* Let’s hear it for the OG
* Who’s using all those hops?
* In search of the newest releases
* New inside the industry podcast
* Hop profile: Mount Hood
* Additional reading
Welcome to Vol. 8, No. 11. I’ve been thinking about how many hops a brewer, commercial or amateur, really needs in their portfolio. At this point, I am not ready to turn those thoughts into a random observation or something longer, but perhaps in the next few months. If you have an opinion, drop me a line at [email protected].
A SHOUTOUT FOR BB1
Yes, I have been known to ramble on about the importance of BB1, the wild hop from Manitoba that Ernest Salmon crossed with an English male in 1918 to produce Brewer’s Gold—and then how many popular varieties can be traced back to Brewer’s Gold. And Brewing Industry Guide even let me write about it.
I offer that as an explanation for why this beer can from Russian River Brewing is one of the few I will save. Take a close look at the megaphone.
LESSONS IN ALPHA
Alex Barth, then president of John I. Haas, showed this chart at the 2015 American Hop Convention. It tracks hop usage since 1971. One hundred years ago brewers used the equivalent of 12.6 grams of alpha acids per hectoliter (26.4 gallons, or 85% of a 31-gallon barrel). That had fallen to 9.1 grams in 1971 and continued to drop regularly until it was just over 4 grams in 2011. It ticked up to 4.5 grams in 2011, climbed in the years that followed, and will be about 4.7 grams this year.