Saison

Saison (French, "season," French pronunciation: [sɛzɔ̃]) is a pale ale that is highly carbonated, fruity, spicy, and often bottle conditioned.[1] It was historically brewed with low alcohol levels, but modern productions of the style have moderate to high levels of alcohol. Along with several other varieties, it is generally classified as a farmhouse ale.

Saison Dupont Vieille Provision, the template for modern saisons

History

'Bière de saison' is first mentioned in the early 19th century. It was most widely known as a beer from the industrial city of Liège, where it was brewed by professional breweries as a keepable version of the city's spelt beer that had been produced for a few centuries. It was made with malted spelt, unmalted wheat and only a small amount of barley malt. It was typically brewed in winter and drunk after four to six months.[2]

While Liège's saison disappeared after the First World War, it continued to be brewed, generally as a barley-only beer, by professional breweries in the province of Hainaut, who sold it as a 'cuvée réservée' luxury beer, which was 'to be served at room temperature like a good wine' and 'to be poured with care'.[3]

In the late 1980s, American importer Don Feinberg was urged by beer writer Michael Jackson to import Brasserie Dupont's saison to the United States. It was Feinberg who re-styled saison as a 'farmhouse ale': 'People asked: is it a wheat beer? Is it a lambic? I told them it was a hoppy farmhouse ale.' [4]

Saison's reputation was further cemented by Phil Markowski's 2004 book Farmhouse ales and has since become a popular beer style worldwide. It was however only these developments in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s that cemented saison's reputation as a 'farmhouse ale': in older sources it is never indicated as such and though there has been a limited tradition in Belgium of brewing on farms or brewing for farm workers, it seems to have been conflated with saison only from the 1980s onwards.[5]

Modern saisons are not exclusively brewed seasonally anymore. Generally they are highly carbonated, fruity and spicy — sometimes from the addition of spices.

Composition

The type of malt determines the color of the saison, and although most saisons are of a cloudy golden color as result of the grist being mostly pale or pilsner malt, the use of darker malts results in some saisons being reddish-amber. Some recipes also use wheat.

Spices such as orange zest, coriander, and ginger may be used. Some spice character may come through due to the production of esters during fermentation at warm temperatures.[6]

Modern examples brewed in the US tend to copy the yeast used by the Dupont Brewery, which ferments better at warmer temperatures like 29 to 35 °C (84 to 95 °F) than the standard 18 to 24 °C (64 to 75 °F) fermenting temperature used by other Belgian ales.[7]

References

  1. Phil Markowski (9 Sep 2011). The Oxford Companion to Beer. Oxford University Press. p. 711. ISBN 9780195367133. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  2. Georges Lacambre, Traité complet de la fabrication de bières et de la distillation des grains, pommes de terre, vins, betteraves, mélasses, etc., Brussel 1851, p. 376-378.
  3. Jacques Trifin - Anciennes brasseries du Hainaut et leurs étiquettes, cf. labels by breweries like Delbruyère, Tillier, Fauconnier.
  4. "The Brasserie Dupont Story - Page 6 of 10". 10 October 2013.
  5. Roger Pinon, ‘Recettes de bières de ménage en Wallonie et subsidiairement en Picardie’, in: Studium et museum. Mélanges Edouard Remouchamps, volume I, Liège 1996, p. 103-122.
  6. Markowski 2004, p. 166.
  7. Markowski 2004, pp. 168–173.
Bibliography
  • All About Beer Magazine, Volume 24 Number 4, September 2003
  • The Beers of Wallonia, John Woods and Keith Rigley, Stourside Press (1996), ISBN 0-9529238-0-7
  • Markowski, Phil (2004). Farmhouse ales: culture and craftsmanship in the Belgian tradition (Print). Boulder, Colorado: Brewers Publications. ISBN 978-0-937381-84-7.
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