Brown beer

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4 products

4 products

Beer Trappiste Rochefort 8 9.2% 24x33cl Rochefort | Brune
€52,80
Belgique Bouteille Namur

Sweet and spicy brown.

Originally called the special, it is less spicy than its little sister the Rochefort 6 and tends more towards this café au lait side which is even more pronounced in its big sister the Rochefort 10.

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Beer La Rouge Croix 7.5% 24x33cl Lesse | Brune
€51,36
Belgique Bouteille Namur
A dark beer with a round and delicately spicy taste. Brewed with caramel malts which give it a soft and mellow taste.
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Beer La Houppe 7.5% Station 16 | Brune
€67,68
Belgique Bouteille Namur Scotch
La Houppe is a blonde beer with copper highlights, balanced bitterness and some citrus notes. Its aromatic nose betrays the presence of a subtle blend of 3 varieties of hops.
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Beer Brogne Brune 7% 24x33cl Brogne | Brune
€61,68
Belgique Bouteille Namur
La Brogne Brune combines 5 different malts. Its dark brown, slightly reddish color reveals a malty, roasted and slightly woody taste. The hops, uniquely aromatic, give it a fine bitterness in balance with the powerful taste of the selected malts.
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Brown beer

Dark beers are a style that classifies beers by color. The fact is that a double and brown beer, are also a dark beers. This gives a limit to the categorization of beers without protecteing the styles by A.O.C or I.G.P.

Generally dark beers are included in everything that is not classified as abbey beer, even if this is not entirely true. You have to be careful with the label of 'abbey beer', because only two conditions must be met.

A third of the malt must come from monastic harvests (the monks produce a third of the barley on the Belgian market, which is not a problem) and the denomination of the abbey must have existed (which in Belgium is not complicated either). In fact, if we remove the second condition, we see that all Belgian beers could be labeled as 'abbey beer'.

Dark beers are a category of beer that is determined by their color. Generally these are abbey beers but the ‘double’ classification is more general today.

These beers are also less sweet and they have a slightly toasted aftertaste. The degree of alcohol is not a reference to be classified in this family.

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