Difference between revisions of "Cantillon Kersengueuze"

From Lambic.Info
Jump to: navigation, search
(Photos)
(History / Other Notes)
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Cantillon-Kersengueuze.jpg|right|200px|Cantillon Kersengueuze]]
+
[[File:CantillonKersengueuzeBottle-1.jpg|right|200px|Cantillon Kersengueuze]]
[[Brasserie Cantillon|← Cantillon]]
+
[[Brasserie Cantillon#Beers|← Cantillon]]
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
 
== Description ==
 
== Description ==
Fill me in
+
In 1990, a beer group called the De Dolle Proever (“The Whacky Tasters”), led by Daniel “Sam” Croonen, posed this question to Jean Pierre Van Roy: “if you use sour cherries to make kriek, then obviously your final product is going to end up sour, but what if you use regular cherries?".  As it turns out, the added sugars in the sweet cherries led to a fruit lambic that was very sour. 
  
 
== History / Other Notes ==
 
== History / Other Notes ==
Fill me in
+
Half a keg of this beer was served at the club's holiday party. Technically, this was the only appearance of a Kersenlambic.  The remainder of the keg was blended with [[Cantillon Kriek 100% Lambic |Cantillon Kriek]] and [[Cantillon Jonge Lambic|Jonge Lambic]] to create Kersengueuze which was bottled into unlabeled 75cl bottles.  Additionally, fifty 1.5 liter magnums were made with a custom label designed by Joris Pattyn.  The first 29 magnums were numbered, but the remaining 21 were not.
  
== Unsubstantiated Stories ==
+
Bottles of Kersengueuze were never sold.  Very limited numbers of 75cl and 1.5L bottles were given as gifts to club members and friends of Joris.
Fill me in
 
  
 
==Label==
 
==Label==
Line 19: Line 18:
 
|-
 
|-
 
! Bottle date  
 
! Bottle date  
(mm/dd/yyyy)
+
(mm/yyyy)
! Cork Date
 
 
! Bottle Size
 
! Bottle Size
 
! Label / Notes
 
! Label / Notes
! Image Link
 
 
|-
 
|-
| 11/14/2008
+
| 3/1991
| 2008
 
 
| 750mL
 
| 750mL
| Barrel with state of PA outline
+
| Unlabeled
| Need Photo
+
|-
 +
|-
 +
| 3/1991
 +
| 1.5L
 +
| Numbered, labeled bottles
 
|-]
 
|-]
  
Line 48: Line 48:
  
  
[[Brasserie Cantillon|← Cantillon]]
+
[[Brasserie Cantillon#Beers|← Cantillon]]

Latest revision as of 12:20, 17 January 2015

Cantillon Kersengueuze

← Cantillon

Description

In 1990, a beer group called the De Dolle Proever (“The Whacky Tasters”), led by Daniel “Sam” Croonen, posed this question to Jean Pierre Van Roy: “if you use sour cherries to make kriek, then obviously your final product is going to end up sour, but what if you use regular cherries?". As it turns out, the added sugars in the sweet cherries led to a fruit lambic that was very sour.

History / Other Notes

Half a keg of this beer was served at the club's holiday party. Technically, this was the only appearance of a Kersenlambic. The remainder of the keg was blended with Cantillon Kriek and Jonge Lambic to create Kersengueuze which was bottled into unlabeled 75cl bottles. Additionally, fifty 1.5 liter magnums were made with a custom label designed by Joris Pattyn. The first 29 magnums were numbered, but the remaining 21 were not.

Bottles of Kersengueuze were never sold. Very limited numbers of 75cl and 1.5L bottles were given as gifts to club members and friends of Joris.

Label

LabelCantillonKersengueuze.jpg

Bottle Log

Bottle date

(mm/yyyy)

Bottle Size Label / Notes
3/1991 750mL Unlabeled
3/1991 1.5L Numbered, labeled bottles

References


Photos



← Cantillon