17 July 2019

Antwerp - Comic Murals & Beer Passion - Saturday 29 June 2019

Waking view from Hotel Rubenshof bedroom
Blue skies and high temperatures in Antwerp for the second day of the 20th BierPassie Weekend.
22 Beeldhouwersstraat - listed building
The Beer Passion Festival in Groeneplaats opens at 1pm so there was time for a leisurely walk north from Antwerp Zuid to the historic centre, keeping to the shady side of the street.
As Steve was having a lie in it was nice to wander at my own pace, stopping to take photos en route. Unfortunately it was 15 minutes before 11am opening time when I passed Coffee & Vinyl at Volkstraat 45.
At the junction of Kloosterstraat and Goedhoopstraat you can find the comic mural (stripmuur) Nero by Marc Sleen (1922-2016).
There is also a mural on a junction box showing a Stripmurenroute with the location of other comic murals in Antwerp. To find the other murals on the route could be a project for a future visit to Antwerp.
Kloosterstraat is a good street for finding interior decor and antiques shops.
2 Kloosterstraat - looking south
Continuing along Oever and Hoogstraat I reached the sun drenched Grote Markt.
Den Hopsack
Regaining the shade, I walked to 24 Grote Pieter Potstraat to find Den Hopsack.
Den Hopsack is mentioned in Joe Stange & Tim Webb's Good Beer Guide Belgium as 'a mellow music club serving 50+ beers including De Ranke and Senne'.
There were flyers in the window for a free gig by Lise at 8pm and art by Peter Callens.
As the bar does not open until 8pm I took a photo through the window to record the interior. It looks like a place worth revisiting on a future trip.
Now it was time to look for more classic cafe bars featured in Regula Ysewijn's book Belgian Cafe Culture.
Den Engel (left) and Den Bengel (right)
Cafe Den Engel,  Grote Markt 3, had seats outside in the full glare of the sun.
Regula Ysewijn writes 'Cafe Den Engel (the angel) ... is housed in a guildhall called 'White Angel'. ... The large guild houses on the Grote Markt were reconstructed in the 19th century in neo-renaissance and neo-gothic style to recreate its former glory. The original guild houses were demolished in the 18th century to enlarge the Grote Markt. ... In 1903 it became Cafe Den Engel. The interior with the wooden wall panelling and mirrors is from the same period.'
I was reluctant to sit inside with a coffee so continued into Braderijstraat and noticed that (rhyming) Cafe De Stengel (the stalk) is situated nearby!
Conscience - Jan Bosschaert (panorama)
Wandering down the narrow twisting cobbled street of Oude Beurs involved passing a group on a walking tour and finding another comic mural, at the junction of Wolstraat and Moriaanstraatje.
At the next corner is Cafe de Kat, Wolstraat 22. Again I had arrived at a suitable coffee place 15 minutes too early as opening time here is 12 noon. Regula Ysewijn writes 'The story of De Kat starts around 1912 with first landlady Aurelia who gave the cafe its name. Apart from the tables all other interior dates from those early years. All the elements: the bar, the piano and mirrored wall panelling were designed to match and have the same inlaid wooden detail.'
With over an hour to wait until the opening of BierPassie at Groenplaats,  I retraced my steps as far as Caffe Mundi, Oude Beurs 24, where it was a relief to finally sit at an outside table in the shade and enjoy a flat white coffee.
Back at Groenplaats, the railings would be parted to allow entry at 1pm.
My first 20cl taster was Botanik from the Gouden Carolus Indulgence range which is only available in 75cl bottles. I was keen to try this beer after visiting Het Anker brewery in Mechelen with Simon on 23 March earlier this year. This 8.5% ABV special blonde beer was brewed using barley, wheat and Belgian hops. The ageing process for Botanik included two weeks with four natural botanicals - elderflower, angelica root, cloves and rosemary.
An advantage of this festival is the chance to taste a beer from a large bottle without needing friends to share it with.
Richard, Graham, Tim, Simon and Steve
Friends soon arrived and we were able to find a rare shady spot although it was standing room only.
We were standing near the Brouwerij Huyghe bar where several Delirium beers were served as well as some new limited edition beers - Paranoia and JI.PA.
Paranoia (5.6% ABV) was developed for the French market. I tried JI.PA (6.8% ABV / 45 IBU) but it was not a favourite. However, Keith Moore picked Delirium Black (Oak aged 2019), a 2 jetons (4 euros) 20 cl pour, as his favourite beer of the festival.
We had time for a few more beers before going to De Groote Witte Arend for lunch at 2.30pm.
However, instead of lunching there I went to Aura Brasserie, Hoogstraat 34, an old favourite, for a lunch of omelette, salad and bread accompanied by a 25cl bottle of St Feuillien Grisette Blanche Bio.
A few draught beers are also available at Aura Brasserie which only opens on Friday, Saturday and Sunday and often features live music in the evenings.
By the time I rejoined the others in the courtyard at De Groote Witte Arend, they were only midway through their substantial meals.
Draught Brasserie de la Senne Taras Boulba was the 4.5% ABV blonde beer I enjoyed here (25cl glass for 3.5 euro).
We finally departed just before 5pm and headed to nearby Pelgrom at 15 Pelgrimstraat which Steve and I had previously visited on Thursday.
As hoped, the cellars here were reasonably cool although we could not sit in the main cellar area facing the bar this time.
With a range of 24 draught Belgian beers to choose from we were happy to stay here until 7.45pm and sample a few of them. It stayed cool but the noise levels rose when another group joined our table. My favourite beer on this occasion was Troubadour Magma a 9% ABV Tripel IPA (45 IBU) by Brouwerij The Musketeers.
Another Antwerp tradition for our group is a visit to De Vagant at nearby Reyndersstraat 25 for Jenever shots. I accompanied the group there but drank a cup of coffee instead of flavoured Jenever.
The barman was interested to hear our opinion about Brexit and we reassured him that we look forward to remaining in the EU.
An hour later we were back at Groenplaats to spend the last of our beer tokens at BierPassie.
Saisons are my current favourite Belgian beer style and it was a treat to have a glass of chilled Saison d'Erpe-Mere served from a 75cl bottle. This Saison does not use any herbs or spices to create its fruity and spicy profile (7.5% ABV, IBU 35).
There was a lively atmosphere at the beer festival and the Dixieland Street Band did a final circuit before we caught the tram (underground) from Groenplaats to Antwerp Centraal station.
(photo: Steve Kelly)
From here it was a 500 metre walk north past Chinatown to reach Beerlovers Bar, Rotterdamstraat 105.
It was very generous of Simon to pay for our drinks here!
With 12 draught beers available from the tap wall, I chose Embrace the Haze a Double New England IPA by 't Duo costing Simon 4.80 euros (25cl) and served in a stemmed glass branded with the bar's pentangle logo. Cheers!
Beerlovers Bar is a verified venue on Untappd (beerloversbar) so it is possible to use the app to keep track of what beers are on tap etc.. My Untappd (timofnewbury) checkin for this beer also mentioned the 'tinny soundsystem' and was reposted on my Twitter account (@timofnewbury).
L to R: Simon, Steve, Graham, Richard & Keith
We had started off sitting inside at a big table near the entrance doorway but moved outside to a pavement table for our second beers (with Simon still paying the tab).
My glass at the empty seat in the photo now contained Golden Tricky by 't Verzet, a 7.5% ABV, 40 IBU pale ale with tropical flavours from Australian Ella hops.
Around midnight we departed and Steve and I were able to catch a tram back to the stop near Hotel Rubenshof while Simon and the others (less Graham) headed to Dageraadplaats. Graham was staying on in Antwerp while Steve and I would next meet up with the others in Brussels on Sunday.




 

11 July 2019

Antwerp - Friday 28 June 2019

Day 2 of the Belgian trip begins with breakfast in the Hotel Rubenshof dining room containing art nouveau details including stained glass windows and rooflights.
We walked into town via the Antwerp Zuid branch of Belfius Bank at Riemstraat 47 as we needed extra Euros from an ATM.
Continuing along Kloosterstraat we passed some cafes and upmarket clothing, antiques and home interiors shops.
Reaching Sint-Jansvliet, we noticed cyclists queueing outside the entrance for St Anna's Tunnel (the underpass). Instead of waiting, we entered the building to ride two flights of wooden escalators to reach the 572 metre long level cyclindrical tunnel for pedestrians and cyclists that runs under the river Scheldt to Linkeroever (left bank).
There are historic photos of tunnel construction mounted on the walls of the escalator shaft and the tunnel itself. There are no lanes marked on the tunnel floor so pedestrians need to take care to avoid obstructing the waves of cyclists that pass after descending by lift.
Emerging into the bright sunshine we headed north and walked through the Open Air Maritime Museum Boeienweide to see the anchors and large steel marker buoys on display.
After spotting a large ferry crossing the river, we headed to the dock near Frederik Van Eedenplein for a free ride back to Antwerp. This gives nice views of the skyline including the outline of Zaha Hadid's angular Antwerp Port House to the north.
Het Steen - from ferry (photo: Steve Kelly)
The lightly loaded ferry deposited us, slightly damp from some spray, at the ferry terminal next to the medieval fortress of Het Steen (stone castle) which was undergoing renovation.
MAS
We walked a kilometre north and then alongside Willemdok to reach MAS (Museum aan de Stroom). From the rooftop observation deck, reached by flights of escalators, there are panoramic views.
View towards north west from MAS (photo: Steve Kelly)
Steve spotted that the cooling towers, visible 10km to the north west, are next to a nuclear power station (Doel) on the banks of the river Scheldt.
A walk north of less than a kilometre led to Bar Paniek on the east side of Kattendijkdok.
Inside the warehouse building is a bar and seating shared with a workspace where grinding noises could be heard.
My first beer of the day was Antwerpse Brouw Co Seefbier, brewed nearby. Our shady seat outside looked across the dock to new residential tower blocks.
At 1.15pm we headed to the taproom of Antwerpse Brouw Co at Indiestraat 21 only 150 metres away as John texted to say that he had arrived there.
My first beer here was Super Cadix, 5.6% ABV dry hopped lager.
The taproom is part of the brewery building but we did not notice any brewing activity. 
Keith, Steve, Richard and Simon
Before long, Keith and Richard would join our table in the courtyard, under a canvas awning for shade. Simon had spent Thursday night in Brussels and was the last to join our group after checking in at the Tryp by Wyndham hotel and catching a tram to a nearby stop.
As one of the original crowdfunders for Antwerpse Brouw Compagnie, Keith Moore had found the funders plaque inside the brewery bearing his name. At the Bierpassie Weekend festival later, he would also meet up with founder Johan Van Dyck. Keith had travelled to Antwerp from his home in Germany and mentioned that he had again won the annual Mainz craft beer festival prize for home brewers. The 2018 summer beer style contest was won by his Entdeckung (Discovery) based on the beer once brewed by Fuller's.
Keith has programmed a Raspberry Pi computer to control brewing temperatures for his beers. Unsurprisingly, when asked about his favourite bar at the end of the trip, Keith picked the Antwerpse Brouw Compagnie taproom.
Hussy, a new 7% ABV 'easy going blonde' limited release beer to try for the first time, reached the high standard set by the brewery's other beers which I have previously enjoyed.
During our visit we observed landscape gardening activity involving the construction of raised beds from railway sleepers, adding plants to fresh soil and watering. The taproom courtyard now has a greener look than previously.
Steve and I persuaded Keith, John, Richard and Simon to visit nearby Bar Paniek and we arrived via the rear workshop entrance on Kattendijkdok-Oostkaai at 5pm.
The small upstairs seating area was free so we found a shady spot, just under the roof, with a view of the dock. The Bar Paniek draught beer range includes Seefbier and Bootjes Bier, the latter referencing the Red Star Line which operated passenger ships from Antwerp to New York until 1935.
Tim, Simon, Keith & Richard on the tram (photo: Steve Kelly)
It was hot under the roof so after one beer we walked to the tram stop on Londenstraat and travelled by 70 and 7 trams to Meirbrug, a short walk from Groenplaats the site of the Bierpassie (Beer Passion) Weekend festival.
Arriving about twenty minutes after the festival opened at 5pm we were able to find a table on the west side of the square, near the Brasserie Du Bocq stand (14),  that would later offer some shade.
Entrance is free but a 20cl Bier Sommelier tasting glass costs 5 euros with a complimentary glossy programme. The blue beer tokens cost 2 euros each and except for a few beers marked in the programme as '2 jetons', one token simplifies payment for a glass of beer.
Having visited Allagash Brewery in Portland, Maine, in October 2017, I was keen to try Brewers' Bridge, the collaboration beer brewed with Brasserie Dupont of Tourpes, near the border with France.
At the Dupont bar, after he recognised my brewery cap, I was able to tell the barman that there are some wonderful people at Allagash. An Allagash blog post includes photos of the brew day and mentions that the Saison style beer was brewed with Dupont yeast and Cascade hops shipped over from Grandview, Washington.
Another special beer to try was draught Boulevard Brewing Co Jam Band Berry Ale a 5.9% ABV fruit ale made with blueberry, raspberry and tart cherry. (The Kansas City based brewery, founded in 1989, is now owned by Duvel Moortgat Brewery.).
King Mule IPA (photo Steve Kelly)
Our table was not far from the Cornelissen brewery bar and this is where Steve found his favourite beer of the festival at an early stage - King Mule IPA. This 5.7% ABV / 80 IBU 'unique stubborn Belgian IPA' ix mixed with tangerine juice.
After a recommendation for Brasserie Dubuisson Peche Mel (Bush), I also enjoyed the peach flavours and then discovered that at 8.5% ABV it is rather strong in alcohol.
A good thing about this festival is that with so many beers to choose from that it is possible to stick to a style like fruit beers and easily find plenty of variety.
Another benefit of the festival is live music including the tradition of the strolling Dixieland Street Band who livened up the evening when they played Dixieland jazz music near our table.
By now our group had grown to include Graham who had been in Europe since a Polish trip with Mark Geeson and his Farnham friends to Krakow, Wroclaw and Gdansk earlier in the month.
Cathedral (north side) - view from Elfde Gebod
At 8.30pm our group, less vegetarian Steve, left the festival and walked around to the other side of the cathedral for a meal at Elfde Gebod (11th commandment) where we sat at a long table outside the restaurant building that dates back to 1425.
The 6.9% ABV amber beer I enjyed here was Martin's IPA 44 from a company founded by British master brewer John Martin in Antwerp in 1909.
Several in our group ordered Apostle's Fish Stew (16.95 euros), while I ordered Steak Robespierre served with a bowl of frites (18.90 euros).
Thanks to Keith for suggesting a Dutch Trappist beer -  La Trappe Tripel as my next beer here. I agreed with Keith about the fruity pear flavours from the 8% ABV Tripel.
As Steve had not returned to join us I caught the 4 tram at 11.22am from Groenplaats for five stops to Pacificatie while the others headed back to their hotel via