Brasserie de Brunehaut | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Location | Rongy-Brunehaut Belgium |
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Owner(s) | Marc-Antoine De Mees | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Year opened | 1890 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Active beers | |||||||||||||||||||||||
ten, including one seasonal
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Brasserie de Brunehaut is the trade name for Brunehaut Brewery[1], located in Rongy-Brunehaut (Hainaut), Wallonia, 80 km south/southwest of Brussels, Belgium, near the French border.
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The brewery's history dates directly to 1096 in Tournai, and a time of severe medieval famine, locally remembered as part of "the great plague"[2]. Beer was already known as a safe alternative to impure local water supplies[3] and the local community desperately needed help to avoid starvation. To promote public health, and compensate for minimal humanitarian support from far-away Rome, Benedictine Bishop Radbod included brewing permissions in the charter to re-establish Abbaye de Saint-Martin[4].
Brewing thrived at Abbaye de Saint-Martin, through multiple wars and rebellions without significant interruption until 1793 when, during the French revolution, most abbey structures, including the church sanctuary and brewery were destroyed. Only the mid-18th century Abbot palace, parts of the 14th century Gothic cloister and a Romanesque, 13th century crypt survived. Fortunately, many important abbey documents, including Saint-Martin's "secret" brewing recipes, were successfully hidden from revolutionary plunder.
In 1890, during Belgium's post-Industrial Revolution prosperity, these essential recipes permitted resumption of Abbaye de Saint-Martin brewing by Brasserie de Bruenhaut. More than forty individual Brunehaut beers were brewed during the next century and, in 1990, output capacity doubled, via new construction of a purpose-built fermentation house[5], two kilometers distance from the 1890 brewery site. Abbaye de Saint-Martin remains one of 18x Belgian beers to still enjoy official "Certified Belgian Abbaye Beer" status. [6]
Note: Tournai is known in Dutch as Doornik and in Latin as Tornacum. The city sits at the crossroads of ancient Roman trading highways. Its Belgian-French-speaking citizens use a distinctive Picard dialect. Tournai's Hôtel de Ville serves citizens from the original Abbot palace, which was re-constructed following extensive WWII damage. (See the photo gallery at the bottom of this page.)
An artisanal (non-conglomerate) brewer, Brunehaut employs ancient Belgian brewing recipes, dating from the First Crusade and documented from 1096. Combining top (in-bottle) fermentation with modern production technologies, Brewmaster Damien Delneste's signature beers include Dubble and Tripel bottle-conditioned ales[7], consistent with 1000+-year-old Belgian brewing tradition.
Each Brunehaut Organic (Bio) label has earned organic certification. The company grows their own barley and wheat [8] locally, within the brewery's terroir. Brasserie de Brunehaut historically maintained approximately two dozen labels, including several specialty and occasional seasonal beers. A 2006 ownership change tightened the firm's market focus. Seven products were retired and new packaging labels commissioned[9]. Today, the brewery exports ten labels, across three beer styles. All Brasserie Brunehaut labels are verified as vegan-friendly.[10]
Abbey beer (Bières d'abbaye)
Gluten-free beer + Organic (Bières Bio) Styles
Regional Style (Bières régionales)
• Abbaye de Saint-Martin Triple was awarded a Double Gold medal in the Ales category at the 2011 BIRA International Awards. Israel [11]
• Brunehaut Gluten-free Bio Blonde won a Gold medal in the Specialty Beer category at the 2011 BIRA International Awards. Israel [12]
• Abbaye de Saint-Martin Blonde received a Silver medal in the Belgian Strong Ale category at the 2011 Copa Cervezas America. Chile [13]
• Brunehaut Gluten-free Bio Ambrée was a Gold medal winner at the 2011 United States Open Beer Championships.[14]
• Brunehaut Gluten-free Bio Blonde was a Gold medal winner at the 2011 United States Open Beer Championships.[15]
• Abbaye de Saint-Martin Tripel won a Gold medal at the 2011 World Beer Championship.[16]
• Abbaye de Saint-Martin Brune was awarded a Silver medal at 2011 Beerfest Asia! Singapore [17]
• Mont Saint Aubert Grand Reserve was runner-up in 2010 Philadelphia Beer Week judging.[18]
• At the 2010 Australian International Beer Awards[19], Abbaye de Saint-Martin Brune and Triple each received Silver medals in the Abbey Style, Dubbel and Tripel category.
• During the 2009 World Beer Awards [20], Abbaye de Saint-Martin Brune was named World's Best Abbey (Dark) Beer while Mont Saint-Aubert received 'World's Best Bière de Garde" recognition. London
• In 2008, Mont Saint-Aubert [21] and Abbaye de Saint-Martin Blonde were awarded Silver and Bronze medals (respectively) during the Australian International Beer Awards[19] in the "Abbey Style, Dubbel and Tripel" category.
• Mont Saint-Aubert won a Silver medal at the 2008 Brewers Association World Beer Cup in the Belgian-Style Pale Strong Ales category.
• Abbaye de Saint-Martin Blonde and Brune received Silver medals at the 2007 World Beer Championship.[22][23]
• In 2007, Abbaye de Saint-Martin Blonde received the International Taste & Quality Institute's Superior Taste Award.
• Brasserie de Brunehaut Organic White Beer earned a Silver medal [24] at the 2007 World Beer Championship.
• Mont Saint Aubert received a Gold medal at the 1997 World Beer Championship.
Brasserie de Brunehaut is a member of The Union of Belgian Brewers [25] and participates in many of Belgiums' annual beer festivals including Zythos Bierfestival,[26] Brussels Beer Weekend,[27] Brugs Bierfestival,[28] and Essen's Christmas Beer Festival.[29] The brewery maintains a limited schedule of private and public events, including local seasonal celebrations, plus bicycle and motor coach tours. Most popular among these is a brewery public open house, Fêtes de la Brasserie, held annually each September.
Brunehaut Brewery ships bottled products in either "capped" 33cl or "corked" 75cl bottles across Europe, Asia, North and South America. Brunehaut draught beer is traditionally distributed in 20-liter kegs. In 2008 however, Brunehaut became the first European brewer to offer recyclable, lightweight 30-liter EcoKegs[30] as an export alternative to negative environmental impacts of non-reused or un-recycled beer bottles.