In North Carolina for a few days, I stopped in last evening at the
Thirsty Monk in Asheville.
The managing director of
Brouwerij Huyghe was the bar's special guest.
Huyghe, family-owned and independent, is best known for its strong Belgian golden ale,
Delerium Tremens, and for the beer's label featuring pink elephants.
Standing on a chair to be heard over the din of the appreciative crowd, Alain De Laet delivered a simultaneously informative and gracious mini-lecture on the good fortune of Huyghe and the state of good beer itself.
![Alain De Laet Alain De Laet](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_ux3pT7jGynUJL9I4DUFjda0L_xW0EMq5IyQdIMbXdO-EtYMeuj0lt8eq6zx88xZiqDvaPifWs31Zep8DRVDgxy3zt1mmKFWZDB5VzjCtVYdBcXAJXg3cBpEeHbsI7BoDk=s0-d)
Rather than damning international light lagers such as
Stella or
Bavik (as many of us often do), he pointed out that these beers can be gateways to better beer. Discovering a new, slightly fuller-flavored beer may lead an inquisitive drinker to look for another... and another.
And the world of full-flavored Belgian beers suddenly will become evident.
American craft brewers have long sought inspiration and instruction from Belgian brewers, he said. Now, De Lait added, many Belgian brewers are asking American craft brewers about
the Americans' creative use of hops.
Among others, I met up with Julie and Jason Atallah, owners of
Bruisin' Ales (where I had just finished an
in-store tasting of
Clipper City beers), and with James, aka
Kilgore Trout, of the
Asheville Beer Blog.
Thirsty Monk is itself only a few months old. It exclusively serves Belgian beers on draft and a mixture of Belgian bottles and Belgian-styled A
merican beer bottles. A few days ago, the pub opened an upstairs room, named the
Pintroom, pouring only American craft beers on draft.
Over a snifter of Delerium Tremens, I asked Alain how to pronounce "Huyghe". There were inflected gutturals --something like "Hu(rt) gh(ch)uh-- that I couldn't quite duplicate. Maybe a few more Deliriums would have helped.
****************
Thirsty Monk's owner Barry Bialik has invited
Clipper City Brewing to bring the first firkin ever to be served at the Pintroom. So, I return this evening to tap a cask of
Loose Cannon Hop3 Ale, our India Pale Ale (I.P.A.), which I had hand-delivered on Monday.
[UPDATE: Photos here.]