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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday August 02 2016, @04:47PM   Printer-friendly
from the nerding-out-on-homebrew-recipes dept.

NPR reports that the rise of craft breweries has helped to sustain hop growers:

Hop Growers are raising a glass to craft brewers. The demand for small-batch brews has helped growers boost their revenues, expand their operations, and, in some cases, save their farms. "Without the advent of craft brewing, a few large, corporate growers would be supplying all of the hops and local, family owned farms like ours would have gone bankrupt," says Diane Gooding, vice president of operations at Gooding Farms, a hop grower in Wilder, Idaho. "It's saved the industry."

[...] The thirst for craft beer has exploded. In 2015, the Colorado-based Brewers Association reported a 12.8 percent increase in craft-beer sales (compared to 0.2 percent for beer sales overall) and estimates the market at $22.3 billion—about one-quarter of the total U.S. beer market. Craft brews use more hops than traditional lagers produced by large brewing companies, which accounts for the surge in demand. Unlike big breweries, where hops are used to give beer its bitterness, craft breweries use "aroma" varieties of hops that have less acid (and impart less bitterness); each of the different varieties add a distinct flavor to the beer.

Craft beers contain up to five times more hops than traditional beers. The result, according to Jaki Brophy, communications director for the trade association Hop Growers of America, is "a huge impact" on commercial hop growers. In 2016, there are 53,213 acres of hops growing nationwide—the most acreage ever in production and an 18.5 percent increase over 2015. Almost all of the hops production is in Washington, Oregon and Idaho but 29 states are registered to grow the crop. Although there has been significant consolidation in the industry—the number of commercial growers decreased from 378 in 1964 and 90 in 1987 to just 44 in 2015, according to Hop Growers of America—new growers are coming online all the time.


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  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Wednesday August 03 2016, @12:33PM

    by FatPhil (863) <pc-soylentNO@SPAMasdf.fi> on Wednesday August 03 2016, @12:33PM (#383574) Homepage
    You don't need modern hops for citrussy aromas and tastes. You'd almost certainly like Hallertau Mittelfruh and East Kent Goldings if used well (meaning in a way that achieves what you like in Citra). (They're 2 of the grandfathers of Citra, IIRC.)

    The only thing that modern hops have done is increase the alpha-acid yields, improve blight-resiliance, and encourage brewers to get more aroma-hop obsessive. EKG is a beautiful aroma hop if you want to use it that way. Most English brewers always stew those properties out of it, which is their (or their customers') loss.

    However, Citra used well is a beauty. I'm rediscovering Cascade love too, recently. After falling out of fashion half a decade ago or so, it's now being rediscovered by good brewers who are not interested in following fashion, and they're doing good things with it.
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