Items found matching the tag "american porter"
Released by the United States Department of Agriculture breeding program in 1985, Chinook is considered by the some the fourth member of the Three C's: Cascade, Centennial, and Columbus / Tomahawk / Zeus (CTZ). With no trademark, Chinook is a great candidate to grow at home.
Newport is a premier American bittering hop that stands as a modernized successor to the legendary Galena. Developed by the United States Department of Agriculture in 1994 and released commercially in 2002, Newport was engineered to provide brewers with a high-intensity "Super Alpha" variety with superior resistance to downy and powdery mildew. Its pedigree is a fascinating global map of hop genetics: a cross between Magnum and the experimental male USDA 58111M (which itself carries the DNA of Brewer's Gold, Fuggle, and Belgium #31). This lineage allows Newport to thrive in the Pacific Northwest, producing resin-saturated cones that serve as a reliable, high-yield workhorse for the most demanding brewhouses. The sensory profile of Newport is a bold and assertive arrangement of pungent earth and rugged forest resins. It leads with a primary, "woodland" bouquet of damp cedar, fresh pine, and savory herbs, followed by a sophisticated secondary layer of grapefruit zest and cracked black pepper. As the profile develops, brewers will find a pleasant balsamic "snap" and a faint hint of wine-like fruitiness that remains substantial on the palate. Thanks to its massive alpha acid content and significant oil saturation, Newport delivers a punchy, resonant bitterness and a crisp finish—making it the definitive choice for establishing a deep foundation in high-gravity styles.
While modern IPAs are defined by tropical fruit, Yakima Cluster is the hop that built the American brewing industry. A specific clonal selection (USDA 65102) of the oldest hop lineage in the United States, this variety was refined in the 1950s by the Prosser Research Center. It was engineered specifically to thrive in the sun-drenched, irrigated soils of Washington’s Yakima Valley—a terroir so specific that this hop struggles to grow in the more humid climates of Idaho or the Willamette Valley. For the brewer, Yakima Cluster is a "living artifact." It represents the missing link between the wild hops of the early American frontier and the precision of modern agriculture. It remains the "gold standard" for anyone looking to brew a truly authentic, historical American ale or lager. Similar to Early Cluster and non-distinguishable from other hops in the Cluster family, it is usually just called "Cluster".