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St Louis Premium Peche

st-louis-premium-framboise

 
Type Single Fermentation
Colour Barley-sugar with hint of peachy white
Bottle 25cl
Case: 24 bottles
Alcohol 2.6% volume
Shelf Life 1+ years

This Lambic beer, made with 30% fresh peach or peach juice, pours a barley-sugar colour with a hint of peachy white in the moderate head. There's a sour lemon and slightly vinegary note on the nose and just the merest suggestion of fruit. On the palate it is medium-bodied and quite creamy, with an initial sweetness that is fruity, but not specifically peachy, which is odd. It has fairly good acidity and a touch of malty richness that stops it from being too cloying.

St Louis Premium Peche History

In 1075 Robrecht de Fries, the Count of Flanders, built a castle on the ruins of a monastery inhabited by English monks in 640 (hence the place name : Anglomonasterium).

On account of its strategic position, at the gates of West Flanders, along the Mandel river, at a junction on the strategic road between Courtrai and Bruges, Ingelmunster was called ‘the key to Flanders’. The present building which goes back to 1736 (with cellars dating from the Middle Ages), is typical of its period, a time when castles had lost their military function. They were luxurious residences, a place where hospitality and good taste went hand in hand. The seigneury of Ingelmunster, which has been a baronetcy since the end of the 16th century, has belonged to several families :

Van Honsebrouck

  • Under the counts of Flanders, including among others de Rhodes and van Gistel (1000 – 1384)
  • Under the Dukes of Burgundy, German and French families, and more particularly the Bourgondi and van Kleef families (1384 – 1583)
  • The de Plotho family (1583 – 1825)
  • The de Montblanc family (1825 – 1986)
  • In 1986 the castle was bought by the Van Honsebrouck family, who have been brewing in Ingelmunster since 1900.
 
 
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