For the past two years running I’ve written a post or two
about
Kent Green Hop Beer Fortnight . For those who haven't been paying attention,
Kent Green Hop Beer
is beer made with fresh, or
green Kentish hops, rather than using hops
that have been dried, as is more traditional in brewing. The resulting beers
have a characteristic fresh taste because the green hops used contain oils and
other aroma compounds that are normally lost when hops are dried. The brewers
make sure the hops are as fresh as possible by using them within 12 hours of
being picked.
Hops are used as the ‘seasoning’ rather the main ingredient
in beer, and impart tanginess, bitterness and aroma. When beers are brewed with
green hops, the fact the hops are fresh and un-processed means they are an unknown
quantity. This combined with the influence of the weather, and other seasonal
factors, on their growing period ensures the flavour of the resultant beer will
be different each year. As brewers are normally at pains to ensure their beers taste
the same every time, these factors add a variety and interest which would not
normally be present.
Almost every brewery in Kent
makes at least one green-hopped – some make several, and with over
20 breweries in the county that’s a large range of beers! In fact more than 30
were brewed this year, and with each brewer creating their own recipe, they
were all different as well.
In order to showcase these beers, and bring them to the
attention of the public at large, the Kent
breweries have banded together to set up
Kent Green Hop Beer Fortnight. This officially
begins at the
Canterbury Food & Drink
Festival; held this year on Friday 26th September 2014.
This is the only occasion
and location when all (or nearly all!) Kent Green Hop Beers are available in
the same place at the same time. Select pubs throughout the
county also stock
Kent Green Hop Beers throughout the two week period following
the festival, ending just before the middle of October.
Of course green-hopped beers aren’t confined to the
Garden
of England alone; brewers as far distant as
Ilkley in Yorkshire have brewed
their own versions, as have brewers in the
Thames Valley and
those based in England’s other main
hop-growing area – the counties of Herefordshire and Worcestershire. It is
therefore worth noting that the
Teme Valley Brewery, who are based at
The
Talbot at Knightwick in Worcestershire, run their own
Green Hop Beer Festival
which is of a size to rival that of the Kent one. This year’s event featured
around 35 green-hopped beers sourced mainly, but not exclusively, from local
brewers.
So do green-hopped beers taste different to more
conventional ones? The short answer is yes, but the difference is perhaps
rather more subtle than that between green tea and normal dried tea.
Green-hopped beers have a definite resinous taste which is almost certainly due
to the abundance of hop oils and other flavouring compounds. These are elements
which are either diminished, or lost altogether during the normal drying
process. Friends have commented on a distinct mouth-feel to the beer, and I
have noticed this too in the form of a slight furriness on the tongue and the
roof of my mouth. Whatever the difference, the fact that brewing with green
hops can only be done during harvest, creates a very special beer with a truly
unique flavour.
.The idea of green-hopped beers has now spread far beyond
these shores, with brewers in New Zealand
now producing their own version of these beers. A number of American brewers
also produce what is known as a
“Wet-Hopped Beer”; sometimes referred to as a
“Harvest Ale”. As far as I can tell, these are beers brewed using fresh,
un-dried hops, so to my mind, at least, they are equivalent to our green-hopped
ales.
The very first green-hopped beer, certainly in the modern
era, was surprisingly not brewed in a hop-growing area, but was instead conceived
by
Wadworth of
Devizes, in Wiltshire. The company’s
Malt & Hops was the
original, and some would say, still the best, green- hopped beer. Somewhat
surprisingly, the beer has been brewed on an annual basis for the past 22
years; the first batch having been brewed as long ago as 1992! In view of this achievement, the name of the beer has now been changed to
The Original Green Hopped Beer.
Wadworth brew this beer in their traditional old
Victorian brew-house, which particularly lends itself to the green hop brewing
process. The malt used is a pale ale malt with just a hint of crystal, and the
main hop used is Earlybird Goldings. Once brewed the beer is stored in casks
for a few days to obtain natural conditioning and can be drunk almost
immediately the yeast has settled out.
Some might dismiss the whole “green-hopped” thing as just another
publicity exercise; with a few people going even further, comparing it to the
media circus which surrounded Beaujolais Nouveau, a decade or so ago. However,
unlike the marketing of an immature and, at times, rather thin red wine, which
incidentally the French thought we were crazy to go chasing after, green-hoped
beers are all about the heritage and future of Britain’s hop-growing industry.
This isn't just about grabbing a seasonal product while you
can: English hops are in desperate need of a boost. Hop acreage has dropped
from a high of 71,189 acres in 1878 to around 2,500 now, and this decline has continued
in recent years by the increasing popularity of hops from places like America and New Zealand.
The demand for the citrus and tropical fruit flavours imparted by these hops shows no
sign of abating, and is side-lining the earthy, floral, hedgerow fruitiness of
traditional English varieties. Anything which helps reverse this trend, by
encouraging an interest in our home-grown varieties, has to be encouraged and
is surely worthy of the support of every English beer drinker.