On the banks of the Charente in Échallat, a short stroll from the small port of Sireuil, Adopte Big Hop invites visitors into a hands-on brewing workshop that turns amateur curiosity into real craft. Over roughly five hours, this local microbrewery opens its stainless-steel doors and its process, putting participants side-by-side with brewers to measure, mash, sparge and sample at every stage. The experience blends tangible technique with convivial tasting: a guided tour of the brewhouse and fermentation tanks, direct instruction from the brewers, and a curated flight of beers that shows how grain, hops and water translate into flavor.
What makes the workshop special is the emphasis on participation. You don’t just watch equipment run; you handle ingredients, note gravity changes, and take part in simple procedural steps under brewer supervision. The group size is small, capped at 12 people, so the instruction stays personal and the conversation stays lively. The meeting point at Au port de Sireuil places the brewery within Charente country life—boats, river breezes, and agricultural fields that supply regional grains and aromatic hops—so a session feels like a short cultural immersion as much as a class.
Key features include the brewhouse and mash tuns, the stainless fermentation vessels, tasting bar and a tasting lineup that can be paired with a Thai food option or another pairing arranged in advance. The geology of the region—soft sedimentary soils and the Charente river—helps explain a local ingredient story: soft water and nearby grain producers shape brewing choices and beer character.
The workshop suits curious beginners and homebrewers who want to refine technique; it’s also ideal for small groups celebrating a birthday or corporate team-building that prefers an active, flavorful morning. Bring closed-toe shoes, a notebook if you plan to log recipes, and an appetite for tasting. Adopte Big Hop’s brewers walk the line between instruction and hospitality, answering questions about hops, malt, yeast and fermentation while keeping the pace relaxed.
Practical details: the visit lasts about five hours, runs in French with possible assistance from Charentes in Flow, and accommodates up to 12 people. Reserve in advance through the provided booking link to secure a spot; sessions fill quickly in warmer months. Whether you leave with a better sense of how beer is made, a new recipe idea, or simply a few tasting notes and fresh impressions of the Charente riverside, this workshop transforms a brewery visit into a full, memorable day. Expect to spend part of the afternoon chatting on the quay, watching light shift across the river, and perhaps picking up a bottle or two from the taproom to take home—handwritten tasting notes and a new appreciation for craft brewing are typical souvenirs and local stories.