Luna introduces flavour with a ‘u’

Luna hop sensoryIn a press release announcing that the experimental hop previously known at HPA-033 will be called Luna, Hop Products Australia states, “Just like our customers, our hops are big characters. When choosing a name, we like to consider both the hop’s flavour profile and its position in our portfolio. Luna seemed like the obvious choice for a hop that is distinguished by lush mango, dark berry and spicy citrus characters, alongside a high polyphenol content that elevates the flavour profile and mouthfeel.”

One more sentence from the press release to give you an idea which other varieties Luna is like to hang out with: “With an aroma intensity akin to Krush, and a biotransformation potential similar to Galaxy, Luna is a joy to experience in the whirlpool and dry hop.”

HPA suggests that a late whirlpool addition of 1-2g/L (0.4-0.7lb/bbl) accentuates spicy citrus characteristics, which can present as marmalade when interacting with darker malts. A dry hop of 4-10g/L (1.3-3.3lb/bbl) elevates the lush mango and dark berry character.

Luna is the result of a 2003 cross between a high alpha Australian male and Liberty, herself a cross made in Oregon between Hallertau Mittelfrüh and a German male. She contains 13.2-15% alpha acids, 7.5-8.2% beta acids, 1.9-2.5 mL/100 grams total oil.

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Queries 9.10: All Cascade edition

* Hop quiz
* Cascade Cup
* Cascade Agenda
* Hop quiz answer

Welcome to Volume 9, No. 10. Wonder what happened at the 2026 American Hop Convention? I filed a report for Brewing Industry Guide. One takeaway is that although acreage may or may not shrink again in 2026, hop growers are focused on ensuring a healthy future. Elsewhere, Clayton Hops in New Zealand announced that experimental hop CIP 014 now has a proper name: Rhapzody. Beyond that, as the subject line states, this is an all-Cascade edition. Regular transmissions will resume in March.

HOP QUIZ

Which one of these hops is not an offspring of Cascade?
a) Crystal
b) Taiheke
c) Mandarina Bavaria
d) Mistral

CASCADE CUP WINNERS

Ethan Smith of Smith Valley Farms in Oregon won the 2025 Cascade Cup, B&D Farms in Oregon was second, and Perrault Farms in the Yakima Valley was third. Should you have forgotten, the Hop Quality Group created the competition in 2013, and its members judge the entries.

B&D Farms has won the cup three times, and (now) finished second twice. On Aug. 8, Ben Smith, the B in B&D, posted an Instagram photo with a comment that, “This is the probably the best Cascade field I’ve ever seen, and it will be my entry into the Cascade Cup.” It wasn’t. Smith changed his choice of what to enter after brewers made post-harvest selections. “The brewers know more than I do,” he said.

The competition wrapped up a great month for one of Smith’s sons, Ethan. He rents land for Smith Valley Farms from a neighbor and from B&D, he grows Crystal for Sierra Nevada Brewing, and Citra and Cascade for John I. Haas. Before the convention, he received a gold award from Haas for the quality of his Citra.

CASCADE AGENDA

I’m not gonna lie. It makes me smile to share these texts from Robert Young III, Mr. Everything at Tapped 33 Craft Brewhouse in Augusta, Georgia. He was briefly in Colorado and at the time drinking a draft beer called Cascade Agenda at Bierstadt Lagerhaus. It wasn’t actually a collaboration with Bierstadt, but we will get to that.

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Rhapzody newest hop variety on the block

Clayton Hops in New Zealand has given the name Rhapzody to the experimental hop variety formerly known as CIP 014, bred in partnership with the New Zealand Institute for Bioeconomy Science (formerly Plant and Food Research).

Here are the basics: 13-14% alpha acids, 4.5-6% beta acids, .8-1.3 mL/100 grams total oil. Rich in 3s4mp precursors, which may add passionfruit, grapefruit and sometimes rhubarb aromas and flavors. Her ancestry includes Nugget, Smoothcone, Southern Cross, and Pacific Sunrise.

Clayton promotes her “intense tropical, passionfruit and pineapple character. Can be used both on the hot side and as dry hop in a variety of styles targeting a fruit forward hop profile.” They provide this sensory diagram:

Sensory for Rhapzody, a new hop variety from Clayton Hops in New Zealand

They suggest Rhapzody pairs well with Mosaic, Citra, Cascade, Eclipse, Nelson Sauvin, and Motueka; and that she could be used in place of Galaxy, Strata, El Dorado, or Simcoe.

Queries 9.09: Michigan news, a hop quiz & dank

* Hop quiz
* What I learned in Michigan
* Shifting acreage
* Dank outtake
* Hop quiz answer

Welcome to Volume 9, No. 9. I am just back from Michigan’s Great Beer State Conference & Trade Show and headed out tomorrow for Tucson and the American Hop Convention. First, however, I get the pleasure of typing, “Now, a word from our sponsor:”

Registration for the 2026 Best of Craft Beer Awards is now open, closing Jan. 31. Use promo code HOPQUERIES at checkout for 20% off entry fees. Competition details and registration link at bestofcraftbeerawards.com

HOP QUIZ

What do Cascade, Halltertau Mittelfrüh, US Tettnanger (really Fuggle), Willamette, and Bullion have in common? Granted, there’s more than one right answer, but I have a specific one in mind. (Answer at the bottom.)

WHAT I LEARNED IN MICHIGAN

– The Michigan Craft Beverage Council has awarded a grant to study the difference between T-90 pellets and Blue Lake Process flash frozen whole cone wet hops. The plan is to compare the aroma and chemical profiles of several cultivars grown in Michigan.

BLP flash frozen hops? I wrote about the process for Brewing Industry Guide last year. The idea began with hop farmer Jim Schlichting, who upon retiring bought 40 acres of land next to his home and began growing hops. When he discovered he could not make money with a traditional approach he began looking for an alternative, working with the Michigan State University Food Processing Innovation Center.

Basically, he freezes the hops fresh off the bines and ships them in vacuum sealed packages along with reusable ice packs. The cones should remain frozen until brew day. After thawing them, brewers may use them as they would unkilned hops, replacing each pound of pellets in a recipe with four pounds of cones. Blue Lake markets the hops to both homebrewers and commercial breweries.

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Queries 9.08: Few surprises in Hop Report; hops are still doing hop things

* US harvest report
* Worldwide production
* On the research front
* Funding future varieties
* Additional reading

Welcome to Vol. 9, No. 8. I love this paragraph in The New Brewer (more about the current issue at the end): “The hops, however, were unfazed by the economics. Nourished by abundant summer sunshine inherent to long summer days in a growing season largely absent from extreme heat events or pest pressure, the Pacific Northwest boasted a crop estimated by USDA-NASS at 82 million pounds — a crop with distinctly high oil content and exceptional aromatic quality.”

Economics are important. The Brewers Association anticipates that craft beer sales in 2025 will be down 5 percent, or maybe a bit more, when the final numbers are toted up. That’s not good for hop growers. Based on the global alpha production in 2025, a theoretical brewing potential of 2.1 billion hectoliters beer can be derived (without even dipping into existing inventory). Estimates suggest 2025 production was less than 1.9 billion hectoliters in 2024. That imbalance also is not good for hop growers.

But the paragraph at the top is a reminder hops are going to be hops; that they’ll stretch to the sky when they can and produce cones full of the compounds that help make beer beer.

US CONTINUES TO WORK OFF INVENTORY

Farmers in the Northwest reduced acreage 7% in 2025 and harvested 5% percent fewer hops, according to the USDA National Hop Report. Average yield per acre was the highest since 2011, when higher yielding hops appreciated more for their alpha made up a larger percentage of acres planted. The 2025 value of production was $447 million, up slightly from 2024, but significantly less than $662 million in 2021. That shouldn’t be a surprise, given that acreage has shrunk 31% since 2021 and production 28%.

Perhaps as important, in September the USDA reported that the inventory of hops held by growers, dealers and brewers was 116 million pounds, down 15 percent from the previous year. That’s the largest contraction in 15 years and suggests the market is getting closer to being in balance. Still, it is a significant amount, and almost 40 percent higher than it was through much of the teens.

Overall production in the Northwest states of Idaho, Oregon, and Washington came in a little higher than the August estimate because of the improved yields. Still, the 83.1 million pounds (37,723 metric tons) harvested were fewest since 2015 (78.8 million pounds). Breweries classified as craft (BA definition) produced 24.3 million barrels in 2016, when most of those hops were to be used. Estimated production in 2025 is less than 23 million barrels, and 2026 obviously is unknown.

Make of all those numbers what you will. A few more of note:

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