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Nora McGunnigle's picture

Brewery Tour: Bayou Teche Brewing

 


Bayou Teche Patio
The Bayou Teche patio is always a lively scene.


Members of the Knott family lead the tours that are conducted on Saturdays, pointing out the brewery’s official pirogue boat – flat-bottomed to navigate the bayou’s shallow waters – and telling tales about how one of the Knott relatives was a bootlegger during Prohibition.

Their great-grandfather Charley would dress up as a priest to make his moonshine runs into Texas. Since South Louisiana and East Texas were heavily Catholic, no police officer ever searched his booze-laden and faux priest-driven automobile.

Karlos Knott said that on one of his Texas runs, one of Charley’s customers didn't have the cash for the moonshine and offered a monkey up in trade instead, which he took. "He had a little illicit bar in Arnaudville and he set that monkey up on the bar,” said Knott. “If you paid a dollar, which was a lot in those days, you could buy the monkey a beer and he would drink it. His name was Macaques á Charley – French for Charley's Monkey – and he was something of a local celebrity. He survived Prohibition and continued his job at my great-grandfather's establishment for many years. Older folks still ask my mom about that monkey."


The Knott family lead tours of Bayou Teche every Saturday.
The Knott family leads tours of Bayou Teche every Saturday.

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