Hops in the Olden Days

I have a hop scratch that needs to be itched after hearing about this year’s harvest and the perfect book has just been ordered from my Dads Alma Mater and nephew’s current college.

“The craft brewing renaissance of recent decades has brought a renewed interest in hops. These vigorous vines, with their flavorful flowers, have long played a key role in beer making and in Oregon’s agricultural landscape. This compendium of photographs offers a visual dive into the distinctive physical presence of hops in the state. From pickers and poles to cones and oasts, Kenneth I. Helphand brings the landscape and culture of hops to life.

For much of the first half of the twentieth century, Oregon was the leading producer of hops in the United States, with the Willamette Valley deemed “the garden spot of the world for the cultivation of hops.” The author has scoured archives across the state to gather together images of the hops landscape in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

The photographs featured in Hops portray pickers of all backgrounds through different eras of agricultural practice. Here are children, nuns, families, immigrants, and college students in fields, hop driers, and tent camps. The photos range from the candid to the highly professional, including images from Dorothea Lange’s iconic Farm Security Administration work.

The 85 high-quality photographs are accompanied by captions that provide, variously, factual background, selections from oral histories, and visual guidance. A historical essay provides a short overview of the plant’s history and the world of hop growing and picking.”

I have already pre-ordered mine.

Seminars Aplenty


In advance of LABW9, I am putting forward a suggestion to emulate Portland Beer Week when it comes to beer education. The 2017 Seminar Series (presented by Oregon State University and The HR Group) has a limited number of talks (5), they are held at various brewery locations around town and they are for both beer fans and pros. As an extra bonus, all come with beer to drink while learning.

Here are three from this year’s slate that caught my eye.

Sustainability Talks
“Learn how a few local breweries approach sustainability through community outreach, ingredient sourcing, and activities within the brewhouse. Presenters and topics include: Jack Lamb (Aslan Brewing CEO/Founder), Christian Ettinger (Hopworks Founder/Brewmaster), Ben Parsons (Baerlic Brewing co-Founder/Brewer), Renee Johnson (Fort George Sustainability Director) and moderated by Heather Sorenson (Plugged in PR.)”

Barrel-aged Beer Seminar
“This seminar features four brewers/brewmasters with potent skill in barrel-aged beer representing Sierra Nevada Brewing, Founders Brewing, Bear Republic Brewing and Breakside Brewery. The discussion will follow techniques, styles and other theories on aging beer in barrels as well as covering multiple kinds of spirit barrels from rye whiskey to vermouth. Attendees not only get a one-of-a-kind learning experience but will get to sample two or three rare, specialty barrel-aged beers from each brewer over the course of the roughly two hour seminar. Time will be allotted to ask questions and mingle with the brewers and Zoiglhaus Brewery will be open for post beers and dinner after the seminar.”

Branding for Beer
“In the increasingly competitive craft beer market, whether your opening a taproom, brewpub or hard cider, branding and design is more important than ever to stand out and define your business. The “Branding for Beer” seminar will cover everything from logo design to merchandising to label design and standing out on supermarket shelves to a brewpub or t-shirt. A panel of branding and design experts will speak on the subject, moderated by Oregon State University instructor Ryan Wheaton and including Blaine Fontana (Muralist, designer of Breakside Brewery’s new IPA, Wanderlust & Pilsner labels), Andy Morris (Creative Director who lead Stumptown Coffee’s branding and more recently Little Beast Brewing) and Dave Bourne (IGNITE Beverage Branding, responsible for Base Camp Brewing & others).”

Most seminars and panels that I have been too are tucked off to the side or corner of an already established festival and can be hard to hear due to the ubiquitous music that is played. And they usually become afterthoughts to the beer and the socializing. These are designed to be the destination and there is a nominal charge for the beer which makes it seem more important as well.

So if you will be attending PBW (which starts today, I believe), check one of these informative sessions out.

Malt this!

The science and agriculture behind beer making is fascinating. That’s why this POST on the Oregonian’s Beer Blog caught my eye.

This will really help create more local malt growing if it works and that means fresher beer with less of a footprint. Green is good.

Masters Degree in hoppiness

From the Oregonian and a Portland Business Journal article:

“A new aroma hop breeding program will be created in the College of Agricultural Sciences at Oregon State University in Corvallis.

A gift pledge of $807,000 from Indie Hops, a Portland-based hop
merchant, will support the new program, which will be led by Shaun
Townsend, a research associate and hop breeding specialist at OSU.

Indie Hops already has provided $200,000 to OSU’s Thomas Shellhammer, holder of the Nor’Wester Professorship in Fermentation Science, to foster research in new techniques for developing aroma hops and to study aroma hop chemistry. The new hop breeding program will work closely with Shellhammer’s lab to study hop essential oil composition and how individual oil components impart the characteristic flavor and aroma to beer.”
indiehopsjpg-2f1684db9ceeb906_medium

This means in a few years we might get the next Citra or Nelson hops. IPA’s will not be the same.