Brouwerij De 6 Helmen

Client Brewer in Ghent, East Flanders, Belgium 🇧🇪

Established in 2013

Contact
Vijfwindgatenstraat 21E Gent, Belgium, Ghent, 9000, Belgium
Description
Benoit and Kristof joined forces in 2013 to make their dream come true. The passion for beer and inspiration from Ghent's rich history, culture and dynamism for entrepreneurship have led us to make this beautiful, tasty beer and realize our dream after many months of preparation.

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6.1
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 6 | Flavor - 6 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 5.5

Small, just off-white head over hazy orange beer. White candi sugar, hibiscus or other flowers, and alcohol. Almonds, alcohol, bitter marzipan. Very boozy, white candi sugar all over the place. Well-carbonated, medium bodied, quite slick. Pff. Thirteen to the boozen.

Tried from Bottle from Dranken Geers on 14 Dec 2025 at 10:05


6.8
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 6.5 | Flavor - 6.5 | Texture - 7 | Overall - 6.5

Very dense, bubbly, persistent lightly yellowish head over fully hazy, very carbonated pale yellow beer. Spicy, chamomille, garden herbs & weeds, hints at white candi sugar. Again spicy, herbal flavour. Dry (white candi), and vegetable flavours. Feels very carbonated, quite slick and creamy texture. Medium bodied. Oh, certainly not bad, but you won't get seesawing over it. IMHO more saison than Kölsch.

Tried from Bottle from Dranken Geers on 30 Nov 2025 at 09:48


6

Tried from Bottle on 13 Aug 2025 at 13:57


6.9
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 6.5

Bottle from a pub quiz.
A: clear golden-orange, stable, foamy, white head.
A: plum, apple, honey, cake, coriander, jenever.
T: sweet plum & apple, spicy coriander, honey, dough.
F: peppery hops, ripe yellow fruit, bit phenolic and wry alcoholic (jenever).
P: medium body, slick texture, average carbonation.
Plain good.

Tried on 21 Aug 2024 at 12:07


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

Sweet and fruity nose, perfume and strawberries. A bit herbal, citrussy, notes of coriander, strange and unusual tripel.

Tried on 30 Sep 2022 at 19:46


6.9
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7.5

Hazy pale blond colour with lasting lacy head. Mentioned here as a Kolsch but has a Saison-esque flavour profile. A little malty and wheaty with a like spicy yeast element. Very clean though.

Tried on 23 Aug 2022 at 19:40


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

Three-grains tripel (where have we heard that before) made by this client brewer located in the Brugse Poort quarter of Ghent - and apparently the last of these Crabbelaer beers that had escaped my attention so far, until last Sunday when I randomly stumbled upon it in café Den Boer in Mariakerke. Thanks to my girlfriend Goedele! Snow white, irregularly edged, medium thick, opening but largely stable head, misty peach blonde robe with pale orangey tinge. Aroma of cooked turnip, unripe peach, coriander seed and even soap, young 'jenever', honey, old potato mash, cooked green beans, soggy bread, old crackers, some light banana, minerals. Fizzy onset, lots of sharpish carbonation piercing through fruity impressions of red apple, halfripe peach and banana peel, sweetish, with some of this honeyish sweetness lingering over a rounded, bready and somewhat soggy cracker-like maltiness, soft and fluffy but still harshened a bit by that sharp carbonation; clear spicy and lightly soapy coriander seed in the finish, paired with a gentle floral hop bitterness and some vague residual sweetness, all tied together by a soft and subtle glow of warming, 'jenever'-like alcohol. Very stereotypical tripel indeed, ticking all the boxes of the style and in that sense nothing surprising (certainly if compared with the output of some of the other Ghent brewers and 'bierfirma's'), but technically very well executed, I hasten to add.

Tried on 22 Sep 2021 at 18:26


7.1
Appearance - 7 | Aroma - 7.5 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 6.5

Ghent harbours many client brewers these days and one of them is De 6 Helmen, located in an old neighbourhood called Brugse Poort, which is also the birthplace of local singer Kurt Burgelman, known for his band 'Biezebaaze' (Ghent dialect for 'swing'). This beer honours the band, so I guess it can be - kind of - categorized under that bunch of beers made for and in collaboration with rock bands (see the beers made for AC/DC, Metallica, Motörhead and so on)... As for style: it is apparently intended as a Kölsch, so a top-fermented golden ale of session strength undergoing a long cold storage as is custom in Cologne; this makes it, to my knowledge at least, the second one in Ghent, as Dok Brewing Company already made one a couple of years ago. This Biezebaaze, however, differs from Dok's fully traditional interpretation - and from the actual Kölsch beers from Germany - in making use of dry-hopping, lending it an Anglo-Saxon twist. Thick, frothy, egg-white, very mousy and 'closed', stable head leaving patches of plastery lacing on the wall of the glass, topping an initially clear, pale straw blonde beer with somewhat greenish tinge and fierce sparkling, becoming lightly hazed with sediment. Aroma of starfruit, halfripe banana, drying white bread, withering grass, vague hint at guava, dried lemon zest, ripe cucumber, field flowers, hints of soap, chalk and lemonbalm. Clean, very restrainedly fruity onset (as, indeed, in a Kölsch), green banana and starfruit with a dash of Granny Smith apple, lively carbonation though nowhere harshly stinging; lots of minerality accompanying a supple, smooth cereally malt body with a light soft-bready edge and a vague underlying sourish touch, green-fruity aspects lingering until a floral hop character appears, offering retronasal impressions of field flowers (sweetclover), some vague lime blossom and some equally vague lychee, as well as a soft, gentle, grassy end bitterness. The 'purity' of pale malt and minerally brewing water remains intact, though, so in that sense I think the Kölsch intentions (or 'Gölsch', Ghentish Kölsch, as the brewer calls it) are well achieved. If Dok's interpretation came close to the cleaner, drier side of Kölsch (think e.g. Dom Kölsch), then this one leans more to the softer, 'sweeter' side (think e.g. Früh Kölsch). The dry-hopping does add an interesting fruity accent but does not completely ruin the Kölsch idea, contrary to what I was fearing - so in all, very well made, I'd happily drink several of these, perhaps ending up singing "Loetsebollekezoetse", the only Biezebaaze song I can think of right now...

Tried on 22 Sep 2021 at 18:23


6.1
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 6 | Flavor - 6 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 5.5

10/VI/21 - 33cl bottle from Geers (Oostakker), shared with my next-door neighbour @ home, BB: 6/IV/22 (2021-482)

Clear pale blond to yellow beer, big creamy white head, little stable, adhesive, leaving a nice lacing in the glass. Aroma: rather fruity, apples and pears, a bit chemical, sourish impression. MF: lively carbon, medium body. Taste: little bitter, chemical, fruity, very yeasty, malty. Aftertaste: yeasty, bit sourish, lemony, green apples, sweet touch, malty, grains, caramel.

Tried from Bottle from Dranken Geers on 10 Jun 2021 at 19:30


6.5

--- Beer merged from original tick of Crabbelaer Hommage ?? III on 19 Oct 2016 at 16:08 - Score: 6. Original review text: Imported from untappd on 02-05-2020

Tried from Bottle on 22 Feb 2021 at 16:56