9.04: How I learned to say hop burn in Spanish

* Here comes Dolcita
* German hop production shrinks
* Beyond Saaz
* Drought conditions in England
* Counting hops
* Oregon Hop Festival
* Hop Source Sept. 23-25
* New Lupulin Exchange tool
* Reference material
* Listen here

Welcome to Vol. 9, No. 4. As the list right above indicates, there’s plenty of information to pass along this month, which means keeping everything brief. I’ll start with something I learned in Argentina earlier this month. How do you say hop burn in Spanish? Hop burn. Same in Portuguese as well.

DOLCITA

From the press release: “Hop Breeding Company (HBC) is proud to announce the official commercial release of Dolcita brand HBC 1019, a new and innovative hop variety designed to meet the high expectations of brewers and beer lovers around the world. Created in 2016 using traditional breeding methods and HBC’s proprietary breeding stock, Dolcita is one of the fastest hops ever brought to market by HBC.”

I posted more at the newsletter website, and also wrote about Dolcita and other newcomers for Brewing Industry Guide. You can find even more at the John I. Haas and Yakima Chief Hops websites.

FROM GERMANY

2025 Hallertau hop queen and her court

As you can see, there is a new Hallertau hop queen (the Tettnang region has a queen of its own). She was crowned last week at a fest party that signals the beginning of harvest. Unlike in the United States, where we must wait until December to learn how many million pounds farmers harvested, the German Hop Growers Association publishes an official estimate for the crop (scroll down for English). Farmers are expected to produce 41,235 metric tons (about 90.7 million pounds and likely more than the U.S. crop), 11 percent fewer than 2024. Growers cut acreage by 6.5 percent and yields were adversely affected by a lack of rain until mid-July and further reduced by disease and pest pressure.

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HBC 1019 = Dolcita = Peach, tropical daiquiri

Here is the first paragraph from the Hop Breeding Company press release:

“Hop Breeding Company (HBC) is proud to announce the official commercial release of Dolcita brand HBC 1019, a new and innovative hop variety designed to meet the high expectations of brewers and beer lovers around the world.
Created in 2016 using traditional breeding methods and HBC’s proprietary breeding stock, Dolcita is one of the fastest hops ever brought to market by HBC.”

Until today it was called HBC 1019. Nine years from cross to name is really fast. Jeff Alworth has written about the semi-early years.

If I find a link to the full press release I will link to it. (Here is the post at the Haas website.) I’ve written about Dolcita for Brewing Industry Guide in a story that will post soon. (Behind a paywall, but no apologies. A subscription is worth the price.)

Meanwhile, more from the press release: “Dolcita is the boldest representation of the Hop Breeding Company’s mission: to provide brewers with the best, most unique, and most sustainable hops on the planet,” said Jeff Dailey, sensory manager at John I. Haas. “With aromas of caramelized pineapple, peach rings, and orange juice, consumers will think they’re drinking a tropical daiquiri rather than an IPA. Beers made with Dolcita definitely stand out due to their strong, distinct flavor profile.”

(The Hop Breeding Company is a partnership between Haas and Yakima Chief Ranches.)

And here’s an outtake (meaning it was in my story and then it wasn’t) from Tiffany Pitra, Yakima Chief Hops senior manager, hop research. “My team consistently gets peach candy aromas in hop assessments and beer tasting. We trialed three yeast strains with 1019 and consistently described the beers as having pineapple, peach, and sweet aromatic notes,” she said. Participants in a YCH/YCR program in which brewers trial products also provided feedback. “I’ve chatted casually with some brewers and ‘tiki drinks’ (think painkiller) seems to a common descriptor.”

9.03: New Zealand hop fields flooded, one farmer dies

* New Zealand flooding
* What tools to use & when
* Hop Profile: Talus
* Good listening

Welcome to Vol. 9, No. 3. The BarthHaas Report 2024/25 will be published next Tuesday (July 22). The release always provides useful information about the previous global harvest and hints about what to expect in the coming months. I’ll be a few days into the beginning of a stretch of travel during which I’ll be home eight out of 31 days. That’s why you are getting this now and a summary of the report will have to wait until the August dispatch.

DISASTER DOWN UNDER

What’s going on in the Tasman region of New Zealand is what they call a breaking news story. At the end of last month, rain hammered the area. Here’s part of the message that Brent McGlashen posted on Mac Hops Instagram feed:

“Statistically and visually, we hit above the 1 in 100-year flood level, with also highest ever recorded river flows in a number of parts in the Motueka river. There were stopbank breaches in places, but luckily the Motueka township was a couple of feet away from near disaster with the high tide also causing issues.

“Both our farms have water everywhere, fences with damage and some debris scattered around, but we are fortunate compared to others who have had significant damage and loss due to the flooding. Was this predicted, well yes it was. Forecasters said over 200mm and we sure got that. We have had a wet winter and the ground can’t absorb more so it has to go somewhere.”

One hop farmer died as a result of the storm. Peter Lines was clearing flood damage from his property in Wai-iti, southwest of Nelson, when he was hit by a tree. This tribute on Instagram provides an idea of how important he was to the hop growing community.

Another round of rain arrived last week, leaving fields under water and dumping mud, gravel and sand on facilities that had just been cleaned up (or were still being cleaned up). Hayden Oldham from New Hoplands said “it’s back to the start. Everything we cleaned up has been spread back out and gone through sheds and gardens.” He said downed trees swept into fast moving water had taken down hop poles.

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9.02: Citra is back, baby! But total hop acreage down again

* GABF category promotes newest public hop
* America’s hop fields continue to shrink
* Global outlook
* Hop Profile: Brewer’s Gold

Welcome to Vol. 9, No. 2. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. Acres of hops strung for harvest in the Northwest states of Idaho, Oregon and Washington were down from last year. Not a shocker. Acreage has shrunk from a peak of 60,872 in 2021 to 42,231 in 2025. The surprise was that Citra acreage increased in all three states. Details after a bit of funs news about special treatment hop newcomer Vera will receive at the Great American Beer Festival.

GOING FOR GOLD WITH VERA

The result is not totally guaranteed, because beer judges have been known to do strange things like not awards medals. However, you can feel pretty confident betting that a beer brewed with the just named hop Vera will win a gold medal at the Great American Beer Festival. The Brewers Association has announced that it has created a special category for 2025 only, featuring beers brewed with Vera (formerly known as W1108-333 or HRC-003). They need not be single hop beers, but they must highlight the distinctive character of Vera, “which has been described as having tropical, stone fruit, and citrus character, reminiscent of a pineapple flavored Life-Savers candy.”

Vera is a product of the USDA-ARS breeding program, a cross between Brewer’s Gold and a powdery resistant male hop 64103M made in 2011 by Steve Kenny at Prosser Station, a Washington Station University facility. Although that program was shelved in 2015, promising experimental varieties were maintained. When a joint effort by industry participants (the Brewers Association, Hop Research Council, Hop Growers of America and others) revived the public program in 2018, W1109-333 was one of the cultivars that Hopsource identified as a brewer favorite.

Hopsource is a platform developed by DraughtLab to “identify public varieties, early in the breeding process, that show commercial promise for their sensory characteristics.” Brewers began using it in 2018 to provide feedback.

Vera was named for Vera Katherine Charles (1877–1954), an American mycologist. She was one of the first women to be appointed to professional positions within the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Charles coauthored several articles on mushrooms while working for the USDA. Although Charles was not involved in research related to hops, when brewers flavor a beer with Vera they may be reminded the hop comes from public supported research.

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9.01: Weather boosts 2025 hop quality in Australia, New Zealand

* Australian harvest report
* NZ Hops harvest report
* Camp on a hop farm
* Crosby Hops x Roy Farms
* Bell’s, Centennial, and terroir
* ‘From Field to Fermenter’

Welcome to Vol. 9, No. 1. Not a lot of querying going on this month, but plenty to tell you about. And if you want more, I suggest subscribing to Brewing Industry Guide, where I wrote about a new round of aroma and flavor products that were on display at the Craft Brewers Conference.

FEWER ACRES, BUT MORE HOPS IN AUSTRALIA

Responding to worldwide diminished demand for hops, Hop Products Australia idled fields in 2025. However, near perfect hop-growing weather for the first time in several years contributed to a bumper crop. Although acreage across six proprietary varieties and Cascade decreased 15.5 percent, farmers harvested 9.5 percent more hops in 2025 than 2024, a total of 1,468 metric tons (3.2 million pounds).

The 2025 crop is the first processed at HPA’s Hop Central facility with cold chain bale storage, temperature-controlled production rooms, and modern pelleting and packaging equipment. “Hop Central has significantly reduced our processing time while maximizing oils in the finished pellets and minimizing oxygen in the foils. It’s all in the name of consistent impact in beer,” said facility manager Michael Monshing.

Galaxy continues to account for 65 percent of production, about 2.1 million pounds, almost four times Vic Secret. Because of contracted demand, growers harvested 88 percent more Ella, the third most produced variety. The Ella crop is characterized as outstanding, with oil and alpha both above the five-year average. “Brewers should expect a real depth of flavor and complexity when pairing Ella with other new world hops,” said CEO Owen Johnston.

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