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Sisters are doing it for themselves: nuns match monks in producing amber nectar

After centuries, Belgian nuns join monks in beer production to raise funds for abbey renovations

Benedictine sister Gertrude drinks a Maredret beer with ingredients inspired by the monastery garden, in Anhee, Belgium.
Benedictine sister Gertrude drinks a Maredret beer with ingredients inspired by the monastery garden, in Anhee, Belgium. (REUTERS/Johanna Geron)

When the nuns of Maredret Abbey in Belgium were struggling to scrape together the funds for badly needed renovations, they turned to an occupation that for hundreds of years had been the preserve of monks — beer brewing.

The 20-strong Benedictine community, founded in 1893, decided about five years ago it was time to team up with a brewer with the aim of producing beer infused with some of their history and values, while helping repair their convent’s leaking roofs and cracked walls.

After nearly three years of collaboration with brewer and importer John Martin, Maredret Altus, a 6.8% amber beer using cloves and juniper berries, Maredret Triplus, an 8% blonde incorporating coriander and sage, went on sale in summer.

It’s not a competition, more a complementarity.

—  Sister Gertrude

“It’s good for one’s health. It aids digestion. All the sisters like the beer, we are in Belgium after all,” said sister Gertrude, adding the nuns allowed themselves one bottle each on Sundays.

The beers are based on spelt, a grain mentioned in texts by St Hildegard, a German Benedictine abbess from the 11th century, who has inspired the Belgian order, along with plants commonly grown in the nuns’ garden.

Edward Martin, head distiller and great-grandson of the brewer’s founder, said production was at 300,000 bottles per year, which could rise to about 3-million within a few years. Outside Belgium, it is already sold in Italy and Spain.

Abbey beers, which involve a brewer paying royalties in exchange for using the abbey name, are common in Belgium, but until now they have only been with abbeys housing monks.

Maredret Abbey is just a kilometre from its male counterpart Maredsous Abbey, whose beer, made by Duvel, is widely available.

Sister Gertrude stressed they did not see each other as rivals.

“They were aware, informed and they gave us the green light. It’s not a competition, more a complementarity,” she said.

— Reuters

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