Ben Coli, owner and brewer of Dageraad, has spent many afternoons with Belgian friends in a particular square in eastern Antwerp. “It’s this beautiful little neighbourhood square, where there’s a basketball court, a playground, kids riding around the square on their bikes,”he says. “And everyone just sitting out on their patios greeting their neighbours and drinking beer — the most amazing beer in the world.”
Ben drank Big Rock in his hometown of Calgary during “the dark ages,”and on later European travels was impressed by various old country brews —especially English cask bitters. But Belgian beer captured his heart. “I always wished we had it here, just simple, easy access to this amazing locally brewed beer.”
After repeated trips to visit friends in Belgium — friends he first met while travelling in Laos at age 26 — Ben committed to learning the art of Belgian beer. He tried home-brewing and had good results (“beginner’s luck”), and then his interest “grew into obsession.” He went to brewing school, and in 2012-2013 took successive “beer sabbaticals” to Belgium, visiting over a dozen breweries. These were located in cities, tiny villages and one in a Trappist monastery, punctuated by afternoons in the Dageraadplaats.
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This award-winning brewery has been serving up delicious Belgian-inspired brews from their tap room since 2014. If you’re looking for something a little different, this is the place to go. Dageraad uses non-traditional ingredients in their beer like spices and sugar.
View this Smart ListYou will find some of the happiest beer aficionados in Dageraad’s tasting room. Based in Burnaby with roots and inspiration in Belgium, the small-batch brewery uses Belgian been traditions when creating their diverse portfolio of pours. Highlights include 8 degrees – a brune ale made with date sugar; De Witte – a sour-fermented wheat ale; and the magical Randonneur Saison – a dry saison, described as “sparkling” by the brewery. And indeed, the bubbles feel more like champagne than lager.
View this Smart List