Cantillon Geuze 125: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
| Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
==History/Side-Notes== | ==History/Side-Notes== | ||
The idea for the recipe came from Raf Meert's book "Lambic Untamed" quoting ratios of wheat different from today's standards in lambic recipes of the 19th century<ref name=lambicuntamed>Raf Meert, book "Lambic. The Untamed Brussels Beer: Origin, Evolution and Future", 2022; quoting a recipe from 1829 in Vrancken, ‘Antwoord’, p. 207 that specifies equal volumes of malt and wheat. It is important to note though that wheat is heavier (about 58% of the total weight in the recipe). </ref>. | |||
As Cantillon was blending until 1938 and the producers they bought from aren't existing anymore, it is impossible to know if Paul Cantillon was buying a lambic similar to this recipe in the very early days. If you have access to notes that could help uncover the recipes used by the producers that supplied them in the early days of the business, please contact the Lambic.info team. | |||
[[Brasserie_Cantillon#Beers|← Cantillon]] | [[Brasserie_Cantillon#Beers|← Cantillon]] | ||
Revision as of 19:41, 18 November 2025
Description
Cantillon Gueuze 125 is a gueuze created to celebrate Cantillon's 125th anniversary.
The brewery was inspired by the lambics brewed by their ancestors more than a century ago. During the 19th century, it was common for brewers to use more raw wheat in their brews than the 35% used today. This gueuze is a blend of lambic brewed with 50% raw wheat and 50% malted barley.
It was brewed on December 27, 2017 and blended on December 10, 2021.
History/Side-Notes
The idea for the recipe came from Raf Meert's book "Lambic Untamed" quoting ratios of wheat different from today's standards in lambic recipes of the 19th century[1].
As Cantillon was blending until 1938 and the producers they bought from aren't existing anymore, it is impossible to know if Paul Cantillon was buying a lambic similar to this recipe in the very early days. If you have access to notes that could help uncover the recipes used by the producers that supplied them in the early days of the business, please contact the Lambic.info team.
- ↑ Raf Meert, book "Lambic. The Untamed Brussels Beer: Origin, Evolution and Future", 2022; quoting a recipe from 1829 in Vrancken, ‘Antwoord’, p. 207 that specifies equal volumes of malt and wheat. It is important to note though that wheat is heavier (about 58% of the total weight in the recipe).