* 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
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.