Register today! | Already registered? Sign in

traveldk.com

from Eyewitness Travel Guides: the world's bestselling travel guides
  • Personal guide
  • Open
Member image

Brussels, Bruges, Antwerp and Ghent : Editor's choice

Submit an attraction

Make sure your favorite shops, restaurants, hotels and more are listed.

Submit an attraction illustration
WIN WIN WIN

Win an Apple MacBook!

Apple MacBook laptop
Download a podcast

Free podcasts Find free podcasts for Boston, New York & more.

Join our free monthly newsletter

Advertisement

  • A famous café-bar in central Brussels, with a gueuze named after it (see A La Mort Subite).

  • Other abbeys also produced beer, but unlike the Trappist monasteries, many have licensed them to commercial breweries. Leffe, for example, is now closely connected with Interbrew. That said, many of the abbey beers are excellent. In addition, there are good “abbey-style” beers, such as Ename, Floreffe and St Feuillien.

  • Eels cooked in a sauce of fresh green herbs.

  • For lovers of everything from old comics and Art Nouveau door handles to exquisite Louis XVI desks and ormolu clocks, Belgium is a happy hunting ground. In Brussels, the full range is on view between the Place du Jeu de Balle and the Place du Grand Sablon.

  • The largest Art Deco building ever built? Remarkable view from its copper-green dome.

  • Beer

    In 1900 there were over 3,200 breweries in Belgium; now there are just over 100, but they still generate an astonishing variety of beers (see Types of Belgian Beer). The most famous are produced by the Trappist monasteries, but even the lighter, lager-style beers such as Stella Artois and Jupiler are made to a high standard.

  • Tiny béguinage (see Bruges) – now a museum showing how the béguines lived.

  • A great Belgian invention. When trying to overwinter chicorée lettuce in around 1840, a Brussels gardener found it produced succulent, salad-like shoots. They can be eaten raw, but their sweet, slightly bitter flavour really emerges when they are cooked, either as a vegetable accompaniment or in dishes such as chicons au gratin . Chicon is the French word, witloof the Dutch; in English, it’s endive or chicory (but it’s confusing, as these terms can also refer to lettuce).

  • Supreme biscuit manufacturer, in a class of its own (see Biscuiterie Dandoy).

  • It is hard not to drool in front of the ravishing shop windows of Belgian pâtisseries – and the mouth-watering offerings taste as good as they look. An alternative is to buy some of the equally famed biscuits (cookies) – from a specialist like Dandoy (see Biscuiterie Dandoy).

Advertisement

 Latest guides
What’s on now in Brussels, Bruges, Antwerp and Ghent
  • Mini-Europe
    Located at the foot of the Atomium, Mini-Europe faithfully reproduces the cities and sights of Europe. Wander past the Eiffel Tower and Big Ben, watch the gondolas go sailing by in Venice or witness... Read more
  • Truc Troc
    Have you ever dreamed of owning a piece of modern art? Truc Troc presents 100 works of art by 100 contemporary artists at Brussels' Palais des Beaux-Arts. The dual concept of the event is to give... Read more
  • Gay and Lesbian Film Festival
    Brussels celebrates gay and lesbian culture through a range of artistic media at the Botanique. The annual Gay and Lesbian Film Festival includes unpublished feature films, reissues, documentaries,... Read more
  • Antiques Fair
    This annual event, organised by The Royal Chamber of Belgian Antiques, is the largest antiques fair in Belgium. Top dealers display their wares in the newly-regenerated Tour & Taxis district... Read more