• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Lambic Discussion Thread

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Has anyone ever received a bottle of cantillon that has a small black line coming down from the cap? Its pretty thick, like glue or something and doesn't really seem like beer. Iguess it could be, just doesn't seem like it. Its 2 years old. Any idea what this is?
 
Has anyone ever received a bottle of cantillon that has a small black line coming down from the cap? Its pretty thick, like glue or something and doesn't really seem like beer. Iguess it could be, just doesn't seem like it. Its 2 years old. Any idea what this is?
eat it and report back
 
eat it and report back
contraband_simpsons.gif
 
Has anyone ever received a bottle of cantillon that has a small black line coming down from the cap? Its pretty thick, like glue or something and doesn't really seem like beer. Iguess it could be, just doesn't seem like it. Its 2 years old. Any idea what this is?
Does it smell like balsamic vinegar?
 
A newer similarly sized bottle I got had a bunch of runoff from the bottling line on the bottle, could this be the same and just dried and hardened over 2 years, or do you think the seal is compromised?
 
I can't smell anything at all.
mRz5RUO.jpg

UpEzRDk.jpg

I scraped a little off with a razor. that's it on a white plate in the 2nd pic.
Whenever there's a question of the form "Is something wrong with my Cantillon bottle?" the answer is "No, their corks are just the worst thing ever so **** happens." Your bottle is almost certainly fine.
 
Took most of '15 and first half of '16 off from etre while we bought a house so I guess my reference points are outdated. I'm used to RdG sitting for at least a few days, not a few hours.
 
Took most of '15 and first half of '16 off from etre while we bought a house so I guess my reference points are outdated. I'm used to RdG sitting for at least a few days, not a few hours.


You've missed a lot man. Minutes is about the standard as of late. Not joking.
 
Yesterday 3F brewed a new wort intended to replicate traditional recipe Faro - 12 hour boil, no hops, racked into 400l barrels and intended to be served fresh in the lambik-o-droom, alongside young lambic. (Paraphrasing what Armand had just been telling a group of us on a tour).
 
Follow-up to the last post... tl;dr I went to Cantillon and 3F and had a ball

Best day out in Brussels yet yesterday. Train got in at 11.30, straight to Cantillon.
- Glass of Iris - a good reminder of how great this is, Saaz hops popping on the nose, breakfast juice on the palate.
- St Lamvinus Grand Cru - bought this with the intention of just having a glass but took the entire 75cl to the dome as 1) the place was mostly full of tour groups and 2) it was that good. The lower carbonation (due to the older lambic?) makes this, the tannins and deep fruit coming through. Incredibly complex.

Lots for sale to take away - Cuvée St Gilloise, Grand Cru Bruocsella, Vigneronne, Saint Lamvinus - and too much to drink on-site to get through solo.

Short walk back to Midi to hop on the train out to Lot and 3F. 10 mins ride from platform 19, €10 return, 5 mins walk the other end.
The lambik-o-droom is brilliant. Flat-out brilliant. Very relaxed, without the tour groups of casual drinkers that clog up Cantillon moaning about the sourness. Not all of the draft beers and assemblages are available all the time - it depends what's in tank or what's just been packaged. Armand will show small groups around the barrel store if he has the time - he's clearly very proud of what they've built here.
If you love lambic, this is your #1 must-visit spot now.

Amongst the highlights:
- New PX and Oloroso barrels are filled for the next Zenne batch. The sherry from these is being served with Zenne b1 in the bar - you get a 70ml pour of each with each bottle at the bar.
- Friday was the brewday for the new 3F Faro as above.
- There are bottles of A&G 2017 conditioning now. This will be an annual blend rather than regular - they're still getting lots of wort from Boon and Lindemans.
- New batch Hommage was bottled in December and is conditioning now. Should be ready around Open Beer Day time.
- New Tuverbol was bottled last month.

Drinks:
- glass of jonge lambiek from Jan 2016. Posted this in the DDT. Huge malted cereal character still in the glass, delicate citric acidity.
- Oude Geuze Honing. They opened this for me just as Armand appeared to do an impromptu tour, and it benefitted from being open for 30 mins - huge, messy amounts of foam on opening and first pour. The honey is extremely delicate, like a floral note, but it's otherwise just a good bottle of 3F geuze.
- OGV 2008. €20 for a split of this. Crazy bargain. All that minerally, dusty 3F depth, after-a-flood basement funk.



Train back to Midi and a short walk up to Moeder to go overboard on the Péché Day drafts... Almost missed the train home due to doubling down on the Bourbon BA.
 
Follow-up to the last post... tl;dr I went to Cantillon and 3F and had a ball

Best day out in Brussels yet yesterday. Train got in at 11.30, straight to Cantillon.
- Glass of Iris - a good reminder of how great this is, Saaz hops popping on the nose, breakfast juice on the palate.
- St Lamvinus Grand Cru - bought this with the intention of just having a glass but took the entire 75cl to the dome as 1) the place was mostly full of tour groups and 2) it was that good. The lower carbonation (due to the older lambic?) makes this, the tannins and deep fruit coming through. Incredibly complex.

I feel you on the st lam grand cru, just delicious! Do not sleep on blending the 50n/st lam grand cru together either ;)
 
Back
Top