My wild hops from the old farm (suspect they are goldings) went berserk this year I had masses of them there were weeks of sun then the rain came & the gales, they got mildew & that was that, lost the poxy lot. Ah well theres always next year.
My wild hops from the old farm (suspect they are goldings) went berserk this year I had masses of them there were weeks of sun then the rain came & the gales, they got mildew & that was that, lost the poxy lot.
Hi there, Northern_Brewer has the answer right about "that UV causes isohumulones to convert to the lightstruck "skunked" smell/flavour."It's an interesting idea about drying hops out of UV light because they might go funny. However to balance that hop cones need a lot of sun to mature properly and if your hop plant is in a sunny position, it could well see 12 hours of sun a day even at this time of year, and even when its cloudy some UV gets through. So perhaps someone who actually knows about these things could put us straight, rather than folks speculate. Otherwise it might end up as a homebrew myth, of which there are many.
That does seem to be a reasoned approach.Hi there, Northern_Brewer has the answer right about "that UV causes isohumulones to convert to the lightstruck "skunked" smell/flavour."
Relatively few home brewers grow and dry their own hops, which may be why you haven't seen much about the UV effect, but search around and you will find chapter and verse in brewing technical information sources.
And I'm not speaking of the "crystals at midnight" type of sources.
Why it doesn't happen in sunshine on the bine is because it IS on the bine still, so the plant keeps the oils unskunked. It's alive. Take the hops off the bine and you remove the source of metabolic energy that maintains the things fresh.
That's why hops are commercially picked and immediately transported to be kiln dried out of sunlight. It is all to do with preserving those special oils and flavours we love so much!
And the same thing can happen in the bottle, which is as has been said, why beer bottles are dark. Beer is best kept in the cool and dark mostly for the hop content.
Some sunlight is tolerated, but too much and deterioration will occur.
Yours in brewing and lovely fresh hopping,
Robin.
Amazing hops!Part 2 of the hop harvest, Cascade, again off one plant. Some of the cones are massive compared to the Styrian Goldings, this is my 5th year of growing and I've never seen them this big.
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Do they have all the same characteristics of aroma and oil?
Must be the year, my local in Wye, Kent has what looks to be identical conformation and sized hops growing over the shrubs outside its rear garden entrance ( if you'll excuse the phrase ).Part 2 of the hop harvest, Cascade, again off one plant. Some of the cones are massive compared to the Styrian Goldings, this is my 5th year of growing and I've never seen them this big.
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Ended up with 275g of Challenger and 30g Calais Goldings after drying themView attachment 32261View attachment 32262
Harvested my Goldings and Challenger today. The Challenger filled my brew bucket to just over 15 litres! Not sure what that’ll weigh when dry but very pleased with that. In contrast, the Goldings produced a fraction of that
Hi all, this year will be my first brewing attempt with Fresh Green Hops.
I spotted them on my exercise bike ride along nearby country lanes growing in a hedgerow at a farm entrance.
I live in Kent, and from their heady aroma, I suspect they are Goldings. There are 1338g (wet) of them!
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