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