Posted on 11/26/2009 4:22:03 PM PST by NYer
The Westvleteren Brewery (Brouwerij Westvleteren) is a Belgian brewery founded in 1838 inside the Trappist Abbey of Saint Sixtus of Westvleteren in the Belgian municipality of Westvleteren, not far from the hops-producing town of Poperinge and the medieval city of Ypres. The brewery and its beers are usually referred to as Westvleteren. The brewery's three beers have acquired an international reputation for taste and quality, as well as the limited availability of the beers which are not brewed to normal commercial demands.
All I’ve evr heard is .. if there are four Catholics together, there’s usually a fifth.
All I’ve evr heard is .. if there are four Catholics together, there’s usually a fifth.
“Hilaire Belloc’s rule of thumb, which is to avoid alcoholic beverages developed after the Reformation”
I can live with this imperative.
LOL! I don’t like beer, except when I’m in Spain, where the beer is very good (the Spanish Celts were famous for their beer way back at the time of the Roman invasions). The companies are all German now, but the recipes are still the Spanish recipes.
Living in the US, I note that whiskies, particularly Scotch, flow freely at Catholic events. One shouldn’t get drunk, but just get free enough to release the great Catholic language gene, something that is particularly prominent among Irish Americans and also, I have noticed, among the few English Catholics I have encountered.
God often gives me cheap Chianti.
As a Catholic in a very Catholic city where every Catholic Church basement or hall has a bar complete with tappers that say “Budweiser”, “Bud Light”, “Michelob” and now “Bud Select” I’ve always wondered what the big deal about drinking is. What’s presented in this article is the way things were in the parish where I grew up and, frankly, still is the way it is. I guess it’s a cultural thing.
Very interesting article. Thanks for posting.
Now the faith is old and the Devil bold
Exceedingly bold indeed.
And the masses of doubt that are floating about
Would smother a mortal creed.
But we that sit in a sturdy youth
And still can drink strong ale
Let us put it away to infallible truth
That always shall prevail.
And thank the Lord
For the temporal sword
And howling heretics too.
And all good things
Our Christendom brings
But especially barley brew!
With my row-ti-tow
Ti-oodly-ow
Especially barley brew!
Of course, one of his most frequently quoted is The Catholic Sun:
Wherever the Catholic sun doth shine,
Theres always laughter and good red wine.
At least Ive always found it so.
Benedicamus Domino!
Hilaire Belloc
It would now be 100% politically incorrect, but, we used to say we were quadruply blessed-the one true church, allowed to drink, dance and smoke.
We have a good family friend, faithful Irish Catholic and older man, who keeps a stocked bar and the last time we were at their house, we counted 27 different whiskies ranging from Bourbon to Irish whiskey (ahh, Jameson). And talk about tolerance - I've never seen the man drunk, but he always has a couple fingers in a glass at social events.
Actually its “What happens when four Irishmen get together?” answer: “A fifth shows up’’.
Very nice- thanks!
Curiously enough, when the left took over parishes, one of the first things they stamped out was drinking at parish events. I remember one parish that I lived in where the Holy Name Society was told they could no longer sell acohol or raffle baskets of “beverages” at parish events...by some limp-wristed young leftist twit wearing a Guatemalan stole. The reaction was severe, but he won. Many of them actually ended up drifting away from the Church because it had suddenly been taken over by the Puritan left.
Is Jamesons a nice Catholic drink?
I’ve loved the stuff since I was an altar boy.
I don’t drink, but I always say that, at the wedding feast at Cana, Jesus didn’t turn the water into Coca Cola...and he could have if he wanted to.
The book has some great recipes, weaved in among chapters relating the Catholic connection to a great many famous European wines, ales, and other libations. I bought it for my wife on her conversion. (Yes. I'm a cradle Catholic. My wife is a recent convert: now a super-Catholic. I'm living in fear these days that she's soon going to be waking me in the middle of the night for matins.)
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