Westvleteren Abdij St. Sixtus

Microbrewery in Westvleteren, West Flanders, Belgium 🇧🇪
Associated with 2 Venues

Established in 1839

Contact
Donkerstraat 12, Vleteren, Westvleteren, 8640, Belgium
Description
The abbey was established in 1831. Already in the early days beer was brewed in small quantities, not for sale but just for their own consumption. In May 1839, the Abbey received a brewer’s licence signed by king Leopold I on April 19, 1839. Most likely a first test brew was produced the same month. In June 1839 the first official brew was produced.

Around 1860 a vast complex of buildings for amongst others sheds, a guesthouse, barns and a second brewery, was built. It remained however a small domestic brewery for personal use. Only from 1878 on production increased due to a good turnover of the tavern ‘In de Vrede’. Between 1886 and 1896 a third brew house, fully operational as from 1896, was built.

On 20 March 1922 the monks started the expansion of the brewery. On 27 October 1927 for the first time steam was used to brew in the modernised, fourth brew house. This brew house was operational till 5 January 1990.

In 1976 a fermentation room with six open yeast vessels and a laboratory were installed. Fermentation in open yeast vessels, a method that is used very rarely, is essential for the ester profile of the Trappist Westvleteren.

The present brew house was officially put into operation in 1990. The new bottling plant was put into operation in 2013. Since 2014, two brews are made per brewing day. This meant a considerable saving in terms of energy consumption and man-hours.

The lagering cellar and the fermentation chamber were modernised and automated, but because the capacity did not change, production also remained unchanged. The production amounts to approximately 6,000 hectolitres annually, spread over 42 brewing days. In 2016 a new secondary fermentation unit with storage space was built.

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7.9
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7.5

Deep red brown ale with a lacing moka head. Light caramel in aroma with torrefied coffee notes. Sweet malt in mouth with nutty notes and good hops, lingering bitterness, well balanced with the malt. Not as rich bodied as expected. As beer warms up, light coriander and faint prunes arise. Bottle at Bier Circus, Brussels, April 2005. My first beer in Belgium.

Tried from Bottle on 11 Dec 2005 at 15:14


9.2
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 9 | Flavor - 9 | Texture - 10 | Overall - 9

1999 vintage . Oranged hue brown ale with a beautifuk off-white head, resilient, lacing. Wonderfully maderized malt with raisins, prunes and dates in aroma, and nice spices wifting through. Smoother than the newer beer tasted (2004), with fruityness coming out weel, dates, port wine, and orange peels. Rich and well balanced, all taste blending well. One word superb (9-5-9-5-18). The 2004 differed in that in aroma, the spices were more sharp, coriander and curacao, very present. The hops in mouth were also slightly metallic, so was the alcohol. (9-5-9-5-17). BW tasting at Dumdum’s, Late March 2005. Merci Dum.

Tried on 03 Dec 2005 at 10:44


9.6
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 10 | Flavor - 9 | Texture - 10 | Overall - 9.5

Bottled. Hazy, dark brown colour with huge beige foamy head, lacing. Just lovely aroma of caramel and chocolate with a sting of alcohol. Also herbs and fruit noteable in the soft, but strong aroma. Palate is about excellent (it can’t get much better than this, full, but smooth, still carbonated). Flavour is of alcohol, plum, chocolate in the beginning, then smoothening up to kind of caramellish, fruity and some roast too. Finish is roasted, as is the aftertaste. Aftertaste also has some plummy and fruity hints. Kind of toffeeish all the wat through. Very pleasant, and in fact even better than Westy 12 in my opinion... Totally kickass.

Tried from Bottle on 18 Nov 2005 at 08:17


8.2
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 10 | Overall - 8

Bottled. Hazy pale apricotty orange/yellow colour with huge, longlasting foamish bubbly head, lacing. Spices, herbs, yeast and wheat in aroma. Also some hints of fruits and flowers. Flavour of herbs, fruit with flowery hoppish hints. Some wheat, caramel and grassyness in flavour too. A bit "soapish" at some point too. Sweetish bitter aftertaste at first, which then turns into smooth hops, and lasts long. Very well done brew! Rich carbonation, but not disturbing, makes palate quite pleasant.

Tried from Bottle on 18 Nov 2005 at 07:16


8
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 9

Hazy yellow colour. Big long lasting head. Aroma of hops, yeast and spices. Dry and smooth malty flavor and also in the background spices and floral hops. Finish off with a nice bitterness. A very easy drinking beer.

Tried on 04 Nov 2005 at 16:09


8.9
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 10 | Texture - 10 | Overall - 9.5

Bottle. Deep brownish beer with a nice cocoa head. Musty aroma with some sweet malt, fruit, and spice. Chocolate, yeasty, fruity (rasins) flavor. There’s a hint of roasted malt. Nothing overpowering, but very well structured and flavors tend to linger. Very easy to drink for the alcohol.

Tried from Bottle on 09 Sep 2005 at 22:43


8.4
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 9 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 8.5

Bottled vintage 1998
Dark ruby color, big cloudy expresso head. Nose is burned malty, roasted barley with hints of chocolate. Quite easy to drink - medium-bodied, almost a bit watery. Very chocolaty; brown milk chocolate gives extremely smooth and soft mouthfeel. A bit bitterness in the aftertaste. "Low alcohol" gem, softened version of Westy 12.

Tried from Bottle on 27 Jul 2005 at 11:38


6.6
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 6 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 6.5

(Bottle 33 cl) It’s rare but it does happen: a new Trappist beer. Pale golden with a huge head. Quite lightbodied with a very, very pronounced bitterness throughout. Fruity and fresh but also a bit sharp. Rather unusual trappist - perhaps Orval is the closest relative. But this lacks that beers refined spicyness. 220501

Tried from Bottle on 27 Jul 2005 at 09:48


8.6
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 10 | Overall - 8.5

Best Before 10.18.07 bottle, big thanks to Olivier_MTL for opening this. Served in a Westvleteren chalice for breakfast on 7/9/2005. Blind serving. Perfect appearance, with a foamy, large beige-flecked-white head, lasting, pillowy and providing ample lacing. The beer is very unfiltered and has a mahogany, tan-brown body, slight hints of light orange and copper. Aroma: The country must be Belgium. The yeast profile is just too smooth, subtley integrated and well-done to be an American replica. Notes of light vanilla cream, raisins, prunes and light candi sugar notes. Upon sipping, I remark that it must be a trappist. The mouthfeel and flavor are just fantastically drinkable, flavorful and balanced. Light carbonation, bits of bitterness and light acidity, with hints of chocolate, anise, hazelnuts and caramelized sugar. Light raisins and prunes with a hint of chocolatey fudge lingering, along with a delectable yeastiness. My next notion places it as an Abbey Dubbel, perhaps, or maybe a Belgian Strong. Somewhere in between, anyways. It has a restrained flavor, with all of the raisins and light fruits and caramel, I could really see it working as a dubbel. The yeast is restrained and tastefully done. Low alcohol apparency, no hops bitterness. On the end, I also did get a bit of waxy crayons, don’t really remember that from the 12, but perhaps it is some yeast dullness. Really enjoyable, smooth mouthfeel, and just tickles the palate with just the right amount of carbonation. Thanks so much Olivier!

Tried from Bottle on 11 Jul 2005 at 10:13


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

Well I have worked my way "down" the Westy ladder and enjoyed the trip! While not as good as the 8 or 12, you can still tell that this beer is crafted with skill and care. Hazy golden yellow with a super thick white head that lasts a long time. Thick sheets of lacing. Aroma of citrus and floral hops. Medium-bodied and dry with spicy hops and citrus flavoring. Wonderful balance throughout. The finish is lightly bitter with yeast and spice flavors. I’d love to have any of the Westy brews again but considering the hefty price tag I’ll probably stick with the 12 from here on out.

Tried from Can on 10 Jul 2005 at 22:20