Right. My old Centennial has been in the bottle for six weeks now and I've just had a bottle and I'm on the second.
So: I made my standard APA malt base coming in at OG 1060 and using recent Columbus to bitter to 40IBUs. Then used the old Centennial Hops thus: 12 litre batch. 12g -10minutes; 18g -5 minutes; 48g <80C steep for 20 minutes. I was going to do a 30g dry hop, but the beer was so pungent on racking that I decided against it.
These Centennial have travelled with me and spent at least 3 years in an uninsulated loft in Poole. They got hot and they got cold. I've had them for at least 10 years in an unopened 250g thick foil vacuum pack which was completely intact. When I opened the pack, rather than a powdery mess, I had a pungent, mass of hops with a very slight oiliness.
When I bottled the beer, the predominant tastes and smells where dank like Simcoe and a deep aroma of something that reminded me of church incense.
THE BEER.
After six weeks in the bottle, I can still taste a residue of priming sugar, but it's been cold down in sunny Brittany. The beer tastes lovely, though. The church incense thing has gone and it's like an IPA. None of the floral perfume of fresh Centennial, to be sure, but a sound beer nevertheless. Would I consider it one of my best? No. Would I think it was effing marvelous if a mate gave it to me to try and I didn't know what it was? Yes.
LESSON. It's the packaging that seems to count with hops.
I've also got a pack of WGV of same provenance.