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Wikipedia

Hops

Hops are the flowers (also called seed cones or strobiles) of the hop plant Humulus lupulus,[1] a member of the Cannabaceae family of flowering plants.[2] They are used primarily as a bittering, flavouring, and stability agent in beer, to which, in addition to bitterness, they impart floral, fruity, or citrus flavours and aromas.[3] Hops are also used for various purposes in other beverages and herbal medicine. The hops plants have separate female and male plants, and only female plants are used for commercial production.[4] The hop plant is a vigorous, climbing, herbaceous perennial, usually trained to grow up strings in a field called a hopfield, hop garden (in the South of England), or hop yard (in the West Country and United States) when grown commercially. Many different varieties of hops are grown by farmers around the world, with different types used for particular styles of beer.

Hop flower in a hop yard in the Hallertau, Germany
Cross-section drawing of a hop
Fully grown hops bines ready for harvest on the Yakama Indian Reservation
Humulus on a house

The first documented use of hops in beer is from the 9th century, though Hildegard of Bingen, 300 years later, is often cited as the earliest documented source.[5] Before this period, brewers used a "gruit", composed of a wide variety of bitter herbs and flowers, including dandelion, burdock root, marigold, horehound (the old German name for horehound, Berghopfen, means "mountain hops"), ground ivy, and heather.[6] Early documents include mention of a hop garden in the will of Charlemagne's father, Pepin the Short.[7]

Hops are also used in brewing for their antibacterial effect over less desirable microorganisms and for purported benefits including balancing the sweetness of the malt with bitterness and a variety of flavours and aromas.[3] It is believed that traditional herb combinations for beers were abandoned after it was noticed that beers made with hops were less prone to spoilage.[8]

History edit

The first documented hop cultivation was in 736, in the Hallertau region of present-day Germany,[9] although the first mention of the use of hops in brewing in that country was 1079.[10] However, in a will of Pepin the Short, the father of Charlemagne, hop gardens were left to the Cloister of Saint-Denis in 768.[citation needed]

Not until the 13th century did hops begin to start threatening the use of gruit for flavouring. Gruit was used when the nobility levied taxes on hops. Whichever was taxed made the brewer then quickly switch to the other.[11]

In Britain, hopped beer was first imported from Holland around 1400, yet hops were condemned as late as 1519 as a "wicked and pernicious weed".[12] In 1471, Norwich, England, banned use of the plant in the brewing of ale ("beer" was the name for fermented malt liquors bittered with hops; only in recent times are the words often used as synonyms).[citation needed]

In Germany, using hops was also a religious and political choice in the early 16th century. There was no tax on hops to be paid to the Catholic church, unlike on gruit. For this reason the Protestants preferred hopped beer.[13]

Hops used in England were imported from France, Holland and Germany and were subject to import duty; it was not until 1524 that hops were first grown in the southeast of England (Kent), when they were introduced as an agricultural crop by Dutch farmers. Consequently, many words used in the hop industry derive from the Dutch language. Hops were then grown as far north as Aberdeen, near breweries for convenience of infrastructure.[14]

According to Thomas Tusser's 1557 Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry:

"The hop for his profit I thus do exalt,
It strengtheneth drink and it flavored malt;
And being well-brewed long kept it will last,
And drawing abide, if ye draw not too fast."[15]

In England there were many complaints over the quality of imported hops, the sacks of which were often contaminated by stalks, sand or straw to increase their weight. As a result, in 1603, King James I approved an Act of Parliament banning the practice by which "the Subjects of this Realm have been of late years abused &c. to the Value of £20,000 yearly, besides the Danger of their Healths".[16]

Hop cultivation was begun in the present-day United States in 1629 by English and Dutch farmers.[17] Before prohibition, cultivation was mainly centred around New York, California, Oregon, and Washington state. Problems with powdery mildew and downy mildew devastated New York's production by the 1920s, and California only produces hops on a small scale.[18]

World production edit

Hops production is concentrated in moist temperate climates, with much of the world's production occurring near the 48th parallel north. Hop plants prefer the same soils as potatoes and the leading potato-growing states in the United States are also major hops-producing areas;[19] however, not all potato-growing areas can produce good hops naturally: soils in the Maritime Provinces of Canada, for example, lack the boron that hops prefer.[19] Historically, hops were not grown in Ireland, but were imported from England. In 1752 more than 500 tons of English hops were imported through Dublin alone.[20]

Important production centres today are the Hallertau in Germany,[21] the Žatec (Saaz) in the Czech Republic, the Yakima (Washington) and Willamette (Oregon) valleys, and western Canyon County, Idaho (including the communities of Parma, Wilder, Greenleaf, and Notus).[22] The principal production centres in the UK are in Kent (which produces Kent Goldings hops), Herefordshire, and Worcestershire.[23][24] Essentially all of the harvested hops are used in beer making.[citation needed]

 
Early season hop growth in a hop yard in the Yakima River Valley of Washington with Mount Adams in the distance
Hop producing country 2020 hop output in tonnes (t)[25]
United States 47,541
Germany 46,878
China 7,044
Czech Republic 5,925
Poland 3,417
Slovenia 2,723
Australia 1,714
New Zealand 1,250
UK/England 924
Spain 908
France 767

Cultivation and harvest edit

 
A superstructure of overhead wires supports strings that in turn support bines

Although hops are grown in most of the continental United States and Canada,[26] cultivation of hops for commercial production requires a particular environment. As hops are a climbing plant, they are trained to grow up trellises made from strings or wires that support the plants and allow them significantly greater growth with the same sunlight profile. In this way, energy that would have been required to build structural cells is also freed for crop growth.[27]

The hop plant's reproduction method is that male and female flowers develop on separate plants, although occasionally a fertile individual will develop which contains both male and female flowers.[28] Because pollinated seeds are undesirable for brewing beer, only female plants are grown in hop fields, thus preventing pollination. Female plants are propagated vegetatively, and male plants are culled if plants are grown from seeds.[29]

Hop plants are planted in rows about 2 to 2.5 metres (7 to 8 ft) apart. Each spring, the roots send forth new bines that are started up strings from the ground to an overhead trellis. The cones grow high on the bine, and in the past, these cones were picked by hand. Harvesting of hops became much more efficient with the invention of the mechanical hops separator, patented by Emil Clemens Horst in 1909.[30]

Hops are harvested at the end of summer.[31] The bines are cut down, separated, and then dried in an oast house to reduce moisture content. To be dried, the hops are spread out on the upper floor of the oast house and heated by heating units on the lower floor. The dried hops are then compressed into bales by a baler.[32]

Hop cones contain different oils, such as lupulin, a yellowish, waxy substance, an oleoresin, that imparts flavour and aroma to beer.[33] Lupulin contains lupulone and humulone, which possess antibiotic properties, suppressing bacterial growth favoring brewer's yeast to grow. After lupulin has been extracted in the brewing process the papery cones are discarded.

Migrant labor and social impact edit

 
Hops harvest in the Kingdom of Bohemia (1898)
 
Hops harvest in Skåne, Sweden, in 1937

The need for massed labor at harvest time meant hop-growing had a big social impact. Around the world, the labor-intensive harvesting work involved large numbers of migrant workers who would travel for the annual hop harvest. Whole families would participate and live in hoppers' huts, with even the smallest children helping in the fields.[34][35] The final chapters of W. Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage and a large part of George Orwell's A Clergyman's Daughter contain a vivid description of London families participating in this annual hops harvest. In England, many of those picking hops in Kent were from eastern areas of London. This provided a break from urban conditions that was spent in the countryside. People also came from Birmingham and other Midlands cities to pick hops in the Malvern area of Worcestershire. Some photographs have been preserved.[36]

The often-appalling living conditions endured by hop pickers during the harvest became a matter of scandal across Kent and other hop-growing counties. Eventually, the Rev. John Young Stratton, Rector of Ditton, Kent, began to gather support for reform, resulting in 1866 in the formation of the Society for the Employment and Improved Lodging of Hop Pickers.[37] The hop-pickers were given very basic accommodation, with very poor sanitation. This led to the spread of infectious diseases and led to contaminated water. The 1897 Maidstone typhoid epidemic was partly as a result of hop-pickers camping near the Farleigh Springs which supplied Maidstone with water.[38][39]

Particularly in Kent, because of a shortage of small-denomination coin of the realm, many growers issued their own currency to those doing the labor. In some cases, the coins issued were adorned with fanciful hops images, making them quite beautiful.[40]

 
Puget Sound region, Washington, ca. 1893

In the United States, Prohibition had a serious adverse effect on hops production, but remnants of this significant industry in the western states are still noticeable in the form of old hop kilns that survive throughout Sonoma County, California, among others. Florian Dauenhauer, of Santa Rosa in Sonoma County, became a manufacturer of hop-harvesting machines in 1940, in part because of the hop industry's importance to the county. This mechanization helped destroy the local industry by enabling large-scale mechanized production, which moved to larger farms in other areas.[41] Dauenhauer Manufacturing Company remains a current producer of hop harvesting machines.[42]

Chemical composition edit

In addition to water, cellulose, and various proteins, the chemical composition of hops consists of compounds important for imparting character to beer.[3][43]

Alpha acids edit

 
Isomerization scheme of humulone

Probably the most important chemical compound within hops are the alpha acids or humulones. During wort boiling, the humulones are thermally isomerized into iso-alpha acids or isohumulones, which are responsible for the bitter taste of beer.[44]

Beta acids edit

 
Structure of lupulone (beta acid)

Hops contain beta acids or lupulones. These are desirable for their aroma contributions to beer.[45]

Essential oils edit

The main components of hops essential oils are terpene hydrocarbons consisting of myrcene, humulene and caryophyllene.[43] Myrcene is responsible for the pungent smell of fresh hops. Humulene and its oxidative reaction products may give beer its prominent hop aroma. Together, myrcene, humulene, and caryophyllene represent 80 to 90% of the total hops essential oil.[43]

Flavonoids edit

 
Chemical structure of 8-prenylnaringenin

Xanthohumol is the principal flavonoid in hops. The other well-studied prenylflavonoids are 8-Prenylnaringenin and isoxanthohumol. Xanthohumol is under basic research for its potential properties, while 8-prenylnaringenin is a potent phytoestrogen.[46][47]

Brewing edit

 
Hops sample at the Moscow Brewing Company

Hops are usually dried in an oast house before they are used in the brewing process.[48] Undried or "wet" hops are sometimes (since c. 1990) used.[49][50]

The wort (sugar-rich liquid produced from malt) is boiled with hops before it is cooled down and yeast is added, to start fermentation.

The effect of hops on the finished beer varies by type and use, though there are two main hop types: bittering and aroma.[3]

Bittering hops have higher concentrations of alpha acids, and are responsible for the large majority of the bitter flavour of a beer. European (so-called "noble") hops typically average 5–9% alpha acids by weight (AABW), and the newer American cultivars typically range from 8–19% AABW.

Aroma hops usually have a lower concentration of alpha acids (~5%) and are the primary contributors of hop aroma and (nonbitter) flavour.

Bittering hops are boiled for a longer period of time, typically 60–90 minutes, and often have inferior aromatic properties, as the aromatic compounds evaporate during the boil. The degree of bitterness imparted by hops depends on the degree to which alpha acids are isomerized during the boil, and the impact of a given amount of hops is specified in International Bitterness Units. On the other hand, unboiled hops are only mildly bitter.

Aroma hops are typically added to the wort later to prevent the evaporation of the essential oils, to impart "hop taste" (if during the final 30 minutes of boil) or "hop aroma" (if during the final 10 minutes, or less, of boil). Aroma hops are often added after the wort has cooled and while the beer ferments, a technique known as "dry hopping", which contributes to the hop aroma. Farnesene is a major component in some hops.[3] The composition of hop essential oils can differ between varieties and between years in the same variety, having a significant influence on flavour and aroma.[3]

 
Macro shot of lupulin on a hop's cone

Today, a substantial amount of "dual-use" hops are used, as well. These have high concentrations of alpha acids and good aromatic properties. These can be added to the boil at any time, depending on the desired effect.[51] Hop acids also contribute to and stabilize the foam qualities of beer.[3]

Flavours and aromas are described appreciatively using terms which include "grassy", "floral", "citrus", "spicy", "piney", "lemony", "grapefruit", and "earthy".[3][52] Many pale lagers have fairly low hop influence, while lagers marketed as Pilsener or brewed in the Czech Republic may have noticeable noble hop aroma. Certain ales (particularly the highly hopped style known as India Pale Ale, or IPA) can have high levels of hop bitterness.

Brewers may use software tools to control the bittering levels in the boil and adjust recipes to account for a change in the hop bill or seasonal variations in the crop that may lead to the need to compensate for a difference in alpha acid contribution. Data may be shared with other brewers via BeerXML allowing the reproduction of a recipe allowing for differences in hop availability.

Lately the dried pucks, extracts and pellets replace whole hops in brewing processes because of efficiency and cost.[53]

Varieties edit

Breeding programmes edit

There are many different varieties of hops used in brewing today. Historically, hops varieties were identified by geography, ie. from the towns of Hallertau, Spalt, and Tettnang in Germany,[54] or the region writ large like the Neomexicanus hops of New Mexico.[55] Others were named for the farmer who is recognized as first cultivating them, including Goldings or Fuggles from England,[56] or by their growing habit like the Oregon Cluster.[57][citation needed]

Around 1900, a number of institutions began to experiment with breeding specific hop varieties. The breeding program at Wye College in Wye, Kent, was started in 1904 and rose to prominence through the work of Prof. E. S. Salmon. Salmon released Brewer's Gold and Brewer's Favorite for commercial cultivation in 1934, and went on to release more than two dozen new cultivars before his death in 1959. Brewer's Gold has become the ancestor of the bulk of new hop releases around the world since its release.[58]

Wye College continued its breeding program and again received attention in the 1970s, when Dr. Ray A. Neve released Wye Target, Wye Challenger, Wye Northdown, Wye Saxon and Wye Yeoman. More recently, Wye College and its successor institution Wye Hops Ltd., have focused on breeding the first dwarf hop varieties, which are easier to pick by machine and far more economical to grow.[59] Wye College have also been responsible for breeding hop varieties that will grow with only 12 hours of daily light for the South African hop farmers. Wye College was closed in 2009 but the legacy of their hop breeding programs, particularly that of the dwarf varieties, is continuing as already the US private and public breeding programs are using their stock material.

Particular hop varieties are associated with beer regions and styles, for example pale lagers are usually brewed with European (often German, Polish or Czech) noble hop varieties such as Saaz, Hallertau and Strissel Spalt. British ales use hop varieties such as Fuggles, Goldings and W.G.V. North American beers often use Cascade hops, Columbus hops, Centennial hops, Willamette, Amarillo hops and about forty more varieties as the US have lately been the more significant breeders of new hop varieties, including dwarf hop varieties.

Hops from New Zealand, such as Pacific Gem, Motueka and Nelson Sauvin, are used in a "Pacific Pale Ale" style of beer with increasing production in 2014.[60][citation needed]

Noble hops edit

 
Mature hops growing in a hop yard in Germany

The term "noble hops" is a marketing term that traditionally refers to certain varieties of hops that became known for being low in bitterness and high in aroma.[61] They are the European cultivars or races Hallertau, Tettnanger, Spalt, and Saaz.[62] Some proponents assert that the English varieties Fuggle, East Kent Goldings and Goldings might qualify as "noble hops" due to the similar composition, but such terms are not applied to English varieties. Their low relative bitterness, but strong aroma, are often distinguishing characteristics of European-style lagers, such as Pilsener, Dunkel, and Oktoberfest/Märzen. In beer, they are considered aroma hops (as opposed to bittering hops);[61] see Pilsner Urquell as a classic example of the Bohemian Pilsener style, which showcases noble hops.

As with grapes, the location where hops are grown affects the hops' characteristics. Much as Dortmunder beer may within the EU be labelled "Dortmunder" only if it has been brewed in Dortmund, noble hops may officially be considered "noble" only if they were grown in the areas for which the hop varieties (races) were named.

  • Hallertau or Hallertauer – The original German lager hop; named after Hallertau or Holledau region in central Bavaria. Due to susceptibility to crop disease, it was largely replaced by Hersbrucker in the 1970s and 1980s. (Alpha acid 3.5–5.5% / beta acid 3–4%)
  • Spalt – Traditional German noble hop from the Spalter region south of Nuremberg. With a delicate, spicy aroma. (Alpha acid 4–5% / beta acid 4–5%)
  • Tettnang – Comes from Tettnang, a small town in southern Baden-Württemberg in Germany. The region produces significant quantities of hops, and ships them to breweries throughout the world. Noble German dual-use hop used in European pale lagers, sometimes with Hallertau. Soft bitterness. (Alpha acid 3.5–5.5% / beta acid 3.5–5.5%)
  • Žatec (Saaz) – Noble hop, named after Žatec town, used extensively in Bohemia to flavour pale Czech lagers such as Pilsner Urquell. Soft aroma and bitterness. (Alpha acid 3–4.5% /Beta acid 3–4.5%)

Noble hops are characterized through analysis as having an aroma quality resulting from numerous factors in the essential oil, such as an alpha:beta ratio of 1:1, low alpha-acid levels (2–5%) with a low cohumulone content, low myrcene in the hop oil, high humulene in the oil, a ratio of humulene:caryophyllene above three, and poor storability resulting in them being more prone to oxidation.[61] In reality, this means they have a relatively consistent bittering potential as they age, due to beta-acid oxidation, and a flavor that improves as they age during periods of poor storage.[61][63]

Other uses edit

 
2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol

In addition to beer, hops are used in herbal teas and in soft drinks. These soft drinks include Julmust (a carbonated beverage similar to soda that is popular in Sweden during December), Malta (a Latin American soft drink) and kvass.[citation needed] Hops can be eaten; the young shoots of the vine are edible and can be cooked like asparagus.[64][65]

Hops may be used in herbal medicine in a way similar to valerian, as a treatment for anxiety, restlessness, and insomnia.[66] A pillow filled with hops is a popular folk remedy for sleeplessness, and animal research has shown a sedative effect.[67] The relaxing effect of hops may be due, in part, to the specific degradation product from alpha acids, 2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol, as demonstrated from nighttime consumption of non-alcoholic beer.[67][68] 2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol is structurally similar to tert-amyl alcohol which was historically used as an anesthetic. Hops tend to be unstable when exposed to light or air and lose their potency after a few months' storage.[69]

Hops are of interest for hormone replacement therapy and are under basic research for potential relief of menstruation-related problems.[70]

Toxicity edit

Dermatitis sometimes results from harvesting hops. Although few cases require medical treatment, an estimated 3% of the workers suffer some type of skin lesions on the face, hands, and legs.[71] Hops are toxic to dogs.[72]

Fiction edit

Hops and hops picking form the milieu and atmosphere in the British detective novel, Death in the Hopfields (1937) by John Rhode.[73] The novel was subsequently issued in the United States under the title The Harvest Murder.[74]

See also edit

  • Gruit, an old-fashioned herb mixture used for bittering and flavouring beer, popular before the extensive use of hops
  • Humulus lupulus, the hop plant
  • Mugwort, an herb historically used as a bitter in beer production
  • Oast house, a building designed for drying hops
  • Rhamnus prinoides, a plant whose leaves are used in the Ethiopian variety of mead called tej

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  64. ^ "9 Perennial Vegetables You Can Plant Once, Harvest Forever … And Never Worry About Again". 8 March 2017. torageprepper.com. Retrieved 3 June 2017.
  65. ^ Alexi Duggins (18 May 2015). "'It's like eating a hedgerow': why do hop shoots cost €1,000 a kilo?". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 June 2017.
  66. ^ Plants for a Future: Humulus lupulus Plants for a Future. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
  67. ^ a b Franco L, Sánchez C, Bravo R, Rodriguez A, Barriga C, Juánez JC (2012). "The sedative effects of hops (Humulus lupulus), a component of beer, on the activity/rest rhythm". Acta Physiologica Hungarica. 99 (2): 133–9. doi:10.1556/APhysiol.99.2012.2.6. PMID 22849837.
  68. ^ Franco L, Sánchez C, Bravo R, Rodríguez AB, Barriga C, Romero E, Cubero J (2012). "The sedative effect of non-alcoholic beer in healthy female nurses". PLOS ONE. 7 (7): e37290. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...737290F. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0037290. PMC 3399866. PMID 22815680.
  69. ^ "How Long Do Hops Last? Do Hops Expire? (With Fridge & Freezer Chart) - Learning to Homebrew". 12 June 2020. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  70. ^ Keiler AM, Zierau O, Kretzschmar G (2013). "Hop extracts and hop substances in treatment of menopausal complaints". Planta Med. 79 (7): 576–9. doi:10.1055/s-0032-1328330. PMID 23512496.
  71. ^ "Purdue University: Center for New Crops and Plant Products. Humulus lupulus L". www.hort.purdue.edu. Hort.purdue.edu. 7 January 1998. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
  72. ^ "Animal Poison Control Center. Hops". www.aspca.org. ASPCA. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
  73. ^ Rhode, John (1937). Death in the Hop Fields (First; hardcover ed.). UK: Dodd, Mead & Company.
  74. ^ Rhode, John. The Harvest Murder. US.

External links edit

  • Plant of the Month: Hops at JSTOR Daily, June 29, 2022
  • "Hop" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.

hops, other, uses, flowers, also, called, seed, cones, strobiles, plant, humulus, lupulus, member, cannabaceae, family, flowering, plants, they, used, primarily, bittering, flavouring, stability, agent, beer, which, addition, bitterness, they, impart, floral, . For other uses see Hop Hops are the flowers also called seed cones or strobiles of the hop plant Humulus lupulus 1 a member of the Cannabaceae family of flowering plants 2 They are used primarily as a bittering flavouring and stability agent in beer to which in addition to bitterness they impart floral fruity or citrus flavours and aromas 3 Hops are also used for various purposes in other beverages and herbal medicine The hops plants have separate female and male plants and only female plants are used for commercial production 4 The hop plant is a vigorous climbing herbaceous perennial usually trained to grow up strings in a field called a hopfield hop garden in the South of England or hop yard in the West Country and United States when grown commercially Many different varieties of hops are grown by farmers around the world with different types used for particular styles of beer Hop flower in a hop yard in the Hallertau GermanyCross section drawing of a hopFully grown hops bines ready for harvest on the Yakama Indian ReservationHumulus on a houseThe first documented use of hops in beer is from the 9th century though Hildegard of Bingen 300 years later is often cited as the earliest documented source 5 Before this period brewers used a gruit composed of a wide variety of bitter herbs and flowers including dandelion burdock root marigold horehound the old German name for horehound Berghopfen means mountain hops ground ivy and heather 6 Early documents include mention of a hop garden in the will of Charlemagne s father Pepin the Short 7 Hops are also used in brewing for their antibacterial effect over less desirable microorganisms and for purported benefits including balancing the sweetness of the malt with bitterness and a variety of flavours and aromas 3 It is believed that traditional herb combinations for beers were abandoned after it was noticed that beers made with hops were less prone to spoilage 8 Contents 1 History 2 World production 2 1 Cultivation and harvest 2 2 Migrant labor and social impact 3 Chemical composition 3 1 Alpha acids 3 2 Beta acids 3 3 Essential oils 3 4 Flavonoids 4 Brewing 5 Varieties 5 1 Breeding programmes 5 2 Noble hops 6 Other uses 7 Toxicity 8 Fiction 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editThe first documented hop cultivation was in 736 in the Hallertau region of present day Germany 9 although the first mention of the use of hops in brewing in that country was 1079 10 However in a will of Pepin the Short the father of Charlemagne hop gardens were left to the Cloister of Saint Denis in 768 citation needed Not until the 13th century did hops begin to start threatening the use of gruit for flavouring Gruit was used when the nobility levied taxes on hops Whichever was taxed made the brewer then quickly switch to the other 11 In Britain hopped beer was first imported from Holland around 1400 yet hops were condemned as late as 1519 as a wicked and pernicious weed 12 In 1471 Norwich England banned use of the plant in the brewing of ale beer was the name for fermented malt liquors bittered with hops only in recent times are the words often used as synonyms citation needed In Germany using hops was also a religious and political choice in the early 16th century There was no tax on hops to be paid to the Catholic church unlike on gruit For this reason the Protestants preferred hopped beer 13 Hops used in England were imported from France Holland and Germany and were subject to import duty it was not until 1524 that hops were first grown in the southeast of England Kent when they were introduced as an agricultural crop by Dutch farmers Consequently many words used in the hop industry derive from the Dutch language Hops were then grown as far north as Aberdeen near breweries for convenience of infrastructure 14 According to Thomas Tusser s 1557 Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry The hop for his profit I thus do exalt It strengtheneth drink and it flavored malt And being well brewed long kept it will last And drawing abide if ye draw not too fast 15 In England there were many complaints over the quality of imported hops the sacks of which were often contaminated by stalks sand or straw to increase their weight As a result in 1603 King James I approved an Act of Parliament banning the practice by which the Subjects of this Realm have been of late years abused amp c to the Value of 20 000 yearly besides the Danger of their Healths 16 Hop cultivation was begun in the present day United States in 1629 by English and Dutch farmers 17 Before prohibition cultivation was mainly centred around New York California Oregon and Washington state Problems with powdery mildew and downy mildew devastated New York s production by the 1920s and California only produces hops on a small scale 18 World production editHops production is concentrated in moist temperate climates with much of the world s production occurring near the 48th parallel north Hop plants prefer the same soils as potatoes and the leading potato growing states in the United States are also major hops producing areas 19 however not all potato growing areas can produce good hops naturally soils in the Maritime Provinces of Canada for example lack the boron that hops prefer 19 Historically hops were not grown in Ireland but were imported from England In 1752 more than 500 tons of English hops were imported through Dublin alone 20 Important production centres today are the Hallertau in Germany 21 the Zatec Saaz in the Czech Republic the Yakima Washington and Willamette Oregon valleys and western Canyon County Idaho including the communities of Parma Wilder Greenleaf and Notus 22 The principal production centres in the UK are in Kent which produces Kent Goldings hops Herefordshire and Worcestershire 23 24 Essentially all of the harvested hops are used in beer making citation needed nbsp Early season hop growth in a hop yard in the Yakima River Valley of Washington with Mount Adams in the distanceHop producing country 2020 hop output in tonnes t 25 United States 47 541Germany 46 878China 7 044Czech Republic 5 925Poland 3 417Slovenia 2 723Australia 1 714New Zealand 1 250UK England 924Spain 908France 767Cultivation and harvest edit nbsp A superstructure of overhead wires supports strings that in turn support binesAlthough hops are grown in most of the continental United States and Canada 26 cultivation of hops for commercial production requires a particular environment As hops are a climbing plant they are trained to grow up trellises made from strings or wires that support the plants and allow them significantly greater growth with the same sunlight profile In this way energy that would have been required to build structural cells is also freed for crop growth 27 The hop plant s reproduction method is that male and female flowers develop on separate plants although occasionally a fertile individual will develop which contains both male and female flowers 28 Because pollinated seeds are undesirable for brewing beer only female plants are grown in hop fields thus preventing pollination Female plants are propagated vegetatively and male plants are culled if plants are grown from seeds 29 Hop plants are planted in rows about 2 to 2 5 metres 7 to 8 ft apart Each spring the roots send forth new bines that are started up strings from the ground to an overhead trellis The cones grow high on the bine and in the past these cones were picked by hand Harvesting of hops became much more efficient with the invention of the mechanical hops separator patented by Emil Clemens Horst in 1909 30 Hops are harvested at the end of summer 31 The bines are cut down separated and then dried in an oast house to reduce moisture content To be dried the hops are spread out on the upper floor of the oast house and heated by heating units on the lower floor The dried hops are then compressed into bales by a baler 32 Hop cones contain different oils such as lupulin a yellowish waxy substance an oleoresin that imparts flavour and aroma to beer 33 Lupulin contains lupulone and humulone which possess antibiotic properties suppressing bacterial growth favoring brewer s yeast to grow After lupulin has been extracted in the brewing process the papery cones are discarded Migrant labor and social impact edit nbsp Hops harvest in the Kingdom of Bohemia 1898 nbsp Hops harvest in Skane Sweden in 1937The need for massed labor at harvest time meant hop growing had a big social impact Around the world the labor intensive harvesting work involved large numbers of migrant workers who would travel for the annual hop harvest Whole families would participate and live in hoppers huts with even the smallest children helping in the fields 34 35 The final chapters of W Somerset Maugham s Of Human Bondage and a large part of George Orwell s A Clergyman s Daughter contain a vivid description of London families participating in this annual hops harvest In England many of those picking hops in Kent were from eastern areas of London This provided a break from urban conditions that was spent in the countryside People also came from Birmingham and other Midlands cities to pick hops in the Malvern area of Worcestershire Some photographs have been preserved 36 The often appalling living conditions endured by hop pickers during the harvest became a matter of scandal across Kent and other hop growing counties Eventually the Rev John Young Stratton Rector of Ditton Kent began to gather support for reform resulting in 1866 in the formation of the Society for the Employment and Improved Lodging of Hop Pickers 37 The hop pickers were given very basic accommodation with very poor sanitation This led to the spread of infectious diseases and led to contaminated water The 1897 Maidstone typhoid epidemic was partly as a result of hop pickers camping near the Farleigh Springs which supplied Maidstone with water 38 39 Particularly in Kent because of a shortage of small denomination coin of the realm many growers issued their own currency to those doing the labor In some cases the coins issued were adorned with fanciful hops images making them quite beautiful 40 nbsp Puget Sound region Washington ca 1893In the United States Prohibition had a serious adverse effect on hops production but remnants of this significant industry in the western states are still noticeable in the form of old hop kilns that survive throughout Sonoma County California among others Florian Dauenhauer of Santa Rosa in Sonoma County became a manufacturer of hop harvesting machines in 1940 in part because of the hop industry s importance to the county This mechanization helped destroy the local industry by enabling large scale mechanized production which moved to larger farms in other areas 41 Dauenhauer Manufacturing Company remains a current producer of hop harvesting machines 42 Chemical composition editIn addition to water cellulose and various proteins the chemical composition of hops consists of compounds important for imparting character to beer 3 43 Alpha acids edit nbsp Isomerization scheme of humuloneProbably the most important chemical compound within hops are the alpha acids or humulones During wort boiling the humulones are thermally isomerized into iso alpha acids or isohumulones which are responsible for the bitter taste of beer 44 Beta acids edit nbsp Structure of lupulone beta acid Hops contain beta acids or lupulones These are desirable for their aroma contributions to beer 45 Essential oils edit The main components of hops essential oils are terpene hydrocarbons consisting of myrcene humulene and caryophyllene 43 Myrcene is responsible for the pungent smell of fresh hops Humulene and its oxidative reaction products may give beer its prominent hop aroma Together myrcene humulene and caryophyllene represent 80 to 90 of the total hops essential oil 43 Flavonoids edit nbsp Chemical structure of 8 prenylnaringeninXanthohumol is the principal flavonoid in hops The other well studied prenylflavonoids are 8 Prenylnaringenin and isoxanthohumol Xanthohumol is under basic research for its potential properties while 8 prenylnaringenin is a potent phytoestrogen 46 47 Brewing editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Hops sample at the Moscow Brewing CompanyHops are usually dried in an oast house before they are used in the brewing process 48 Undried or wet hops are sometimes since c 1990 used 49 50 The wort sugar rich liquid produced from malt is boiled with hops before it is cooled down and yeast is added to start fermentation The effect of hops on the finished beer varies by type and use though there are two main hop types bittering and aroma 3 Bittering hops have higher concentrations of alpha acids and are responsible for the large majority of the bitter flavour of a beer European so called noble hops typically average 5 9 alpha acids by weight AABW and the newer American cultivars typically range from 8 19 AABW Aroma hops usually have a lower concentration of alpha acids 5 and are the primary contributors of hop aroma and nonbitter flavour Bittering hops are boiled for a longer period of time typically 60 90 minutes and often have inferior aromatic properties as the aromatic compounds evaporate during the boil The degree of bitterness imparted by hops depends on the degree to which alpha acids are isomerized during the boil and the impact of a given amount of hops is specified in International Bitterness Units On the other hand unboiled hops are only mildly bitter Aroma hops are typically added to the wort later to prevent the evaporation of the essential oils to impart hop taste if during the final 30 minutes of boil or hop aroma if during the final 10 minutes or less of boil Aroma hops are often added after the wort has cooled and while the beer ferments a technique known as dry hopping which contributes to the hop aroma Farnesene is a major component in some hops 3 The composition of hop essential oils can differ between varieties and between years in the same variety having a significant influence on flavour and aroma 3 nbsp Macro shot of lupulin on a hop s coneToday a substantial amount of dual use hops are used as well These have high concentrations of alpha acids and good aromatic properties These can be added to the boil at any time depending on the desired effect 51 Hop acids also contribute to and stabilize the foam qualities of beer 3 Flavours and aromas are described appreciatively using terms which include grassy floral citrus spicy piney lemony grapefruit and earthy 3 52 Many pale lagers have fairly low hop influence while lagers marketed as Pilsener or brewed in the Czech Republic may have noticeable noble hop aroma Certain ales particularly the highly hopped style known as India Pale Ale or IPA can have high levels of hop bitterness Brewers may use software tools to control the bittering levels in the boil and adjust recipes to account for a change in the hop bill or seasonal variations in the crop that may lead to the need to compensate for a difference in alpha acid contribution Data may be shared with other brewers via BeerXML allowing the reproduction of a recipe allowing for differences in hop availability Lately the dried pucks extracts and pellets replace whole hops in brewing processes because of efficiency and cost 53 Varieties editMain article List of hop varieties This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Breeding programmes edit There are many different varieties of hops used in brewing today Historically hops varieties were identified by geography ie from the towns of Hallertau Spalt and Tettnang in Germany 54 or the region writ large like the Neomexicanus hops of New Mexico 55 Others were named for the farmer who is recognized as first cultivating them including Goldings or Fuggles from England 56 or by their growing habit like the Oregon Cluster 57 citation needed Around 1900 a number of institutions began to experiment with breeding specific hop varieties The breeding program at Wye College in Wye Kent was started in 1904 and rose to prominence through the work of Prof E S Salmon Salmon released Brewer s Gold and Brewer s Favorite for commercial cultivation in 1934 and went on to release more than two dozen new cultivars before his death in 1959 Brewer s Gold has become the ancestor of the bulk of new hop releases around the world since its release 58 Wye College continued its breeding program and again received attention in the 1970s when Dr Ray A Neve released Wye Target Wye Challenger Wye Northdown Wye Saxon and Wye Yeoman More recently Wye College and its successor institution Wye Hops Ltd have focused on breeding the first dwarf hop varieties which are easier to pick by machine and far more economical to grow 59 Wye College have also been responsible for breeding hop varieties that will grow with only 12 hours of daily light for the South African hop farmers Wye College was closed in 2009 but the legacy of their hop breeding programs particularly that of the dwarf varieties is continuing as already the US private and public breeding programs are using their stock material Particular hop varieties are associated with beer regions and styles for example pale lagers are usually brewed with European often German Polish or Czech noble hop varieties such as Saaz Hallertau and Strissel Spalt British ales use hop varieties such as Fuggles Goldings and W G V North American beers often use Cascade hops Columbus hops Centennial hops Willamette Amarillo hops and about forty more varieties as the US have lately been the more significant breeders of new hop varieties including dwarf hop varieties Hops from New Zealand such as Pacific Gem Motueka and Nelson Sauvin are used in a Pacific Pale Ale style of beer with increasing production in 2014 60 citation needed Noble hops edit nbsp Mature hops growing in a hop yard in GermanyThe term noble hops is a marketing term that traditionally refers to certain varieties of hops that became known for being low in bitterness and high in aroma 61 They are the European cultivars or races Hallertau Tettnanger Spalt and Saaz 62 Some proponents assert that the English varieties Fuggle East Kent Goldings and Goldings might qualify as noble hops due to the similar composition but such terms are not applied to English varieties Their low relative bitterness but strong aroma are often distinguishing characteristics of European style lagers such as Pilsener Dunkel and Oktoberfest Marzen In beer they are considered aroma hops as opposed to bittering hops 61 see Pilsner Urquell as a classic example of the Bohemian Pilsener style which showcases noble hops As with grapes the location where hops are grown affects the hops characteristics Much as Dortmunder beer may within the EU be labelled Dortmunder only if it has been brewed in Dortmund noble hops may officially be considered noble only if they were grown in the areas for which the hop varieties races were named Hallertau or Hallertauer The original German lager hop named after Hallertau or Holledau region in central Bavaria Due to susceptibility to crop disease it was largely replaced by Hersbrucker in the 1970s and 1980s Alpha acid 3 5 5 5 beta acid 3 4 Spalt Traditional German noble hop from the Spalter region south of Nuremberg With a delicate spicy aroma Alpha acid 4 5 beta acid 4 5 Tettnang Comes from Tettnang a small town in southern Baden Wurttemberg in Germany The region produces significant quantities of hops and ships them to breweries throughout the world Noble German dual use hop used in European pale lagers sometimes with Hallertau Soft bitterness Alpha acid 3 5 5 5 beta acid 3 5 5 5 Zatec Saaz Noble hop named after Zatec town used extensively in Bohemia to flavour pale Czech lagers such as Pilsner Urquell Soft aroma and bitterness Alpha acid 3 4 5 Beta acid 3 4 5 Noble hops are characterized through analysis as having an aroma quality resulting from numerous factors in the essential oil such as an alpha beta ratio of 1 1 low alpha acid levels 2 5 with a low cohumulone content low myrcene in the hop oil high humulene in the oil a ratio of humulene caryophyllene above three and poor storability resulting in them being more prone to oxidation 61 In reality this means they have a relatively consistent bittering potential as they age due to beta acid oxidation and a flavor that improves as they age during periods of poor storage 61 63 Other uses edit nbsp 2 methyl 3 buten 2 olIn addition to beer hops are used in herbal teas and in soft drinks These soft drinks include Julmust a carbonated beverage similar to soda that is popular in Sweden during December Malta a Latin American soft drink and kvass citation needed Hops can be eaten the young shoots of the vine are edible and can be cooked like asparagus 64 65 Hops may be used in herbal medicine in a way similar to valerian as a treatment for anxiety restlessness and insomnia 66 A pillow filled with hops is a popular folk remedy for sleeplessness and animal research has shown a sedative effect 67 The relaxing effect of hops may be due in part to the specific degradation product from alpha acids 2 methyl 3 buten 2 ol as demonstrated from nighttime consumption of non alcoholic beer 67 68 2 methyl 3 buten 2 ol is structurally similar to tert amyl alcohol which was historically used as an anesthetic Hops tend to be unstable when exposed to light or air and lose their potency after a few months storage 69 Hops are of interest for hormone replacement therapy and are under basic research for potential relief of menstruation related problems 70 Toxicity editDermatitis sometimes results from harvesting hops Although few cases require medical treatment an estimated 3 of the workers suffer some type of skin lesions on the face hands and legs 71 Hops are toxic to dogs 72 Fiction editHops and hops picking form the milieu and atmosphere in the British detective novel Death in the Hopfields 1937 by John Rhode 73 The novel was subsequently issued in the United States under the title The Harvest Murder 74 See also edit nbsp Beer portalGruit an old fashioned herb mixture used for bittering and flavouring beer popular before the extensive use of hops Humulus lupulus the hop plant Mugwort an herb historically used as a bitter in beer production Oast house a building designed for drying hops Rhamnus prinoides a plant whose leaves are used in the Ethiopian variety of mead called tejReferences edit University of Minnesota Libraries The Transfer of Knowledge Hops Humulus lupulus Lib umn edu 13 May 2008 Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 20 May 2012 Cannabaceae Description Genera amp Species Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 16 September 2020 a b c d e f g h Schonberger C Kostelecky T 16 May 2012 125th Anniversary Review The Role of Hops in Brewing Journal of the Institute of Brewing 117 3 259 267 doi 10 1002 j 2050 0416 2011 tb00471 x Willy H Verheye ed 2010 Hops and Hop Growing Soils Plant Growth and Crop Production Volume II EOLSS Publishers p 194 ISBN 978 1 84826 368 0 Hornsey Ian S 2003 A History of Beer and Brewing Royal Society of Chemistry p 305 ISBN 9780854046300 Understanding Beer A Broad Overview of Brewing Tasting and Analyzing Beer October 12th 2006 Beer amp Brewing The Brewing Process www jongriffin com Jongriffin com Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 20 May 2012 Michael Jackson 1988 The New World World Guide to Beer Running Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 89471 884 7 F G Priest Iain Campbell 2003 Brewing microbiology Springer p 5 ISBN 978 0 306 47288 6 Ian Hornsey 31 October 2007 Brewing Royal Society of Chemistry p 58 ISBN 9781847550286 H S Corran 23 January 1975 History of Brewing David and Charles PLC p 303 ISBN 978 0715367353 Verberg Susan 2020 From Herbal to Hopped Beer The Displacement of Regional Herb Beer Traditions by Commercial Export Brewing in Medieval Europe Brewery History 183 9 23 via ResearchGate Richard W Unger 2004 Beer in the Middle Ages and Renaissance University of Pennsylvania Press p 100 Mika Rissanen The Reformation had some help from hops www academia edu Retrieved 21 September 2016 Pocock D C D 1959 England s diminished Hop acreage Geographical Association pp 14 22 Charles Knight 1832 Antiquity of Beer p 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Adam Anderson 1764 An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce Vol 1 p 461 Charles W Bamforth 1998 Beer tap into the art and science of brewing Plenum Press p 245 ISBN 978 0 306 45797 5 Knight Paul D HOPS IN BEER USA Hops Hop Growers of America Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 11 June 2015 a b Hops industry has great potential for Atlantic Canada peicanada com 12 December 2012 The London magazine 1752 page 332 Summary of Reports Nurnberg Germany 14 November 2006 International Hop Growers Convention Economic Committee NCGR Corvallis Humulus Genetic Resources www ars grin gov Ars grin gov Retrieved 20 May 2012 Norman Moss A Fancy to Worcesters Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Agricultural research Service US Department of Agriculture Herefordshire Through Time Welcome www smr herefordshire gov uk Smr herefordshire gov uk Retrieved 24 May 2012 International Hop Growers Convention Economic Commission Summary Reports PDF February 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2021 Humulus lupulus L common hop USDA Plants database Retrieved 13 September 2013 Keegstra Kenneth 1 October 2010 Plant Cell Walls Plant Physiology 154 2 483 486 doi 10 1104 pp 110 161240 ISSN 1532 2548 PMC 2949028 PMID 20921169 C C Ainsworth 15 June 1999 5 Sex Determination in Plants Sex Determination in Plants Current Topics in Developmental Biology Vol 38 Garland Science pp 167 223 doi 10 1016 s0070 2153 08 60247 1 ISBN 9780203345993 PMID 9399079 Interactive Agricultural Ecological Atlas of Russia and Neighboring Countries Economic Plants and their Diseases Pests and Weeds Humulus lupulus www agroatlas ru Agroatlas ru Archived from the original on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 20 May 2012 Innovative Hopping Equipment New Belgium s Dry Hop Dosing Skid Craft Brewing Business 22 October 2013 Retrieved 4 May 2021 The Anatomy of a Hop Craft Beer Academy 21 November 2014 Retrieved 5 June 2021 How Hops are Harvested and Used in Brewing Bale Breaker Brewing Company www balebreaker com Retrieved 5 June 2021 Andrew Sewalish Hops Anatomy and Chemistry 101 bioweb uwlax edu Retrieved 13 September 2013 Connie s Homepage Hop Picking in Kent www btinternet com Btinternet com Archived from the original on 21 July 2012 Retrieved 20 May 2012 George Orwell Hop picking www theorwellprize co uk Theorwellprize co uk 20 October 2010 Retrieved 20 May 2012 Smith Keith Around Malvern in old photographs Alan Sutton Publishing Gloucester ISBN 0 86299 587 6 Kentish Gazette 23 October 1866 Sarah Rogers The Nurses of the 1897 Maidstone Typhoid Epidemic Social Class and Training How representative were they of mid nineteenth century nursing reforms Unpublished Master of Letters dissertation Dundee March 2016 Hales I 1984 Maidstone Typhoid Epidemic Bygone Kent 5 4 217 223 The Furiners A Forgotten Story www brewtek ca Retrieved 22 July 2019 Gaye LeBaron 29 June 2008 Hops once king of county s crops helped put region on map Press Democrat Retrieved 4 September 2012 About dmfg com Retrieved 3 August 2021 a b c M Verzele 2 January 1986 100 Years of Hop Chemistry and Its Relevance to Brewing Journal of the Institute of Brewing 92 1 32 48 doi 10 1002 j 2050 0416 1986 tb04372 x ISSN 2050 0416 Denis De Keukeleire 2000 Fundamentals of beer and hop chemistry Quimica Nova 23 1 108 112 doi 10 1590 S0100 40422000000100019 ISSN 0100 4042 Ortega Heras M Gonzalez Sanjose M L 2003 BEERS Wort Production In Benjamin Caballero ed Encyclopedia of Food Sciences and Nutrition Second ed Academic Press pp 429 434 doi 10 1016 B0 12 227055 X 00087 0 ISBN 9780122270550 Stevens Jan F Page Jonathan E 1 May 2004 Xanthohumol and related prenylflavonoids from hops and beer to your good health Phytochemistry 65 10 1317 1330 Bibcode 2004PChem 65 1317S doi 10 1016 j phytochem 2004 04 025 PMID 15231405 Milligan S Kalita J Pocock V Heyerick A Cooman L De Rong H Keukeleire D De 2002 Oestrogenic activity of the hop phyto oestrogen 8 prenylnaringenin Reproduction 123 2 235 242 doi 10 1530 rep 0 1230235 PMID 11866690 James S Hough 1991 The Biotechnology of Malting and Brewing Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 39553 3 Elizabeth Aguilera 10 September 2008 Hop harvest yields hip beer for brewer Denver Post Kristin Underwood It s Harvest Time at the Sierra Nevada Brewery Archived 13 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Treehugger 6 August 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2011 John Palmer 2006 How to Brew Boulder CO Brewers Publications pp 41 44 ISBN 978 0 937381 88 5 Hough JS Briggs DE Stevens R Young TW 6 December 2012 Malting and Brewing Science Volume II Hopped Wort and Beer Springer p 867 ISBN 978 1 4615 1799 3 Jan 23 December 2022 Hops Beerwiki Retrieved 29 December 2022 The Oxford Companion to Beer Definition of German hops Craft Beer amp Brewing 6 April 2023 Retrieved 6 April 2023 Stephens Hollie 18 October 2021 The Rise of Neomexicanus Craft Beer amp Brewing Retrieved 6 April 2023 Finding Mr Fuggle The Largely Mysterious History of England s Two Greatest Hop Varieties BeerAdvocate 11 April 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2023 Brewery History 121 pp 94 112 www breweryhistory com Retrieved 2 June 2017 Capper Allison Darby Peter 24 March 2014 What makes British Hops Unique in the world of Hop Growing PDF www britishhops org uk Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2014 History of Hops British Hop Association Retrieved 19 July 2014 On Trade Preview 2014 PDF www ontrade co uk a b c d Andrew Walsh 30 November 2001 An Investigation into the Purity of Noble Hop Lineage www morebeer com More Beer In Brewing Techniques Vol 6 No 2 Retrieved 10 March 2019 Hop growers union of the Czech Republic www czhops cz Czhops cz Retrieved 20 May 2012 Hop Chemistry Homebrew Science www byo com Byo com 28 April 2000 Archived from the original on 2 February 2010 Retrieved 20 May 2012 9 Perennial Vegetables You Can Plant Once Harvest Forever And Never Worry About Again 8 March 2017 torageprepper com Retrieved 3 June 2017 Alexi Duggins 18 May 2015 It s like eating a hedgerow why do hop shoots cost 1 000 a kilo The Guardian Retrieved 3 June 2017 Plants for a Future Humulus lupulus Plants for a Future Retrieved 4 September 2012 a b Franco L Sanchez C Bravo R Rodriguez A Barriga C Juanez JC 2012 The sedative effects of hops Humulus lupulus a component of beer on the activity rest rhythm Acta Physiologica Hungarica 99 2 133 9 doi 10 1556 APhysiol 99 2012 2 6 PMID 22849837 Franco L Sanchez C Bravo R Rodriguez AB Barriga C Romero E Cubero J 2012 The sedative effect of non alcoholic beer in healthy female nurses PLOS ONE 7 7 e37290 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 737290F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0037290 PMC 3399866 PMID 22815680 How Long Do Hops Last Do Hops Expire With Fridge amp Freezer Chart Learning to Homebrew 12 June 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Keiler AM Zierau O Kretzschmar G 2013 Hop extracts and hop substances in treatment of menopausal complaints Planta Med 79 7 576 9 doi 10 1055 s 0032 1328330 PMID 23512496 Purdue University Center for New Crops and Plant Products Humulus lupulus L www hort purdue edu Hort purdue edu 7 January 1998 Retrieved 20 May 2012 Animal Poison Control Center Hops www aspca org ASPCA Retrieved 20 May 2012 Rhode John 1937 Death in the Hop Fields First hardcover ed UK Dodd Mead amp Company Rhode John The Harvest Murder US External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hops Plant of the Month Hops at JSTOR Daily June 29 2022 Hop The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hops amp oldid 1191819242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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