Brasserie Caulier
Microbrewery
in Péruwelz,
Hainaut,
Belgium 🇧🇪
Associated Venue: Caulier Taproom & Shop
Established in 1996
In the early 1990s, Roger and Linda decided to market their own beer: a custom-made high fermentation blonde. The Bon Secours was born! These were promising beginnings but they still dreamt of creating their own brewery. A dream which became reality when they bought the machinery from the Deneve brewery in Schepdaal and inaugurated the first brew in 1996!
In 2007, the NV Brasserie Caulier was declared bankrupt. At the beginning of 2008, the activities were transferred to a private limited company of the sons of Roger Caulier, who subsequently adopted the name Brasserie et Distillerie Caulier. As of 2012, Laurent, Bertrand and Vincent joined their parents in the adventure. In order to respond to the growing demand for its products, in 2018 the Brewery began a large multi-annual programme of investments with the goal of tripling its production capacity. The historical Brewing House has been extended, new fermentation and storage tanks have been added, and the bottling line has been modernised.
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 9 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 8.5
Clear amber, white head. Aroma of grass, citrus, melon. Rich taste, caramel, citrus, well balanced hops.
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7.5
0.33 l bottle; tasted as Bon Secours Héritage; opalescent amber colour, hlf inch of creamy beige-ish ecru head; aroma of baked apple, peach, some clove, nutmeg, caramel and yeasty notes; taste has similar notes to the aroma; good one
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7.5
# 4216; 5/2024. As Paix Dieu Triple. Honey, spicy, fruity aroma. Murky gold body; lacing white head. Spicy, honey, fruity, caramel. Very good belgina triple. 0,75 l, bottle, local shop, Gravelines (Flanders, France).
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7.5
Cette double IPA, avec Herkules, Ekuanot et Columbus possède de très belles qualités notamment aromatiques qui la rendent très appréciables. Sa grande limite, et ce d'autant plus pour une double IPA est son manque de vivacité avec notamment une amertume qui n'est pas assez vive. En verre, nous sommes sur une robe ambrée avec une fine effervescence moyennement soutenue et une mousse blanc cassé ne couvrant pas toute la surface. Le nez est sur un cocktail d'orange amère, caramel, kumquat et pamplemousse. L'attaque est plutôt appréciable avec un bon équilibre malt/houblon et une amertume plutôt saillante. La densité de l'IPA est agréable avec une texture de plus un peu épaisse ce qui lui confère une bonne présence en bouche. Et si en seconde bouche, des épices et du poivre apparaissent, mais l'amertume est plus poussive ce qui donne moins d'allant à l'ensemble. L'arrière bouche ne donne pas non plus beaucoup de relief. Le final également qui s'écrase rapidement est décevant. Quelques réglages à encore opérer.
Draft!!! Super hard to find on draft. Omg. So good. A little peachy. A little yeasty. All good.
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7.5 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7
Double IPA hopped with Herkules, Ekuanot and Columbus, from a family brewery with a complex recent history: declared bankrupt - after three quarters of a century - in 2007, taken over by a company called Bien-Être Développement (now Caulier Développement) and then restarted with a completely restyled Bon Secours range, the remarkably (and, frankly, incomprehensibly) popular Paix Dieu and, more recently, this 'Stuut' range of one-offs, including this DIPA, which is something I would never have seen coming from them if you had asked me twenty-odd years ago. From an Anglo-Saxon style can (44 cl) bought at Van Callenberge. Thick and frothy, pale greyish off-white, membrane-lacing, stable head on a crystal clear, deep orange blonde beer with warm amber glow - a tad darker than I am used to from even a West Coast style DIPA, but looking alright. Aroma of toasted 'Bicky Burger' onions, dry caramel, dried orange peel, caramelized shallot, old dry biscuit, lots of rusk, some pine resin (Columbus!), dried fenugreek, cumin cheese rind even, tamarillo, roasted peanuts, toast, spruce tips (Herkules?), boxwood, petrichor. Cleanly fruity onset, low in sweetness with notes of tamarillo, persimmon and vague green bell pepper, softish carb but still with minerally 'stings', smooth and full oily body; somewhat resinous from the middle, with a hard-caramelly, rusk- and toast-like, pronounced 'amber' malt profile, soon drenched in oldskool West Coast-ish hoppiness, albeit much more softly than the real oldskool West Coast DIPAs I recall (think Pliny the Elder and the like). Still a long-stretched, toasted-oniony, peppery and citrus pith-tinged hop bitterness unfolds, not scorching away all the other flavours like I was silently hoping, but adding an elegant and confident bitterness to the inherent toasty bitterness of the malts. Drying, spicy, resinous finish, retronasal boxwood, wormwood and dried dandelion effects with just a dash of bitter citrusiness (dried grapefruit peel) and tonic water, but somehow the toasty malt bitterness remains too pronounced as well. Quite malty for the intended style, in all, so I would not be against even more hoppiness (whether it be from Columbus or any other 'classic' New World hop variety) - resembling a dry Walloon style 'ambrée' to a certain extent, but in a clean, sleek, 'American' kind of way. Altogether very tasty, I love a good malt-based IPA (even though the only thing that still holds the entire IPA family tree together is hoppiness rather than maltiness) and this one certainly delivers, even if I would have preferred it to be even more hoppy in an old-fashioned American West Coast way. Clearly understated in the hops department, but a damn good Anglo-Saxon style ale nonetheless - even British ESB springs to mind every now and then. Caulier Développement, owner of the 'historical' Caulier brand since 2008, has produced some really fine Brett and sugar-free IPA style beers in its day, but this tenth (!) Stuut variant certainly brings back memories of those, even if a much more outspoken grapefruity and piney hoppiness would have been welcome.
allmyvinyl (21071) reviewed Bon Secours Prestige from Brasserie Caulier 2 years ago
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7
Bottle from Beers of Europe. Pours hazy yellow with a thick white head. Aromas of white bread and spice, yeast esters. Taste adds some lemon. Clean finish.
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 8.5
Lovely unclear deep golden pour and a fine head Good lacing. Looks fine and inviting Fine intensity in the aroma Balanced sweetness and a pleasant mild acidity in the back Also affine carbonation level Dangerously easy to drink Malty, fruity, wheat, mild banana, some spices and some yeast in the flavor. [Bottle at ’t Einde in Gent, Belgium] Brewery #2593
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7
Flesje gedronken bij B. en H. Amberkleurig helder bier met stevige schuimkraag. Aroma is fruitig en hoppig. Smaak van appel, banaan en hop. Nasmaak is iets bitter.