Tuesday, 19 August 2025

St Bernard's Day: 20th August.


2 suggestions for St Bernard's Day (more about at the bottom of this blog), first I decided to go back to the darker English Trappist Ale for today, brewed by Cistercian monks at Mount Saint Bernard Abbey in Leicestershire (website), this Tynt Meadow is a 7.4% trappist ale. Dark ruby red/mahogany colour with a big fruity aroma and flavour. Not the citrus fruits I normally enjoy, but rich darker fruits, with a touch of chocolate and malt/toffee in the taste, plenty of body and smooth, and slightly sweet to drink, Tynt Meadow is bottled conditioned, consequently having a long shelf life, so store in a cool place, drink quite chilled, and pour out carefully, unless you enjoy the addition of yeast particles from the lees...


The second suggestion which I have written about very recently (blog), so will precis that information here, is from Brouwerij St Bernadus (website), their St Bernadus ABT 12 (10.0%). Strictly, not a Trappist beer, although they had brewed Trappist ales for the Trappist monks at Westvleteren from 1946 to 1992. In 1998 Hans Depypere bought the business and it has flourished since. The St Bernadus ABT 12 is a very deep dark coloured red Quadrupel, brewed with hops grown in their own hop field. This has a slightly malty/fruity aroma, again, a bit sweet, but with a dry slightly bitter finish. Tasting of dark plum and damson fruits, indeed, a Christmas Pudding of a beer as many Quadrupels tend to be, very rich and tasty!


So, who was St Bernard? Bernard of Clairvaux was a 12th century monk, then Abbot, who was a principle in the foundation of the Knights Templar, and in the creation of the Cistercian Order that broke from the Benedictines. Indeed, the Cistercians are also called Bernardines, after Bernard of Clairvaux, or White Monks, as they dropped the black cowl warn by Benedictines. Unsurprisingly, St Bernard is patron saint of the Cistercians and Knights Templar, and also patron saint of bees, beekeepers, and candle makers/chandlers. There you are. 👍

So, to celebrate, maybe raise a glass of Tynt Meadow or St Bernadus, cheers! 🍺


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