The Saison Show: Origins, Style Profile, and Homebrewing Tips | Ep. 265
We want to Make Saisons Cool Again
It wasn’t that long ago that saisons were one of the popular styles. Several breweries offered up some variation or another and a lot of great collaborations came about. The saisons are still there, they just don’t have the hype they used to. We’d love to see them come back around.
The saison style started in 1700s in Wallonia, the French-speaking part of Belgium. Each farm brewed their own take on these Farmhouse Ales in the cold months for seasonal farm workers (Saisonnièrs) to drink during the warm months. This gave farm workers something to do in the cold months, used up any excess grain, and provided a clean and safe source of hydration for farm workers. Each worker may drink up to 5 Liters per day of these low ABV (3.0-3.5%) beers as they toiled away. As each farm used the resources they had available it was difficult to nail down an exact saison style at the time. Today, the style has some definition but still offers up a lot of variation. The alcohol content has creeped up a bit and the ones that fall into the range of the originals are known as a Table Beer.
Saison lovers Britt Teusink of brewery in planning Frameshift Fermentation and Brandon King of Stout Brothers Beer Markets joined us on the show this week to dive into the style. Teusink plans to brew a variety of saisons at Frameshift and has his own blended culture to provide a unique character to each of his brews.
The Award-winning Synesthesia Saison Recipe
Saison is a great style for new homebrewers to try out as the yeast is very open to higher temperatures that don’t require temperature control. Pitch your yeast at room temperature and let it go and you should end up with a great saison. For the malt bill you can use all Pilsner malt, or toss in some spelt or wheat to your liking. Experienced homebrewers can expand on the style with the huge variety of yeasts available or culture their own.
Here’s our recipe for Synesthesia Saison. We’ve consumed gallons of this beer and it’s won a handful of medals in homebrew competitions. If you try it out let us know what you think.
Synesthesia Saison
Type: All-grain
Batch size: 5.5 gallons
OG: 1.053
FG: 1.006
Efficiency: 70%
ABV: 6.2%
IBU: 23
Ingredients
- 8 lbs 8 oz Pilsner Malt
- 1 lb 8 oz White Wheat
- 1/2 oz Hallertauer @ FWH
- 1/2 oz Saaz @ 60 minutes
- 1 lb Belgian Simplicity Candi Syrup @ 10 minutes
- 1.0 oz Mosaic @ flame-out for 10 minutes
- WLP566 Belgian Saison II Yeast
Process
Mash for 75 minutes at 148°F and sparge to target volume. Boil 120 minutes following addition schedule above. Chill to 67°F and pitch healthy yeast into well oxygenated wort. Start fermentation at 67° and ramp 5° every 24 hours to 90°, allow to ferment for a total of 14 days, verifying FG is reached. Bottle condition to 3.0 vols for at least a month (you can drink it earlier but it’s much better after a month+), beer develops champagne-like characteristics with age.
The Beer List
- Allagash Saison Violette
- Boulevard Saison Brett
- Creature Comforts Common Things
- Dupont / Allagash Brewer’s Bridge
- Jester King / Buddha’s Brew Collab (saison and kombucha hybrid)
- Saison Dupont
- Variant Dream Balloon
Craft Beer News
- An Overwhelming Majority of Beer Drinkers Want Direct-To-Consumer Shipping
- An Online Writing Platform is Looking for Beer Hangover Testers
- Goldman Sachs Says No- and Low-Alcohol Beers Could Reach $3 Billion by 2025
Check out these farm-fresh episodes
- Saison Season with Logsdon Farmhouse Ales | Ep. 235
- Boulevard Brewing’s Steven Pauwels | Ep. 180
- Farmhouse Funk with Fonta Flora’s Todd Boera | Episode 152
https://beerguysradio.com/2021/03/13/saison-origin-style-homebrewing/https://beerguysradio.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Saison-Selection-FB.jpghttps://beerguysradio.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Saison-Selection-FB-150x150.jpgHomebrewingShowsBelgian Beer,Brandon King,Britt Teusink,Farmhouse Ale,Frameshift Fermentation,saison,Table Beer,The Stout Brothers We want to Make Saisons Cool Again It wasn't that long ago that saisons were one of the popular styles. Several breweries offered up some variation or another and a lot of great collaborations came about. The saisons are still there, they just don't have the hype they used to....Tim DennisTim Dennistgdennis@gmail.comAdministratorCo-Host of the Beer Guys Radio Show. Georgia beer advocate, all around craft beer fan, homebrewer, and troublemaker.Beer Guys Radio Craft Beer Podcast
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