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Hops shortage hitting US craft-breweries
AFP ^ | 5-25-08 | Laura Zuckerman

Posted on 05/25/2008 2:40:34 PM PDT by kingattax

SALMON, Idaho (AFP) - Like apple pie and baseball, beer has achieved favored status in the lexicon of American traditions, with US sales of the drink outstripping purchases of liquor and wine by billions of dollars.

But an international shortage of hops -- the ingredient that adds aroma, body and bitterness -- is causing prices of the agricultural commodity to soar, industry officials say.

The origins of the hops shortage are linked to an oversupply a decade ago of the agent that provides flavors in beer that range from fruity to woody, said Paul Gatza, director of the Brewers Association.

The glut sent prices plunging and caused farmers to plant fewer acres to hops. That included hops growers in Washington, Oregon and Idaho, the states that produce the commercial supply of US hops.

At the same time, excess hops were converted to an extract to allow long-term storage and a supply that only now is being depleted despite the fact that production went below usage five years ago.

Add to that what Gatza and Washington-based hops broker Ralph Olson describe as today's global hops market, where weather and other conditions that affected hops harvests worldwide ramped up international competition.

"All the sudden last year, panic hit the street," said Olson, head of Hopunion, a leading supplier of hops to the craft brewing industry.

"It was, What do you mean you don't have hops? We want hops.' International brewers came in to buy, the supply was tight and they were prepared to pay anything."

Now hops farmers in the Pacific Northwest are scrambling to boost acreage by an estimated 8,000 acres, an increase of 26 percent. It will nevertheless take several years before the additional acreage can be harvested.

Craft breweries make up 4.0 percent of US beer production by volume, but account for 1,406 of 1,449 breweries nationwide.

But with a fivefold increase over the past year in the per-pound price for some varieties of hops, many craft brewers are poised to pass on hikes to customers at the bar and in the store.

Nick Bertram has been producing beers, ales and stouts at Bertram's Salmon Valley Brewery and Restaurant in east central Idaho for 10 years.

In April, Bertram was eyeing a dwindling supply of hops for the first time in the brewpub's history.

"I was right down and couldn't get any," he said.

The crisis was averted when Bertram was among winners of a lottery sale of hops offered by a big brewery to its struggling, small-scale counterparts. Unable to obtain certain types of hops, Bertram's is among breweries that have turned to tweaking beer recipes.

The renaissance of the American craft beer industry, which was all but dismantled during the prohibition era from 1920 to 1933, has long been associated with the laidback lifestyle of the Pacific Northwest.

That is the region that gave early approval to the small, independent and traditional breweries that meet the classic definition in the United States of a craft beer business.

Today, top craft beer markets are in Oregon, Washington state and Colorado even though the industry can now track a national presence.

Steve Hindy is founder and president of Brooklyn Brewery Corp., a regional craft brewery that can boast a ranking among America's top 40 and an amber lager that is the fourth best-selling draft beer in New York City.

Hindy marked up his products, ranging from Pilsners to ales, by 5.0 percent in February when skyrocketing hops prices hit home.

The markup had virtually no impact on Brooklyn Brewery's exports to countries like England, Denmark and Sweden because of strong European currencies like the euro and the pound.

"They didn't bat an eye, the dollar is so weak," Hindy said of sales to eateries and bars in such cities as Stockholm and Copenhagen


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: beer; theendisnigh; weredoomed
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To: singletrack
The vines will grow over, around or through ANYTHING!

My neighbor must have gotten annoyed at my hop vines growing into his yard so he planted some grape vine things - my hops now just use them as trellises.

Spent a little extra time in th hop yard today to make sure I get a good harvest.

41 posted on 05/25/2008 8:22:19 PM PDT by Last Dakotan
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To: Dr.Zoidberg

I checked out the price of gruit, or really the wild spices from which it is made. At least in small quantities it is still many times the price of the most expensive(rare) hops.

I guess an herbalist could go out in the woods and find the plants on their own...but of course this would only work for homebrew quantities.


42 posted on 05/25/2008 9:02:52 PM PDT by AnalogReigns
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To: AnalogReigns

At present, it would be much more expensive, but it does stand as an option should hops go the way of the barrel of oil.

Where there’s a will, there’s fermentation.


43 posted on 05/25/2008 9:05:39 PM PDT by Dr.Zoidberg ("Shut the hell up, New York Times, you sanctimonious whining jerks!" - Craig Ferguson)
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To: John123
And what is Obama going to do about this?

Doesn't he have the audacity of hops?

44 posted on 05/25/2008 9:09:24 PM PDT by Tex_GOP_Cruz
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To: knews_hound
Anyone else taken the plunge as a result of the rise in prices? I'm just cutting back on consumption. I drink mostly Belgian and German beers, and between rising material cost and the fall of the dollar against the Euro, these brews have become quite expensive.
45 posted on 05/26/2008 5:13:20 AM PDT by Renfield (Turning apples into venison since 1999!)
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To: kingattax

ROFL - those commercials used to rock. I always watch those old beer and cigarette commericials on YouTube.


46 posted on 05/26/2008 6:26:38 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist (Bipartisanship: Two wolves and the American people deciding what's for dinner)
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To: kingattax

I’ve got my own hops started. (Chinook and Willamette) Of course, it’ll be another year before I can brew more than a gallon of beer with homegrown hops. Until then, I’m getting a crash course in hops substitutions at the local HBS shop.


47 posted on 05/27/2008 12:04:31 AM PDT by Redcloak (The 2nd Amendment: It's not about sporting goods.)
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To: Tex_GOP_Cruz
Doesn't he have the audacity of hops?

Yes, but he's fighting against the woman who married (and stuck with) the man from Hops, Arkansas!

Seriously, the price of a good sixer is going up, but I'm damned lucky that I'm making more money than I was last year, so I can afford it.

48 posted on 05/27/2008 4:23:34 PM PDT by hunter112 (The 'straight talk express' gets the straight finger express from me.)
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To: kingattax
It will nevertheless take several years before the additional acreage can be harvested.

Want to buy some hops? Pay now, beat the price increase. Delivery in 2018.

49 posted on 05/27/2008 4:26:36 PM PDT by RightWhale (You are reading this now)
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To: GOP_Raider

Hamm’s was out of business, a Minnesota brewery bought the rights to the names of several “old school” regional beers as a marketing technique. Their advertising research found that the younger set wanted to be different (like everybody else) and really flocked to the whole “vibe” of these names.

I first heard of the hop shortage after a big warehouse of hops caught on fire, out in Washington state iirc. I have a good supply of tettnanger plugs in those mylar pouches in the freezer, I think they will keep OK for a while. I agree with what someone said about some over-hopped beers in the microbrews, it was just silly.

Without some hops though, the flavor and keeping qualities are greatly reduced.


50 posted on 05/27/2008 5:27:19 PM PDT by Freedom4US
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To: american_ranger

Where do I get hop.. hops? Seeds? Cuttings? Are they hard to grow? Do deer like to eat them or anything like that?


51 posted on 05/27/2008 5:30:14 PM PDT by Freedom4US
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To: hunter112
Yes, but he's fighting against the woman who married (and stuck with) the man from Hops, Arkansas!

Right, and don't forget, Cindy McCain's family business is a beer distributor.

52 posted on 05/27/2008 10:16:22 PM PDT by Tex_GOP_Cruz
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