MdV: Merchant du Vin beer e-newsletter – Wed. July 21, 2004: Orval
Trappist Ale
NEWS, EVENTS, ARTICLES
For the July/August 2004
issue, Organic Style Magazine held a tasting of currently available organic
beers. One of the recommended beers: Samuel Smith Organic Lager, "Smooth
and mild, with a round deep flavor, it's certified
vegan but excellent at a cookout."
Santé, the Magazine for
Restaurant Professionals, has awarded Samuel Smith Old Brewery Pale Ale the
“Santé Gold Star Award.” See the July/August 2004 issue for details.
A number of MdV’s benchmark European beers were featured at the
prestigious Fancy Foods Show in
Travel and Leisure
Magazine’s Golf issue listed favorite English beers in the July 2004 edition.
The article “Get to the Pint,” listed “the perfect summer brews,” including the
refined and subtle Samuel Smith’s Nut Brown Ale.
Festivals in New York,
Washington, and Hood River, Oregon; a great beer dinner in Richmond, VA; a new
very limited draft Belgian ale from Merchant du Vin . . . It’s a great time for
fine beer! Complete national events are online at:
http://www.merchantduvin.com/pages/1_about/news.html
BEER CHAT FROM THE
Belgian beer imports to the
While all the Trappist
breweries make noteworthy beers, Orval also has a wonderful legend and history:
Sometime around 1070 AD, Countess Mathilda of
The abbey of Orval, founded
in 1070, makes bread, cheese, honeyed sweets, and one of the most remarkable
and respected beers in the world. Orval Trappist Ale is a
full-flavored, effervescent ale of rich amber-gold color, 6.9% alcohol
by volume. It has more bitterness than many Belgian ales,
due to high levels of kettle hops, and Orval is dry-hopped during conditioning
for floral, spicy aroma. The subtle, elusive, but extreme flavor notes in Orval
– difficult to describe, and not for the faint-of-heart – derive from a complex
fermentation schedule: a pure Belgian yeast strain is added first; then later
wild yeasts of multiple strains are added to secondary fermentation; then later
at bottling time a fresh dose of yeast is added for bottle-conditioning. (Many
tasters use adjectives like “hopsack,” “horse-blankety,”
“earthy,” or “barnyardy,” to describe Orval. They
mean these as compliments!) Orval, always found in the custom skittle-shaped
bottle, is available throughout
If you like beer, or if you
don’t like beer, or if you are reading this, you should try it. If you have had
Orval already, don’t you feel like having another? Authentic glassware is
available, too - http://store.merchantduvin.com/e/mdv
Merchant