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Cost of hops crops hits tops: Won't someone please think of the beer? |
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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 12 May 2008 |
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Over at Wired.com, a piece by David Kravets on one odd effect of the (i can't believe I'm typing this) global food shortages -- artisanal beer brewers are reformulating recipes to reduce the amount of increasingly costly hops:
At Pacific Coast Brewing here, brewer Donald
Gortemiller is reworking his recipes and altering his brewing styles like
never before.
Gortemiller isn't acting on a spurt of creativity. He's coping with a
worldwide shortage of hops -- the spice of beer. The dry cones of a
particular flowering vine, hops are what give your favorite brew its flavor
and aroma. Prices of the commodity are skyrocketing as hop supplies have
plummeted, forcing smaller brewmasters around the United States to begin
quietly tweaking their recipes, in ways that are easily discerned by serious
imbibers.
The shortage -- caused by a dwindling number of hop growers worldwide, and
exacerbated by a Yakima, Washington, warehouse fire -- has forced
Gortemiller to use fewer and different hops than before, changing the flavor
of his beer. He's also resorted to beer hacks, like "dry hopping," in which
the hops are added late to the mix, consuming fewer hops and yielding a more
consistent flavor.
"When hops were $2 a pound, compared to $20 or $30 a pound now, it didn't
matter. We'd throw them into the boil at various times," Gortemiller says.
"That was an inaccurate way of doing things. We're modifying recipes and
using about 20 percent less hops."
Link. (photo by Jim Merithew, Wired.com; thanks, Wayneco)

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