Brasserie à vapeur

Brasserie à vapeur is a Belgian vapor brewery based in Pipaix. The original brewery was opened in 1785.[1] The brewery was reopened in 1984 by a Jean-Louis Dits and his wife, Sittelle.[2] They brew the following beers :

  • Saison de Pipaix -A French-Belgian style saison
  • Vapeur en folie
  • Vapeur cochonne -The brewery's flagship beer
  • Vapeur vanille -An herb and spice beer

History[3]

(Brasserie Vapeur means "Steam Brewery". "Vapeur" is "Steam" in French. An old steam engine drives a single belt, like an automotive universal belt, that runs all of the brewery's equipment. Also, Jean-Pierre's first wife has passed on. His new wife is named Vincianne. Posted by Dick Hess of Denver, Colorado, who knows the Ditses. Please feel free to verify.)

The original brewery was opened in 1785. At some point in the late 18th or early 19th century, Cornil Cuvelier inherited the brewery, but he died at a young age and his son, Joseph Dominica I succeeded his father in running the brewery. In 1890, the brewery was estimated at 45000 FB, (approximately €175,000). The brewery's clientele was mostly neighbouring villages.

In 1903, the brewery was taken over by Joseph Ferdinant's widow. In 1914, the occupying German military was requisitioning all metal resources for the war effort and attempted to take the steam engine from the brewery, but were only able to take a copper vat.[4] In 1926, the brewery was able to resume production, after it had been rebuilt and new equipment had been purchased.

In 1930, Gaston Biset, who had married Joseph Ferdinant's daughter, sought to recreate the tradition of Cuvelier. He created new beers like Cuver-Ale and Biss. The Second World War did not create serious problems for the brewery and after the conflict, the brewery had attained a distinct reputation. Gaston Biset ran the brewery until 1983.

In 1984, Jean-Louis Dits and his wife, Vinciane, purchased the brewery. 2012, Monsieur Dits is still the current owner.

Since 1992, Belgian cartoonist Louis-Michel Carpentier has designed the bottle labels. Tours of the brewery are available on the last Saturday of each month.[1]

Notes

  1. Audet, J: "Brasserie à vapeur", http://www.broue.com/evenements/Festibiere/1999/Vapeur.htm%5B%5D, retrieved March 08, 2008.
  2. Dits, Jean-Louis. Jean-Louis Dits Tells the Story of Beer and the "Brasserie à Vapeur" of Pipaix", 10. Brussels: Gillis Bruxelles, 2005.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20091023102837/http://geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Launchpad/1080/beer/brewing/pipaix.html retrieved March 08, 2008.
  4. Dits, 11.
gollark: So this gained a loop polling MPD - remember, it has a client-server model, so other stuff can communicate with it. Use of MPD turned out to be a good design decision!
gollark: But that isn't very relevant here.
gollark: This also accreted a small admin interface and youtube-dl frontend, mostly as a result of an aborted attempt to implement SSO.
gollark: Fortunately, I already *had* a service sitting around which I could extend to do things, in the form of the Random Stuff API, which had a long history of driving PotatOS services.
gollark: For other technical reasons, splitting everything into tons of separate services would have been annoying for me.
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