3 Fonteinen Schaerbeekse Kriek

Revision as of 12:19, 12 April 2020 by Adam (talk | contribs) (Bottle Log)

Revision as of 12:19, 12 April 2020 by Adam (talk | contribs) (Bottle Log)

Description

3 Fonteinen Schaerbeekse Kriek is a special oude kriek bottling made exclusively with young lambic and wild Belgian Schaerbeekse cherries. The lambic and cherries are aged together for four months before bottling. Though 3 Fonteinen's official website lists Schaerbeekse Kriek as 8% ABV, it is labeled as 6% ABV. Schaerbeekse Kriek is bottled in 750ml bottles and is available both in Europe and North America.

In Europe, the labels read "Oude Kriek van Sckaerbeekse Krieken - 35%". This is not an indication that 35% of the cherries in the beer are Sckaerbeekse cherries. Rather, this is because the beer has 210g/l of cherries (35% of the 600L barrel are cherries).

History / Other Notes

The brewery notes on their website that the production of this beer is often driven by the amount of Schaerbeekse cherries that can be sourced from local residents during the growing season. The Schaerbeekse Kriek cherries come from a tree that grows in the wild which is becoming increasingly scarce.[1]

Label Log

European Bottle Text (Vintage):
Young lambic with Schaerbeekse cherries added. Unfiltered. Spontaneous refermentation in the bottle. No colors or other additives.

European Bottle Text (Current):
Young lambic with 35% Schaerbeekse cherries added. Unfiltered. Spontaneous refermentation in the bottle. No colors or other additives. Lambic is brewed from 60% malted barley, 40% wheat, hops, and water

US Import Bottle Text:
Made only with malt, wheat, hops, water, and whole ripe cherries, entirely spontaneously fermented with wild yeasts. A rare, completely natural, traditional lambic beer, with no added sugars, syrups, artificial colors or flavors. For ages, very rare Schaerbeek cherries have been prized by brewers for the deep rich color and flavor they give to Kriek beer.

Bottle Log

Bottle Date (mm/dd/yyyy) Bottle Size Label / Notes Image Link
01/18/2003 750ml Old white/cream label 3 Fonteinen Schaerbeekse Kriek Jan 18 2003.jpg
04/05/2004 750ml Old white/cream label -
03/01/2005 750ml - -
03/22/2006 750ml European Label -
02/26/2007 750ml European Label Bottledate-schaerbeekse2007.jpg
10/17/2008 750ml US Label -
04/28/2010 750ml US & European Labels, black foil SchaerbeekseKriek-04282010.jpg
04/25/2011 750ml European Label -
04/26/2011 750ml - -
12/23/2011 750ml European Label -
01/30/2015 750ml European Label, first release since 2011 -
06/09/2016 750ml European label -
07/19/2017 750ml 41st blend of the 2016-2017 season with fruit harvested in 2016. 365 days of maceration with kriek. 6.2% -
04/25/2018 750ml 53rd blend of the 2017-2018 season. This Schaarbeekse Kriek was macerated for 10 months. The lambic in this blend originated from 4 barrels and 6 brews, all of which are 3 Fonteinen lambics with the oldest having been brewed on 16 November 2016. The final fruit intensity is 382 grams of Schaarbeekse kriek per liter. 3 Fonteinen SK 25 Apr 2018.jpg
07/10/2019 750ml 89th blend of the 2018-2019 season. This Schaerbeekse Kriek has a full year macerating in a tank. The lambic comes from five vats and twelve different brews, the oldest of which was brewed in April 2017. The ifnal fruit intensity is 353 grams of Scaherbeekse Kriek per liter. 100% 3 Fonteinen. 3F Scaherbeekse 10 Jul 2019 blend 89.png
07/10/2019 750ml 90th blend of the 2018-2019 season. This Schaerbeekse Kriek has macerated for a full year in a foeder. The lambic comes from four different barrels and ten different brews with the oldest having been brewed in 2017. The final fruit intensity is 353 grams of Scaherbeekse kriek per liter. 100% 3 Fonteinen. 3F Schaerbeekse 10 July 2019.png
08/07/2019 750ml 99th blend of the 2018-2019 season. This Scaherbeekse Kriek has thirteen months of maceration in a toasted barrel. The lambic comes from five barrels and ten brews. The final fruit intensity is 286 grams of Schaerbeekse Kriek per liter. 100% 3 Fonteinen. 3F Schaerbeekse Toast 07 August 2019.png

References