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A different kind of bubbly &mdash; <i>bi&egrave;re brut</i>

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While it’s Miller High Life that claims the title of “the Champagne of beers,” there is a style of craft beer that aims to fill the flutes of revelers with a refined malt beverage that can hold its own against sparkling wine.

Known as bière brut or bière de Champagne, these brews were conceived by Belgian brewers as a way to compete with high-end wines and present beer in a format and with flavors familiar to Champagne drinkers. Some varieties of the style are processed like a Champagne with lengthy, labor-intensive secondary fermentations, cave-aging, and dégorgement -- where yeast is removed from the conditioned beer.

The result is a beer that is dry and very effervescent and that showcases complex fermentation flavors and amplified alcohol content. There are dark versions available alongside the straw-pale versions, and there is even an example brewed with cherries -- Cuvee Brut from Lindemans -- that is as vibrant as any pink Champagne.

Bottles of bière brut can be tough to find, and they’re often priced at $30 or more, but the examples from Brouwerij Bostells (DeuS) and Brouwerij De Landtsheer (Malheur Bière Brut and Brut Noir) are available at L.A.’s better beer shops, and the occasional Whole Foods Market.

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If you’re looking for something a little different than sparkling wine or high-alcohol imperial stouts to toast the new year (or you want to surprise a wine-loving friend with a beer unlike anything else), pop a bottle of biere de Champagne before the ball drops on 2013.

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