* Introducing Erebus
* Random observation: Hops and health
* Hop profile: Mistral
* Recipe: Old World’s Mantra
* Additional reading
Welcome to Vol. 8, No. 7. In the current (Nov/Dec) issue of The New Brewer, I posed the question, “Remember Delta, Sylva, Ultra, Santium, Banner or Smaragd?” The point of asking the question in a story about newly named cultivars, or ones that may earn a name, is that it is not always obvious which will endure. They are going to keep coming, and sustainability is going to continue to be more important.
“If we don’t do this, somebody will,” said Ben Smith at B&D Farms, one of five farms that are partners in West Coast Hop Breeding. “Everybody out there breeding (hops) is doing some good. We are going to solve problems.”
On the flip side, right now I’m working on a story for Brewing Industry Guide about a variety that was released more than a century ago. It was a high impact hop, and in more than one way, before anybody talked about high impact hops. More after the story is published.
HOPSTEINER NAMES A ‘BOLD DISRUPTOR’
It might be just me, but as I noted at HopQueries.com on Oct. 31, it seems appropriate that Hopsteiner chose Halloween to announce that a cultivar previous known as HS16660 will be called Erebus, the primordial deity of darkness in Greek mythology. A press release states, she “embodies the essence of its chaotic origins, serving as a bold disruptor to the world of hops.”