Carmelites – non-alcoholic beverage – 0% vol.

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 4,90 23,00

Enjoyment is possible without alcohol! More and more people are discovering non-alcoholic drinks as a tasty alternative to the familiar Gin Tonics. We use the same herbs and spices, but through a unique production process without alcohol.

0% alcohol | 0% added sugar | 100% real life water

Carmelites – 0% non-alcoholic beverage – 500 ml & 50 ml- 0% vol.

  • Description
  • Additional information

Description

AN ANCIENT HISTORY

The Carmelites are one of the oldest monastic communities of the Catholic Church. They get their name from Mount Carmel where the first monastics lived. In the 13th century, Carmelites migrated to Europe and city monasteries sprang up everywhere.

 

CARMEL MONASTERY

The oldest surviving Carmel monastery in Belgium, indeed in the world, is located in the center of Vilvoorde. It was founded in 1469 as one of the first monasteries in the Carmel Order, even before Teresa of Avila would initiate her great reforms from which a new monastic order emerged (called Discalced Carmel).

 

THE CHARLES

In the 20th century, the sisters still joined the Teresian Carmel family. Vilvoorde’s Carmel is best known as a pilgrimage site for Our Lady of Consolation. The first Carmelites were also known in Flanders as the “Carmers” or “Caermers. We still encounter that name in the former monastery in Ghent’s Patershol district, which now houses the Kunsthal Gent.

 

BRUGES

A few years after the start of the sister communities, the male branch of the Teresian Carmel also came to Flanders. In 1630, the first fathers occupied a house in Bruges. Three years later they moved into the monastery on Donkey Street, which is still a Carmel community. They were not really welcome in ecclesiastical Bruges because this new monastic order meant more competition for the fathers of the older orders. They made their money partly from donations for celebrations and were not waiting for an additional “player” in the city’s Catholic life.

Nevertheless, the Carmelite Fathers managed to win the hearts of Bruges residents by volunteering to support the plague sufferers, who had to live in quarantine because of their contagious disease. Nine brothers and fathers lost their lives in the process.

 

PRINSENHOF

In Ghent, too, the Fathers were received with mixed feelings, but they had powerful protection from Archduke Leopold. They bought in 1651 a piece of land on the edge of the former Prinsenhof, where the court of the Counts of Ghent resided. There the Fathers began building the monastery and church on Burg Street. Archduke Leopold donated a vault to the new monastery, where the fathers could retire individually for prayer. Now the vault is also accessible to outside visitors and can even be rented for short stays.

The present monastery complex still contains numerous details that recall the building’s more than five centuries of history. In addition to the monasteries in Bruges and Ghent, the Carmelite Fathers are also based in Berchem and have good ties with Carmel monasteries in Denmark and Sweden, which were originally Belgian foundations.

 

THE APPROVED VIEW OF KAREL V

At the back of the Carmel cloister garden in Ghent is a structure that recalls a famous neighbor of the Fathers, although he was long deceased when the Carmelites settled in the city. The cradle of the later Emperor Charles V (1500-1558) was in the Prinsenhof, which also included one of the oldest zoos in Europe. That little building of the Fathers bears the name Leeuwenhof, and was part of the place where the wild animals were housed.

Emperor Charles V reportedly loved good food so much that he drank a glass of the Carmelite water daily so that his stomach could settle down a bit. As the Carmelite Fathers in Ghent reintroduce this Eau des Carmes, they are counting on an approving glance from their old neighbor Charles.

Non-alcoholic beverages

When you’re looking for a tasty aperitif but don’t feel like alcohol, our Carmelites 0% offers a perfect solution. The preparation of these herbal distillates like gin lends itself perfectly to a non-alcoholic version. When combined with tonic, it creates a spicy and rich cocktail. You don’t know what you’re tasting!

Perfect serve:

  • 6 cl Carmelites 0%,
  • 200 g Ice cubes
  • 150 cl Powerful indian tonic.
  • Zeste of lemon
  • Slice of lemon, juniper berries, sprig of lemon balm, marigold

Carmelites 0% non-alcoholic beverage – 500 ml & 50 ml – 0% vol.

Additional information

Volume

500ml, 50ml

Alcohol content

0% vol.

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