Brouwerij De Feniks

Microbrewery in Heule, West Flanders, Belgium 🇧🇪

Established in 2016

Closed in 2023

Contact
Mellestraat 138, Heule, 8501, Belgium
Description
Founded on July 1st 2016, Brouwerij De Feniks is all about Living your Passion (in our case : brewing the great beers we love and helping others do to the same) and keep doing what you love no matter what. As you only live once, you will find out at some point that it pays off on emotional/satisfaction and many other levels to follow your passion. Under adversity, if you stumble and fall, or even crash and burn, remember that you can Always rise from your ashes like the mythical Feniks bird as long as you keep believing and continue to live that passion... And if you do, have a great beer on us !

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6.4/10 Appearance 4 Aroma 7 Flavor 7 Texture 4 Overall 7.5
Imperial oatmeal stout, my first beer from this brand new micro brewery near Kortrijk in western Flanders, thanks Gino and Kurt - the first of which was apparently the brewmaster of Québec’s Unibroue before Sleeman took over, and subsequently returned to Belgium to turn the old Riva into Liefmans Breweries, which eventually went bankrupt. Curious to find out more about the range he brews now in his own settlement, hopefully many echoes from Unibroue, which, surpassed as it may be today, was among the first breweries in Canada to jump start the craft beer revolution there. This one opens under quite a lot of pressure and gushes, so be ware, though the gushing is slow enough to limit the loss of beer to a minimum. Medium thick, pale beige head, quickly settling to a firm, regular, well-retaining rim and a thin greyish ’island’ in the middle but eventually all but vanishing; blackish colour with hazy mahogany brown edges, the coloration being visible for about one centimeter off the edge before vanishing into utter darkness. Quite strong bouquet of a lot of very aromatic, overpowering liquorish, even liquorish candy, followed by more sedate impressions of butterscotch and melting caramel candy, Belgian chocolates made with ’fondant’ chocolate, brown rum, ruby port, coffee liqueur, raisins, strong baked banana, wodka, wet leather, hazelnut oil, honey peeping through subtly, stewed plums, burnt toast, cloves, glue. Fruity onset, estery (a bit much so for the style) with hints of ripe pear, dried banana and blueberry, but retaining itself thanks to balancing, ’deep’ sourishness and a (very) slight touch of beefy umami, though a candied fruit sweetness dominates; carbonation is delicate but determined and a bit too spritzy for the style (unsurprising seen the gushing effect), numbing the tip of the tongue a bit. A thick, rather syrupy mouthfeel is somewhat coarsened by this overcarbonation, which is a bit of a shame. Thick, ’fat’ maltiness ensues, mouth-filling but still tingling too much from the sharp carbo, and feeling less oily than it could and should have been for a 10% stout especially since oatmeal has been used and does try to effectuate a creaminess to the whole, which can be felt through the carbonation; in all, though, mouthfeel is more quad-like than imperial stout-like. The flavour is a noble, butterscotch-like sweet at first, thoroughly nutty as well, before turning into a deeper toasted bitterness, though the caramel sweetness never quite goes away; meanwhile the banana ester notes linger a bit, though not disturbingly so, and the liquorish effect from the nose shows up in full armour, attacking the nose retronasally with great force, almost blotting out the qualities of the malt beneath. Since no liquorish has actually been used, I guess this effect is a mixture of clove-like (or in other ways spicy) phenols and nutty malts; it keeps dominating the finish till the end, supported by an almost tea-ish herbal hop bitterness. Earthy yeastiness is added in the very end - including more outspoken clove phenols - and the throat is heated by a wodka-like alcohol effect, becoming a tad wry in the very end. In all, a meritorious attempt, but still very Belgian: as the international craft beer movement penetrates this country more and more, more and more imperial stout attempts will be made, but like IPA, they will get stuck in the middle, unable to shake off the clichés of Belgian fermentation; this does not necessarily lead to failed beers of course, but I think it will be only a matter of time before beer connoisseurs come up with a term like "Belgian imperial stout" (already used by a number of breweries in the States) and if this will ever happen, this Jazz’ Black Oatmeal Delight has all the chances of becoming a classic example of it, along with several others. If you forget the clean character of Anglo-Saxon ’impies’ and are willing to accept a strong Belgian quadrupel-like character in your big stouts, this will be your beer. I, for one, would rather have seen a big black stout without any trace of Belgian esters or phenols, because I am still waiting for that being made within the borders of this small country.
Tried from Can on 07 Apr 2017 at 17:31

7.3/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 7 Flavor 7 Texture 6 Overall 9
Bottle. pours clear blonde, huge white head. Smell is mild bitter. Bit malts, some yeast. Taste is indeed in the style of a Duvel. It comes rather close, actually. some sharp, very clean bitterness, as well as the malty flavor you’ll find in a duvel. Very well done !
Tried from Bottle on 05 Apr 2017 at 11:26

7/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 7 Flavor 7 Texture 6 Overall 8
Pours rather unclear amber, very big white head. Smell is bit hoppy. Nice ambermalty background. Taste is decently bitter. nice crispy ambermalty. Very decent beer. i like drinkin’ this, I enjoy the taste, even the MF . But indeed, it is not an IPA. At least they’re honest, and I can see the clear comparency to the style ,as it is more hoppy than an amber ale.
Tried from Can on 04 Apr 2017 at 11:01