Oostvleteren - Belgium
Owners of a nearby ostrich-raising farm in Lo-Reninge with accommodations for vacationers, Urbain Coutteau and Philippe Driessens developed an interest in making distinctive regional beers to serve to their guests.[2] In 2001 they began doing so with help from local wine maker Carlo Grootaert, and this project eventually developed into its own independent commercial concern.Upon its inception in 2003, Struise produced beers at the Caulier brewery in northern Hainaut. Since 2006, they have been made at the Deca brewing facility in Woesten-Vleteren in West Flanders until 2014, after beers were brewed at their own brewhouse. The firm has reported that their own microbrewery and tasting room in Het Oud Schooltje (a renovated school building) located in Oostvleteren, is open and operational.The company takes its name from the historic Flemish word for ostrich, which also is a contemporary slang term meaning “tough”. They render the name into English as “The Sturdy Brewers”, and many of their labels feature ostriches, a trait they share with Dutch brewery Brouwerij ‘t IJ.Following industry trends made popular by American craft brewers, the brewery has recently[when?] ventured into stronger, more flavorful beers and also barrel-aging.They have also collaborated with other European artisan beer scene such as Denmark’s Mikkeller, Estonia’s Põhjala, fellow Belgians Picobrouwerij Alvinne and Brouwerij De Molen of the Netherlands, as well as American brewers. While their Black Albert was originally conceived in concert with United States-based Ebenezer’s Pub, a joint effort to create a “Pannepot Cafe” in Brunswick, Maine was abandoned in May 2009.
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