Difference between revisions of "Brasserie Huygens"

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==History==
 
==History==
  
Huygens was a Gueuze blender in Vlezenbeek, founded in 1911 by Jan-Baptiste Huygens (b. 1883) during the interwar period. In 1897, at the age of 14, Huygens apprenticed at the Union Marchands de Bières in Uccle. The origins of the blendery began at the corner of [https://bit.ly/2VOM2mC Postweg and Schreinstraat] in Vlezenbeek, with a café and adjacent warehouse. After World War I, he built a new residence and second adjacent warehouse. Jan-Baptiste Huygens was the master blender from 1920 until his death in 1958. His son Dominiek and his two son-in-laws Henri Depever and Eugeen De Kegel continued the business until 1970. Lambic was sourced from Lindemans, De Neve, Eylenbosch, Moriau, and Winderickx. Huygens closure was attributed to the decreased popularity of Gueuze in favor of sweeter beers.
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Huygens was a Gueuze blender in Vlezenbeek, founded in 1911 by Jan-Baptiste Huygens (b. 1883) during the interwar period. In 1897, at the age of 14, Huygens apprenticed at the Union Marchands de Bières in Uccle. The origins of the blendery began at the corner of [https://bit.ly/2VOM2mC Postweg and Schreinstraat] in Vlezenbeek, with a café and adjacent warehouse. After World War I, he built a new residence and second adjacent warehouse. Jan-Baptiste Huygens was the master blender from 1911 until his death in 1958. His son Dominiek and his two son-in-laws Henri Depever and Eugeen De Kegel continued the business until 1970. Lambic was sourced from Lindemans, De Neve, Eylenbosch, Moriau, and Winderickx. Huygens closure was attributed to the decreased popularity of Gueuze in favor of sweeter beers.
  
 
==Beers==
 
==Beers==

Revision as of 13:28, 22 June 2020

Huygens Gueuze - Kriek sign. Source: Hierstroomhetbier.be

History

Huygens was a Gueuze blender in Vlezenbeek, founded in 1911 by Jan-Baptiste Huygens (b. 1883) during the interwar period. In 1897, at the age of 14, Huygens apprenticed at the Union Marchands de Bières in Uccle. The origins of the blendery began at the corner of Postweg and Schreinstraat in Vlezenbeek, with a café and adjacent warehouse. After World War I, he built a new residence and second adjacent warehouse. Jan-Baptiste Huygens was the master blender from 1911 until his death in 1958. His son Dominiek and his two son-in-laws Henri Depever and Eugeen De Kegel continued the business until 1970. Lambic was sourced from Lindemans, De Neve, Eylenbosch, Moriau, and Winderickx. Huygens closure was attributed to the decreased popularity of Gueuze in favor of sweeter beers.

Beers

  • Gueuze
  • Kriek

Links

Historical account (Dutch) (PDF).

Historical photo source #1

Historical photo source #2

Historical photo source #3

Photos

Videos

References

• Debraekeleer W. e.a., Brouwerijen en bierstekerijen in Beersel. Lambiek en Faro zijn de beste bieren van de wereld, Beersel, Het heemkundig genootschap 'van witthem' Beersel, 2003.

"Twee Eeuwen Biercultuur In De Zennevallei" (Two Centuries of Beer Culture in the Senne Valley) exhibition guide, Provincie Vlaams-Brabant Dienst Erfgoed, 2016.