn't thought about till reading your post), the native
krieken in Brabant are not sufficient to fulfill the needs (and budgets) of all the brewers and I read now that the cherries are increasingly imported from Germany and Denmark and now also Poland. Thanks for bringing that issue to my attention. But still I wonder to what degree the change in the 'cherry' used is responsible for the change from 'very tart with a sweet edge' to 'very sweet with a tart edge' and to what degree it has to do with other short-cutting/cost-lowering measures (e.g., syrup instead of real fruit, less lambic used).
Anyway, good
kriek should not to my mind ever be describable with the word 'sweet' and luckily, there are still some makers who get it right.
Mort Subite's kriek was still pretty good a few years ago when I was last at the café of same name. With a nice slab of bread and butter and some plattekeis, scallions and rammenas, hard to beat. I'll report back on the current quality of this combo after my next visit in September,
inshaallah.
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David:
Thanks for starting this thread on a swell family of beverages.
About Hoegaarden, you say it's been bought by Miller, which is a surprise to me -- are you certain? Hoegaarden had been (like so many small breweries in Belgium) been gobbled up by the behemoth Interbrew (which grew out of the long expansive Stella-Artois of Leuven -- I lived next door to their main brewery for 2 years plus). Anyway, Interbrew is surely horrible at some level but they also leave some measure of independence to the small specialty brewers that assures a measure of continuity with regard to quality that one doesn't typically see with Bud and Miller buy-outs (this is especially so, I'm sure, with the products intended first and foremost for the native Belgian audience).
There is a Hoegaarden knock-off that I thought belonged to Miller, namely Celis (small brewery started by former Hoegaarden brewmaster who moved to Texas, made great beer for a while, then sold the business and name to Miller). Blue Moon is the Coors correlate; as is virtually always the case with American interpretations of Belgian beer varieites, it's overwrought (the 'more is better' philosophy).
I can't remember if I mentioned this once here or whether it was in the Land of Leff (no final
-e), but whenever talk turns to the
witbier of Hoegaarden I'm inclined to wax poetic and nostalgic about the town of Hoegaarden and the surrounding area, just a little east of Leuven and right on the language boundary. For anyone who visits Belgium and has time to get out into the country, this area is a very beautiful and interesting part of the country.
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One of the things I like about traditonal lambic is its flatness and one of the things I like about geuze is its liveliness; it also has a nice bitter edge alongside the sour element. Faro is not so common and was the original (I believe) of the sweetened lambics. I agree with Mike G that the pêche beer is more interesting than the framboise but what I'm really waiting for is the witloof beer.
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.