EP039 | Brussels Beer Cafés

Photos by Cliff Lucas This editorially independent podcast has been supported by VISITFLANDERS as part of the “Straight Talk” series of podcasts.  Brussels beer café is an institution that has enjoyed as much acclaim as it has suffered fatigue.  This podcast is a panel discussion recorded in a Brussels beer café in front of an intimate live audience. The central question we were trying to answer was whether the Brussels beer café is a doomed relic or a durable icon.  The event was part of the Biercult Festival, a series of tastings, talks, and tours in locations across Brussels over one weekend, organised by Eoghan Walsh to celebrate the 5th birthday of his blog Brussels Beer City, and to launch his new book A History of Brussels Beer in 50 Objects. You should buy the book. It’s great. The Brussels beer café in which we recorded this podcast was het Goudblommeke in Papier (or in French, La Fleur en Papier Doré). It’s one of the oldest cafés in Brussels. The figureheads of Brussels’ surrealism would meet there in the mid-twentietth century: René Magritte, Louis Scutenaire, Michael Mariën and others. Later on, regular customers would include artists and writers like Jean Dubuffet, Wout Hoeboer and Hugo Claus. The café’s founder, poet and art dealer Geert van Bruaene, created a bizarre interior using an assortment of bric-a-bric and kitsch. Now for the most part a listed building, the café is still a meeting-place for artists and writers. And now for the first time, a beer podcast.

Om Podcasten

Breandán Kearney sits down with some of the most high profile people in the world of Belgian beer to discuss beer styles, brands and the stories behind the breweries and to find out what makes beer culture in Belgium so special.