The first beers I really thought about were Bavarian Weizen
(back in 1988 they were a revelation and I can still pour a bottle into a glass
super quick as was shown to me by a barman in an Eindhoven pub then), but
Belgium followed — there was a deli in Stoke Newington in 1992, which is where
I then lived, that sold Delirium Tremens, and of course there was Belgo, whose
Camden branch was very close to where I worked.
In 2005 I co-organised a British Guild of Beer Writers trip
to Wallonia that included visits to Silly, Lefebvre, Du Bocq and Cantillon (my
second, I was first there in 1996). I do remember being excited about Silly
Saison but several years later when I wrote a piece on saison for All AboutBeer I thought it had become much sweeter.
On the other hand, saison as a beer
style/variety/expression was starting to really dig away at me. What on earth
was a saison? And when I wrote my AAB piece I contacted Garrett Oliver who
came back with the following quote: ‘In my mind, there are really only a few
things truly required of a saison. It must be dry – residual sugar would have a
considerable effect on the beer’s ability to keep through the summer. They
should also be fairly hoppy. Moderate alcohol, 5- 7%, would make them strong
enough to last for a while, but not so strong that they’d stun the farm workers
who drank it. So perhaps it is not a style that lends itself to orthodoxy, but
rather one that originally existed to answer a question – “what can I brew
that’s nutritious, refreshing, tasty, and will last for at least a year in the
cellar?”’
So with that in mind I tasted Firewitch from Cheddar Ales, a
brewery more known for their solid cask beers and when I got a press release
and the offer of a bottle I was interested to try it. As soon as I popped the
cap I could smell Soriachi Ace; it dominated the nose, a sort of soft, meringue
lemon, dank hop sack character, and then it was followed by a soft lemony and
bittersweet and flinty and bitter and spicy template of flavours on the palate, a
billowing of flavours with a high dry finish — a modern saison indeed and I must say that it’s rather
good.
Saison is merely a French (and German) word for season. So across the Continent, Saisonbier(e) means the current seasonal/special, to the considerable confusion of monoglot Anglophone visitors who wonder why this 'Saison' tastes more like a Bock, Witbier or whatever. It would be nice if we could call the style something else - Farmhouse ale, perhaps - but it is too late now. And yes, to some extent it's their problem for being monoglot!
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