Brouwerij Buvens

Microbrewery in Diest, Flemish Brabant, Belgium 🇧🇪

Established in 2016

Contact
Industriepark 6, Diest, 3290, Belgium
Description
Buvens Brewery was founded on a wild passion for brewing beer. What started as an outrageous idea soon grew into a successful brewery. In 2017 they won with both beers the bronze medal at the "World beer Awards" at the Great British Beer Festival. In 2018 they won bronze for the Blondin'Triple and GOLD for the Triple Rost.

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7

beerfestival olen

Tried from Bottle on 15 Aug 2020 at 11:57


7

beerfestival olen

Tried from Bottle on 15 Aug 2020 at 11:56


7
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7

Clear deep amber-brown colour, tall beige creamy head, good retention. Aroma roasted malt, candy sugar, caramel, raisins, light coffee. Flavour light heavy sweet and light bitter, malty, caramel, coffee. Medium body, oily texture, mild malty sweetbitter finish, coffee groundings, alcohol well-hidden, nice no-nonsense dubbel.

Tried from Bottle from KUVA Dranken on 29 Nov 2019 at 22:54


6.5
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 6

The third beer by Buvens, a small and low profile artisanal brewer in sympathetic Diest. At Just Beer. Medium thick, pale yellowish beige, moussy and creamy head lacing in shreds over a misty caramel brown beer with bronze hue. Rather weak and underwhelming aroma of caramel candy, hazelnuts, brown bread crust, red apple, cold tea, hay, dried fig. Sweetish onset, dried fig and red apple notes returning, vague baked banana, very sharp and minerally carbonation, slick and somewhat resinous hazelnutty and thoroughly caramelly malt body with a very light toasty bitterish accent; subtle herbal, tea-ish and floral hop bitterishness in the finish, but the caramel aspect prevails, albeit not in an overly sweet way. Technically correct dubbel, but very simple and, frankly, boring.

Tried from Can on 04 Nov 2018 at 15:25


6.5
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 6

17/09/2018 @home - 33cl bottle from a trade with jerre. Clear golden, small white head. Nose is malts, grains, bit floral. Taste is malts, sweetness, banana, spicy, bit alcohol.

Tried from Bottle on 24 Sep 2018 at 09:27


6.1
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 5 | Flavor - 6 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7.5

Dark yellow beer, small head. Aroma is malt, some fruit. Taste is sweet, fruit, bitter, fizzy. ok

Tried on 15 May 2018 at 16:21


5.4
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 4 | Flavor - 4 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7.5

Light Yellow beer, small head. Aroma is sewage, yeast, dusty, Taste is the same, mediocre.

Tried on 15 May 2018 at 16:20


6.4
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 4 | Overall - 6.5

One of the two first brews from a new micro brewery in Diest (with the actual brewery being situated in an industrial park nearby), a classically Belgian tripel, with a label which mentions the bottle date (April 1st, 2017 in this case), a pleasant surprise in this country. Apparently both his beers won a bronze medal at the World Beer Awards in London last summer, which mainly proves he is ambitious enough to pay an entrance fee for this type of events, but I suppose it will impress the audience he is trying to reach - being the common local Belgian beer drinker, I presume. Opens with a lot of hissing, but doesn't gush. Thick and frothy, thickly 'papery' lacing, irregular, egg-white, creamy and very stable head over a misty golden blonde beer with lightly ochre-ish tinge, teeming with minute, darker dead yeast dots. Classic Belgian artisanal tripel aroma of ripe banana, strong 'coriander seed soap', butter, unripe pear, fresh camomile flowers, old white bread, powder sugar, baker's yeast, apricot, raw 'witloof', hot waffles, hints of cumin, spoiled potato mash, quite pronounced abbey cheese (deteriorating hops, in other words), pond water, egg yolk, withering lettuce, young 'jenever'. Crisp onset, banana ester but not too bubblegummy (though still a little bit), hints of pear, peach and a bit of starfruit soapiness, sweetish with souring edges, made more sour by a very sharp, almost painfully numbing amount of overcarbonation, very minerally. Full, lean mouthfeel, bready malt middle with ongoing esteriness but not overly so, cereally too with sharper grainy edges, overcarbonation keeps stinging till the finish, fizzing away on the roof of the mouth. Cumin seed-like phenols are highlighted by the expected 'dusty old' coriander seed effect, soapy and spicy and quite pronounced, before it is joined by a firm, dried wormwood leaf-like, spicy, floral hoppiness, providing a rooty bitterness capable of almost ruling out the banana ester sweetness and followed by an afterglow of 'jenever'-like, very explicitly warming but not too unpleasantly astringent alcohol, with some bready yeastiness lingering. Yet another easy, banana-estery tripel added to the Belgian beer map, which is already drowning in this kind of beers; the well-developed coriander part only adds further Belgian 'stereotypicality', the carbonation is painfully sharp even for a tripel, the coriander is overstated (as is all too often the case) and the alcohol, quite noticeable in the end, should have been better hidden even in this type of beer. That said, however, I have to admit that I had way worse tripels from new Belgian micro breweries and this one at least carries a confident, long-lasting, resolute amount of hop bitterness in its tail so apparently decided not to opt for the more popular, sweeter and even easier side of the overcrowded Belgian tripel population. I get that this guy wants to be a player on the traditional Belgian market and in that sense, this beer does what it is supposed to do. Could have been a lot worse, free of serious off-flavours (not even DMS is to be found) and quite pleasantly bitter, albeit in a subtle, 20th-century, noble-hopped way. Quite alright, in all. Just put it in context - and don't be fooled too much by that World Beer Awards medal issue, of course...

Tried from Bottle on 03 Nov 2017 at 19:29