<ref name=HonseHistory> Brouwerij Van Honsebrouck, [http://www.vanhonsebrouck.be/en/brouwerij/geschiedenis# Brewery History]</ref>
In early 1950, Van Honsebrouck began distributing [[Brasserie_Belle_Vue | Belle Vue]] and observed the increasing demand for the beer.<ref name=GeuzeKriek>Jef Van den Steen, [[Books#Geuze & Kriek: The Secret of Lambic Beer|Geuze & Kriek: The Secret of Lambic Beer]], 2012</ref> In 1953, Luc Van Honsebrouck, the son of Paul, goes went to brewery school and completes completeed apprenticeships in Wallonia and Germany. He then took over the brewery and renamed it Brewery Van Honsebrouck. By 1955, Luc Van Honsebrouck decided to stop brewing lagers and focus on his own Oud Bruin recipe which was named Bacchus. In 1958, the brewery began buying wort from [[Brasserie_Van_Haelen-Coche | Van Haelen Fréres]] in Uccle to produce what they called a gueuze and later a kriek.<ref name=GeuzeFaroEtKriek>Raymond Buren, [[Books#Gueuze.2C_Faro_et_Kriek|Gueuze, Faro, et Kriek]], 1992</ref>
<ref name=HonseHistory> Brouwerij Van Honsebrouck, [http://www.vanhonsebrouck.be/en/brouwerij/geschiedenis# Brewery History]</ref>
Wort was transferred into oak foeders that held Bacchus and blended with a house-brewed wort. This eventually inoculated the yeast culture into the foeders which lead to in-house production of spontaneously fermented ale after their wort supplier ceased production. In an attempted to replicate the environment in the Pajottendland the brewer experimented with trucking their wort into the region for cooling. The experiment was ultimately unsuccessful, and all spontaneous fermentation is done in-house today.<ref name=GeuzeKriek>Jef Van den Steen, [[Books#Geuze & Kriek: The Secret of Lambic Beer|Geuze & Kriek: The Secret of Lambic Beer]], 2012</ref> In 1969 Van Honsebrouck became the second largest "gueuze" producer in Belgium behind Belle-Vue using700using 700,000 kg of malt.
In 1986 Van Honsebrouck introduced the Kasteel line of beers which are not spontaneously fermented.