Leicestershire monks brew UK's first Trappist beer
- Published
Monks in Leicestershire have become the first in the UK to brew an officially recognised Trappist beer.
Mount Saint Bernard Abbey, near Coalville, is only the world's 12th to get permission to call itself a Trappist brewery.
The beer, Tynt Meadow, comes in at 7.4% ABV.
Named after the meadow in which monks originally settled on the site in 1835, it will be on sale at the abbey and beer shops next month.
The monks began looking at opening a brewery in 2013, after closing down their dairy farm when it became economically unviable.
Brothers visited other Trappist breweries - whose beers are regarded as among the finest in the world - as part of their research, and conducted their first experimental brew on St Lutgard's Day, a saint famous for surviving on bread and beer during fasts.
Dom Erik Varden, abbot of Mount Saint Bernard, said he was "very relieved" to see the brewery up and running, and hoped it could help them extend their community work.
"Beer is a good, honest, nurturing drink - our Belgian friends said more than once it should be liquid bread and not coloured water, and that's what we're aiming to live up to," he said.
What is Trappist beer?
According to the International Trappist Association, external, the beer must be brewed within the abbey by the monks or under their supervision
The brewery's activities must be secondary in importance to the monastery's work and way of life
It should not be run as a profit-making venture, with funds going to fund the monks' living expenses and grounds and to help charitable causes
Six of the 12 Trappist breweries are based in Belgium, with two from The Netherlands and one each in Austria, Italy and the US
Some Trappist monasteries also make bread, cheese, chocolate and other products
Other alcoholic products made by different orders of monks include French liqueur Chartreuse and controversial tonic wine Buckfast, which is made in Devon
Roger Protz, one of the country's leading beer writers, said the beer was "seriously nice" and should generate "enormous interest" from beer drinkers.
"It's really very exciting - this is the first beer brewed by monks [in England] since the Reformation," he said.
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- Published24 March 2017
- Published26 June 2016