Items found matching the tag "grassy"
Summer is a luminous Australian aroma variety that offers a contemporary, fruit-forward twist on a legendary lineage. Bred in 1997 by Hop Products Australia, Summer was developed as a direct descendant of the world-renowned Saaz. The goal was to meet strict European "noble" standards—refined aroma with low bitterness—while adapting the plant to thrive in the unique terroir of the Southern Hemisphere. While it retains the low-cohumulone "DNA" of its Czech ancestors, the Australian environment has encouraged the plant to produce a significantly more vibrant oil profile. Since its release, it has become a cornerstone for brewers looking to create highly sessionable, refreshing ales and lagers. It is widely considered a "social" hop—engineered for maximum drinkability and subtle, elegant aromatics that don't overwhelm the palate.
Sunshine is a historic English aroma variety that holds a critical, if often overlooked, place in the lineage of modern hop breeding. Developed by the legendary Professor E.S. Salmon at Wye College during the 1920s and early 1930s, Sunshine was the result of a complex open-pollination process involving a Golding-class female and, crucially, wild American genetics. Sunshine is instantly recognizable in the field by its brilliant, neon-yellow leaves—a striking genetic trait it passed down to its famous offspring, Comet. While its low commercial yields kept it from becoming a 20th-century staple, it remains a prized "genetic treasure." It serves as the definitive bridge between traditional English elegance and the aggressive, citrus-forward profiles that would eventually ignite the American craft beer revolution decades later.
Teamaker is a revolutionary variety from the United States Department of Agriculture that completely flips the script on hop breeding. While most hops are judged by their bittering power, Teamaker was engineered for the exact opposite mission: high antimicrobial potency with virtually zero bitterness. Bred from a global genetic pool including Fuggle (31.25%), Late Grape, and Late Cluster, it was originally intended for the pharmaceutical and herbal tea industries. Because its alpha acids often measure below 1.0%, Teamaker is essentially "non-bittering." This unique chemical makeup has made it a "secret weapon" in the craft beer world. It allows brewers to load up on hop-derived health benefits and floral oils without moving the IBU needle. Whether you are crafting a "Hop Water" or a medicinal herbal ale, Teamaker provides the soul of the hop plant without the sting of the lupulin.
Tettnanger (US) is a distinguished aroma hop with a fascinating—and somewhat mysterious—botanical identity. While it shares a name with the legendary German Noble variety, DNA profiling has revealed that the American version is actually a Swiss landrace cultivar. It arrived in the Pacific Northwest and carved out its own niche, proving to be more genetically related to the Fuggle lineage than the Tettnanger hops of the Hallertau. Since its introduction to American soil, Tettnanger (US) has become the ultimate "bridge" hop for craft brewers. It offers the refined, spicy elegance of European tradition combined with the rugged dependability of American-grown cultivars. It is a true dual-heritage hop: cleaner and more floral than its English cousins, yet sturdier and more reliable in the field than its German namesake.