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Cantillon

Cantillon Cuvee Saint Gilloise 75cl

Cantillon Cuvee Saint Gilloise 75cl

Regular price £18.00
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Cuvée Saint-Gilloise is a refined lambic beer from Brasserie Cantillon, created by blending two-year-old lambics dry-hopped with carefully selected aromatic hops. This unfiltered, unpasteurized beer showcases a perfect balance of citrusy hop aromas and the complexity of spontaneous fermentation. At 5.5% ABV, it offers a crisp, refreshing character, celebrating the essence of traditional brewing and Cantillon's signature craftsmanship.

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Tasting Notes

Lemon Zest, Hay, Herbal Hops and Funk

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Cantillon

Style: Lambic Brewery & Blendery

Country: Belgium

Region: Brussels

Cantillon is basically sacred ground for sour beer fans. Part brewery, part living museum, part spontaneous fermentation cult headquarters, this tiny Brussels producer has spent over a century stubbornly refusing to modernise while the rest of the beer world lost its mind chasing trends.

Founded in 1900, Cantillon specialises in traditional lambic beer, brewed using spontaneous fermentation where wild yeasts from the air do the work instead of carefully controlled lab strains. Which sounds either beautifully romantic or completely irresponsible depending on how much microbiology you know. Somehow, against all logic, it produces some of the most complex and revered beers on earth.

The brewery still uses methods that many producers abandoned decades ago because they’re slow, unpredictable and commercially inconvenient. Wort cools overnight in open coolships beneath the Brussels air, beer ages for years in old barrels, and blending becomes an art form somewhere between brewing and alchemy. The result is beer full of tart citrus, barnyard funk, oak, lemon peel, hay, apple skin and enough acidity to wake up parts of your palate you forgot existed.

What makes Cantillon especially fascinating is how uncompromising it remains. The beers are unapologetically dry, sour and deeply weird by mainstream standards. First-time drinkers sometimes react like they’ve accidentally consumed farmhouse vinegar. Then six months later they’re queueing outside the brewery trying to buy limited bottles like medieval pilgrims.

The brewery itself feels frozen in time too. Dusty, chaotic, creaking and utterly authentic in a world increasingly dominated by polished taprooms and branding consultants. Cantillon isn’t trying to impress anyone. It simply keeps making some of the greatest traditional beer in existence and letting the rest of the world catch up eventually.