* Thora
* Hop harvest estimates
* Vera hopped beers honored at GABF
* Fresh hop winners
* Alpha King winners
* Read and listen to this
Welcome to Vol. 9, No. 6. There are plenty of hop varieties out there whose names end in a, but I’m not sure if three have been put forward in the same year. But here we are: Vera, Dolcita and Thora. Getting a name may seem like the end of a journey — after all, Vera resulted from a cross made in 2011, Dolcita one in 2016, and Thora one in 2015 — but, really, this is just the beginning for all of them.
THORA
The Hop Quality Group and the USDA-ARS have revealed the name of the newest hop variety, Thora, and announced that the plant material (that doesn’t sound sexy, but you get the idea) is, like other public varieties, available “for commercial production, research purposes, and the breeding and development and commercialization of new cultivars.”
The name Thora is of Scandinavian origin, derived from the Old Norse name Þóra, which is a feminine form of Þórr, the name of the Norse god of thunder, Thor. (In its native language, Thora is pronounced Thawr-ah, with the emphasis on the first syllable.) Brewers will surely see the potential for incorporating Thora and/or its meaning in new beer names.
Thora is the first variety to emerge from the collaboration between the Hop Quality Group and the USDA public breeding program that began in 2015. The HQG provided funding, its members gave direction to John Henning and Angela Randazzo at the USDA, conducted brewing trials and otherwise participated in every part of the process that led to the release.
Backing up a bit, Henning made 38 crosses for the HQG, that is cross-pollinated females and males of interest, in 2015, producing 30,000 seeds. Those were sprouted in pots in a greenhouse in 2016. Only 600 of those proved to be disease resistant enough to planted in a field in 2017. Following another season, samples from 60 contenders that remained were sent to HQG members to rub and sniff.
