This is a beer with an interesting history. It was first brewed in 1981 by the Halve Maan Brewery, however the label was lost to Brouwerij Riva in 1988. It was then acquired by Liefmans, until that brewery’s bankruptcy in 2007, when the business was bought by Duvel-Moortgat.
De Halve Maan saw an opportunity to re-acquire its old label, and in 2008 a deal was done to purchase the brand from Duvel. So after bouncing around the Belgian countryside, the label is finally back where it began.
De Halve Maan is the brewery right in the centre of Bruges, better known for their Brugse Zot beers. ‘Strong Henry’ was the name given to this beer, which is a mix of six specialty malts along with Styrian Golding and Saaz hops.
This is one of my favourite tripels. It pours darker than your standard tripel, with a nose of fruit, malt, Belgian yeast and spice. This all comes through in the flavour too.
There is an early fruit and malt sweetness, with banana, orange and apricot. There is a stickiness to the mouthfeel that hints at honey (though it isn't there to my knowledge). A good level of hop bitterness lifts the muthfeel, with a hint of resiny hop character. The yeast is also a hero here, coming in with a good prickly spice.
Not as celebrated as some of Belgium's tripels, but every bit as good as most (though Westmalle Tripel is still my champion).