Nearly 60 craft breweries to participate in International Gruit Day Feb. 1

January 18, 2018 Beau’s Brewery, founders of International Gruit Day, will mark the occasion with Lamb’s Wool, an apple and spice gruit ale made with yarrow, cinnamon, cloves and unfiltered apple juice

Since 2013, Eastern Ontario craft brewery Beau’s has been the steward behind International Gruit Day, a worldwide movement that sees craft breweries band together to raise awareness of gruit ale, a historic beer style brewed with herbs and spices instead of hops. This year’s edition of International Gruit Day will see participation from nearly 60 craft breweries across 9 countries: Canada, the United States, Germany, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Finland, the Netherlands and South Africa  – making it the biggest International Gruit Day to date.

Breweries will be participating by brewing, releasing, or showcasing one (or more) of their gruit ales on February 1, while taking to social media using the hashtag #GruitDay to share their experience. Additionally, Bellwether Brewing in Washington and Brauerei Kemker in Germany will be hosting their own local Gruit Day festivities to mark the occasion, while Two Okes Brewery in South Africa will celebrate by brewing and releasing the only commercially available gruit ale in the country.

More locally, the team at Beau’s will be gathering in the brewery’s Tap Room at noon EST in Vankleek Hill to raise a glass of their apple and spice gruit, Lamb’s Wool. Made with yarrow, cinnamon, cloves and unfiltered apple juice, Lamb’s Wool is currently available in bottles and on tap in Ontario and Québec. It has a rich history that dates to Celtic pagan times, when it was enjoyed mid-winter as part of various ‘wassail’ traditions. Other gruits on tap for the day are a carefully preserved keg of Triceratops Tripel (brewed for last year’s International Gruit Day); the award-winning St. Luke’s Verse lavender gruit; and December’s Ottawa 2017 Series creation, Glacial Gruit.

The origins of gruit ale date to the medieval times, when most beers in Europe were brewed without the use of hops. Instead bitterness was provided by a mixture called gruit, a blend of local herbs and spices. Brewing with gruit was mandatory, but eventually brewing with hops would become the new compulsory, and brewing with gruit faded into obscurity. Today this style of beer is known as gruit ale, a style which some craft brewers have now come to rediscover, including Beau’s.

Beau’s released its first gruit ale, Bog Water, in 2008, and has since become a frontrunner in the rekindled gruit movement thanks to its award-winning Gruit Series. According to Untappd, a geosocial networking service that allows people to share their beer-drinking preferences, Beau’s holds 6 of the top 10 spots in the Top Rated Gruit or Ancient Herbed Ale category for Canada.

To find your nearest International Gruit Day participating brewery, and for more information, visit www.gruitday.com.

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