Pneill3161
Well-Known Member

New Lamvinous date
With the help of some of our friends outside the project, Lambic.info proudly presents its bibliography, as a list of primary sources presented entirely in PDF form that are of interest to the history, culture, and scientific study of lambic. The bibliography is presented in one location to further the Lambic.info initiative of improving public awareness and education about lambic. These documents span three centuries and as many languages, each of which is indicated for every document. Most are directly related to lambic, though a handful are about beer in general, but are on a topic that is particularly interesting to lambic.
The bibliography is a living document and we'll continue to add to this collection as more sources become available. We welcome any additions and suggestions.
https://www.lambic.info/Bibliography
One question I would love to know more about is Filtration, particularly at Cantillon.
I have seen the video of them making the cellulose filter and noticed that you mention filtration in the brewing process at their Lambic.info page but I was wondering what purpose it serves. Usually we think of filtering as taking out the yeast, bacteria and other particulate, but at the same time with a beer like Cantillon obviously some of that comes through the filtration as the beers definitely continue to evolve in the bottle. Do you (or do they even know) what is being filtered out? Do they filter all their beers or just some?
OMG <3 <3 <3With the help of some of our friends outside the project, Lambic.info proudly presents its bibliography, as a list of primary sources presented entirely in PDF form that are of interest to the history, culture, and scientific study of lambic. The bibliography is presented in one location to further the Lambic.info initiative of improving public awareness and education about lambic. These documents span three centuries and as many languages, each of which is indicated for every document. Most are directly related to lambic, though a handful are about beer in general, but are on a topic that is particularly interesting to lambic.
The bibliography is a living document and we'll continue to add to this collection as more sources become available. We welcome any additions and suggestions.
https://www.lambic.info/Bibliography
Oude Kriek produced with handpicked Schaarbeekse krieks (sour cherries). Oude lambiek is added right before botteling, which makes this beer different from the "Scarenbecca Kriek".
Does the submission page work? I added some pictures of a few h.ertie blends not on the site a while ago, and they're not up. Not sure if you guys have a huge queue to work through, or whether the pics didn't go through?
One question I would love to know more about is Filtration, particularly at Cantillon.
I have seen the video of them making the cellulose filter and noticed that you mention filtration in the brewing process at their Lambic.info page but I was wondering what purpose it serves. Usually we think of filtering as taking out the yeast, bacteria and other particulate, but at the same time with a beer like Cantillon obviously some of that comes through the filtration as the beers definitely continue to evolve in the bottle. Do you (or do they even know) what is being filtered out? Do they filter all their beers or just some?
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Sorry for the potato cam pic, but here is (I think) gueuze being filtered when I was there in June. There are 4 sight glasses in the pic. The one on the L is the unfiltered beer, the two in the middle are during the filtration, and on the R is the filtered beer. I'm assuming draining the barrels stirs up quite a bit of turbidity and that all the beers are filtered so the bottles end up clear.
Another question inspired by Untappd, lately I've been seeing a ton of duplicates of Scarenbecca Kriek, did they change their label? For instance, someone just made Oude Schaarbeekse Kriek with this description:
Here's the label:
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Leaving aside that adding old lambic right before bottling doesn't really make sense (I mean, I guess they could do it though I don't see why they would), I see no real evidence that this is anything but a new name for an old beer. Any info?
Leaving aside that adding old lambic right before bottling doesn't really make sense (I mean, I guess they could do it though I don't see why they would), I see no real evidence that this is anything but a new name for an old beer. Any info?
I believe they are the same. Both state that they are aged in oak barrels and refermented in the bottle. One label is easier to get stateside, the other is easier to get continental-side. At least IME.
They could be, but the wording has me believing they are the same. The older label stated wild Schaerbeek cherries. The newer one just says cherries. I'm leaning towards the lack of Schaerbeek cherries calling for the change in labeling. Has anyone contacted Hanssen's? They are quite a friendly couple. I'm sure they might be able to shed some light on this. Just maybe.I mean... most lambic labels say aged in oak barrels and refermented in the bottle. And this is definitely the first time this label has ever been used in Europe whereas it used to be the older label we see here, and I haven't found a TTB approval for this one yet. I'm not saying it's not a different beer, but it could be. Just no confirmation one way or the other yet.
New Iris date - March 25th 2015
So ****** stoked as they finally bottled a birthday beer for me!
Yeah 750 & 2015 cork.Size and cork date? I'm assuming 750ml and 2015, but ya know.
Yeah 750 & 2015 cork.
How long is the website going to be down?
Well, that was the most underwhelming trolling I've done in quite some time.It's not?
Coup new loon dates
Classic Geuze feb 9 2015 750 euro
RdG May 20 2015 750 naked lady euro
Not to step on SeaWatchman or Forgetfu's toes, but I wanted people here to see this before they are gone:
http://www.lambic.info/Support_Lambic.Info
Lambic.info shirts and tumblers, go get 'em!