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Difference between revisions of "La Fin du Monde"

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(Created page with "right|200px '''La Fin du Monde''' is a rich and sophisticated golden Tripel<ref>No idea what this even means, but the beer tastes good.</ref> from Unibroue,<ref>https://www.unibroue.com/en-us/beers/classics/la-fin-du-monde</ref> has earned several international titles thanks to its refined taste marked by notes of grains, fruit and spice, supported by a slight bitterness. It is a tribute to Quebec, the land encountered by 16th-century French exp...")
 
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==Awards==
==Awards==
The beer industry seems to have a billion awards for everything.  If you win a tasting contest at a local town's "brew-fest," sites like [https://www.beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/22/34/ BeerAdvocate] will tack some sort of award on your brew.   
The beer industry seems to have a billion awards for everything.  If you win a tasting contest at a local town's "brew-fest," sites like [https://www.beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/22/34/ BeerAdvocate] will tack some sort of award on your brew. It's a silly practice, but hey, it helps craft brewers get their name out there...and they can also add an award logo on their bottles of beer.
 
==Unibroue==
[[File:unibroue.png|right|200px]]
La Fin du Monde is made by a company called UnibroueThey started brewing in 1990 or so, and despite the fact that the company was owned by Canadians, they managed to do something right.  The company is owned by Sapporo now, which explains the switch from glass bottles to aluminum cans.  Anyway, they make 3 other really good beers:
 
*[https://www.unibroue.com/en-us/beers/classics/don-de-dieu Don de Dieu]
*[https://www.unibroue.com/en-us/beers/classics/trois-pistoles Trois Pistoles]
*[https://www.unibroue.com/en-us/beers/classics/maudite Maudite]
 
I have tried these ones in their original cork topped bottle and have enjoyed them.  I cannot vouch for the cans.  Beers made this way need to be in a transparent vessel, it just seems right that way.


==References==
==References==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 00:12, 22 September 2023

Lafindumonde.png

La Fin du Monde is a rich and sophisticated golden Tripel[1] from Unibroue,[2] has earned several international titles thanks to its refined taste marked by notes of grains, fruit and spice, supported by a slight bitterness. It is a tribute to Quebec, the land encountered by 16th-century French explorers who thought they'd reached the end of the world.

That's all well and good, but the real reason why this beer is featured here on this blog is because it has a 9% ABV.[3] A bottle of this stuff will make the night interesting.

My Experience

Evidently, Unibroue is now selling this stuff in aluminum cans.[4] I have never had one, but if they do it right (they never do), it will be great. My experience is with the 750ml cork topped bottle.[5] My impression of that bottle was "this beer is incredible." So yeah, that is the extent of my experience. I have gone back and tried the beer several times. I must say, again, that the attraction to this beer is the ABV.

Awards

The beer industry seems to have a billion awards for everything. If you win a tasting contest at a local town's "brew-fest," sites like BeerAdvocate will tack some sort of award on your brew. It's a silly practice, but hey, it helps craft brewers get their name out there...and they can also add an award logo on their bottles of beer.

Unibroue

Unibroue.png

La Fin du Monde is made by a company called Unibroue. They started brewing in 1990 or so, and despite the fact that the company was owned by Canadians, they managed to do something right. The company is owned by Sapporo now, which explains the switch from glass bottles to aluminum cans. Anyway, they make 3 other really good beers:

I have tried these ones in their original cork topped bottle and have enjoyed them. I cannot vouch for the cans. Beers made this way need to be in a transparent vessel, it just seems right that way.

References