Cantillon Lou Pepe Gueuze: Difference between revisions

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== Description ==
== Description ==
Lou Pepe Geuze is part of Cantillon's Lou Pepe series which is bottled on a regular basis.  The series also contains the [[Cantillon_Lou_Pepe_-_Framboise|Lou Pepe Framboise]] and [[Cantillon_Lou_Pepe_-_Kriek|Lou Pepe Kriek]].  Lou Pepe Gueuze is not a true gueuze in the traditional sense.  It is made from two year old lambic that has been aged in used wine barrels. To carbonate the beer, a small amount of sweet liquor is added after bottling causing the refermentation in the bottle.
Lou Pepe Geuze is part of Cantillon's Lou Pepe series which is bottled on a regular basis.  The series also contains the [[Cantillon_Lou_Pepe_-_Framboise|Lou Pepe Framboise]] and [[Cantillon_Lou_Pepe_-_Kriek|Lou Pepe Kriek]].  Lou Pepe Gueuze is not a true gueuze in the traditional sense.  It is made from two year old lambic that has been aged in used wine barrels. To carbonate the beer, a small amount of sweet liquor is added after bottling causing the refermentation in the bottle.
According to Cantillon's official website, "The particular name of these beers comes from the south-west of France, a region the Cantillon family is very fond of. In this beautiful region, the grandfather is called Lou Pepe."


== History / Other Notes ==
== History / Other Notes ==
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Lou Pepe Geuze, as with the other Lou Pepe bottlings, come with two dates. A vintage date and a bottling/cork date. They are generally two years apart, with the vintage date shown as a sticker on the bottle above the label.  The earliest known vintage is 1998.


== Unsubstantiated Stories ==
== Unsubstantiated Stories ==
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Some reviews mention that there may be 375ml bottles of this beer in existence. To date, none of been shared publicly and thus cannot be verified as existing. 


==Bottle Log==
==Bottle Log==