Sly Fox 20th Anniversary Dry-Hopped Belgian Golden Ale

imageFrom Sly Fox:

Celebrating 20 years of brewing authentic beers!
In 1995,
Sly Fox Brewing company poured their first beer from a modest brewhouse and pub in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. Twenty years later the brewery is still crafting critically-acclaimed, classically-styled beers.

The family-owned operation has seen a lot of changes in two decades, but the one constant has been the desire to produce high quality, authentic beer. Sly Fox has also received national attention for their popular series of outdoor events and festivals… this is a brewery that knows how to celebrate!

To mark their twentieth year in business,
Sly Fox is offering a very special brew… Sly Fox 20 will bring a dry-hopped, Belgian-style golden ale in a big bottle that is as unique and special as the colorful history of the venerable brewery. Stay tuned for details on the release of Sly Fox 20 and anniversary celebrations at the pubs!

Grisette Wins Again
Working class ale recognized for the third time!
The wildly-popular, warm weather offering Grisette Working Class Ale was first canned by the Sly Fox Brewing Company in 2013. In that initial year of its release, the refreshing farmhouse-style ale was awarded a silver medal in the French and Belgian-style Ale category at the prestigious Great American Beer Festival (GABF). It returned the following year to win the gold, and now, in 2015, we're proud to announce that Grisette was once again awarded a silver medal at the country's largest beer competition.

T

he 2015 GABF competition winners were selected by an international panel of 242 expert judges from the record number of 6,647 entries received from 1,552 U.S. breweries. The GABF represents the largest collection of U.S. beer ever served in a public tasting event, plus a private competition that brings together the brewers and diverse beers that make the U.S. the world's greatest brewing nation.

Grisette was originally brewed for miners in the Walloon region of Belgium, just as Saison was the beer of the farmers. Grisette was lighter than Saison and frequently contained wheat as well as barley malt (as does the Sly Fox version). The name is derived from the French word for "gray," referring to both the drab factory frocks worn by the young women (the grisettes) who doled out pints as the men exited from the mines, and also the color of the cobblestone rock being extracted. Grisette will return to the shelves in the spring of 2016.

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