• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Anyone ever make "hop water"?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

NewJersey

Supporting Member
HBT Supporter
Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
1,389
Reaction score
647
Location
Boonton
I've purchased this under the hoplark and lagunitas brand names and enjoyed them. (Wife & I are doing dry March again)
I haven't brewed in a while but figured boiling water for 15 minutes and packaging directly into a keg is literally as easy as it could possibly get, right? (And then just waiting for it to carb)
How'd it come out if you tried it?
Thanks
 
I haven't done just a hop infusion but I've been messing with malt soda after drinking a swig of Propper starter wort and thinking it was delicious. I'm going to make a wort at 1.010 and steep a very small dose of hops before putting it in the keg hot. Just watch out, the glue that holds the bottom boot of a keg in place will soften at boiling temps. Don't move the keg until it's chilled down.
 
The guys at Clawhammer made some recently:


A good video on Hop Tea (made with Hops and Tea):


There are a few variations out there. I have only tried once and I went with just a little bit of extract and yeast (I had read some info about that approach giving a touch more of a beer character). It turned out nice, but maybe not as much hop character as I wanted and too much lemon character (I added some lemon juice to help lower the pH.)

After my one try with Hop Water, I started just keeping a keg of carbonated water on tap that I would flavor in the glass (not with hops). I then ran out of available taps and the water got kicked aside for beer.
 
I just boiled 2.5 gallons of water, mixed in a pound of Amber dry malt extract, added that to a keg and dropped it into some ice water. Once it got down to 70, I dropped in a bagged ounce of Motueka hops and I'm carbing it now. I like the idea of tea also, but I'm going for more of a beery soda so I really wanted some malt flavor. I'll report back tomorrow after everything settles and carbs up. I have some phosphoric acid at the ready if needed but I didn't want to add it until I tasted the acidic bite of high carbonation first.
 
I’ve made hop water a bunch of times. I stand the hops only at 165 or so for 10 minutes; no boiling, or it ends up too bitter. About 1/3 ounce per gallon of water. I add pellets loose and then filter when transferring into the keg; a good hop bag might work, too. Something to watch out for is that it’s not drinkable until a few days after making it; presumably, some of the bitter and /or astringent compounds precipitate out over that time.
 
Last time I was brewing I dropped one small hop pellet into 8 oz of hot water, maybe 160 F. Stirred and let it sit until it cooled to room temp. It was unpalatably bitter. A couple tablespoons of that added to a pint of club soda was pretty good though.
 
Last time I was brewing I dropped one small hop pellet into 8 oz of hot water, maybe 160 F. Stirred and let it sit until it cooled to room temp. It was unpalatably bitter. A couple tablespoons of that added to a pint of club soda was pretty good though.
That’s what I’m saying — you do that, but you need to let it sit a few days before you can drink it.
 
I just boiled 2.5 gallons of water, mixed in a pound of Amber dry malt extract, added that to a keg and dropped it into some ice water. Once it got down to 70, I dropped in a bagged ounce of Motueka hops and I'm carbing it now. I like the idea of tea also, but I'm going for more of a beery soda so I really wanted some malt flavor. I'll report back tomorrow after everything settles and carbs up. I have some phosphoric acid at the ready if needed but I didn't want to add it until I tasted the acidic bite of high carbonation first.

Without bringing the extract/water up to a full boil, it seems that it may stay hazy forever. One ounce of hops in 2.5 gallons, even cold steeped for a couple hours is way too intense. 1.020 is also too sweet. Adding just 10% of this into 90% seltzer is very nice. It adds just a touch of malt and hop character. I would explore this more with much less malt, probably a max of 1.003 and just steep the hops during a quick chill down.
 
I make hop water quite a bit. Most of the time I dry hop only for a couple of days. Then let it rest for a couple of days while it’s being force carbed.
My favorite thing to do is to add
Bubly extract (peach and mango) to the hop water. Besides beer, it’s the best beverage in the world. My wife doesn’t always like it hopped so about half the time I just make the Bubly water.
If you do add the extract to hop water, I cut down on the hops just a bit and only use one tiny bottle for 5 gallons ( the extract is good for 3 gallons).
 
I just tried the tea one today. 22 bags of leftover tea that we get with Chinese food. Brought 5 gallons of RO water to a boil with 2.5g CaCl2, 1g gypsum, and 3g citric acid. Turned of the heat, added the tea, and steeped for 5 minutes.
Pulled the bags and let it cool to 150 then dropped in 1oz of Idaho 7 in a hop bag. Left it until mostly cooled down and transferred to a keg.
It's in the fridge now at 30PSI.
 
I just tried the tea one today. 22 bags of leftover tea that we get with Chinese food. Brought 5 gallons of RO water to a boil with 2.5g CaCl2, 1g gypsum, and 3g citric acid. Turned of the heat, added the tea, and steeped for 5 minutes.
Pulled the bags and let it cool to 150 then dropped in 1oz of Idaho 7 in a hop bag. Left it until mostly cooled down and transferred to a keg.
It's in the fridge now at 30PSI.
What’s the pH target with the 3g citric? 4.5 like a kettle sour?
 
Just watch out, the glue that holds the bottom boot of a keg in place will soften at boiling temps. Don't move the keg until it's chilled down.
Not to hijack the thread but I wonder if this would work to re-glue loose boots and handles? I think I know what I'm trying when I get off work today.
 
I just tried the tea one today. 22 bags of leftover tea that we get with Chinese food. Brought 5 gallons of RO water to a boil with 2.5g CaCl2, 1g gypsum, and 3g citric acid. Turned of the heat, added the tea, and steeped for 5 minutes.
Pulled the bags and let it cool to 150 then dropped in 1oz of Idaho 7 in a hop bag. Left it until mostly cooled down and transferred to a keg.
It's in the fridge now at 30PSI.
My experience carbonating tea is that it tastes terrible. Some combination of tannins and carbonic bite just goes wrong. I do keg tea, but I push it with food grade N2.
 
My experience carbonating tea is that it tastes terrible. Some combination of tannins and carbonic bite just goes wrong. I do keg tea, but I push it with food grade N2.

I pulled a little sample this evening. Not completely carbed yet. Very light tea flavor, no tannic flavors... I don't think 20ish bags was nearly enough if I wanted 5 gallons of actual tea. But for this, pretty good. Some hoppiness and background tea flavor. Tasted fine, I'm curious to see how it ends up after a week or 2. It pretty much only cost an oz of hops, so very much worth the experiment.
 
Tried it again. This is pretty good. A nice change up from seltzer water.
I put a little foam when I poured and it stuck around.
Not bitter. Hoppy flavor and then some faint tea background. Not nearly up to 30psi carbed yet, but getting there.
I think next time I'm going to add a lot more gypsum. I think the drying flavor it gives to the aftertaste would go well with it.
20220307_154826.jpg
20220307_155057.jpg
 
Tried it again. This is pretty good. A nice change up from seltzer water.
I put a little foam when I poured and it stuck around.
Not bitter. Hoppy flavor and then some faint tea background. Not nearly up to 30psi carbed yet, but getting there.
I think next time I'm going to add a lot more gypsum. I think the drying flavor it gives to the aftertaste would go well with it.
View attachment 761964View attachment 761965
You're carbing to 30psi??!?
 
I've read that you should use 2 grams hops per gallon of water. Add the hops at 170f and let them steep for 10-15 minutes or so. Also I read that lemon juice should be used to drop the PH down to 4.6.

I'll be trying this in the next few days. My plans are to use tap water treated with Campden, fix the PH while the waters at room temp, bring to boil for 10 min, cool to 170F, steep 10 grams hops for 10-15 minutes, then pour into a keg using two paint strainer bags and the filter on a carboy funnel. Figure the keg could handle the warm beer and I'd put it on gas/put in the kegerator while the keg was hot and let the kegerator finish chilling. I initially worried about creating a vacuum as the keg was sealed and cooled down but then I figured keeping it on gas would keep the pressure in there to prevent a vacuum. Would that be a good idea or should I just let the hop water cool first then keg?
 
I've read that you should use 2 grams hops per gallon of water. Add the hops at 170f and let them steep for 10-15 minutes or so. Also I read that lemon juice should be used to drop the PH down to 4.6.

I'll be trying this in the next few days. My plans are to use tap water treated with Campden, fix the PH while the waters at room temp, bring to boil for 10 min, cool to 170F, steep 10 grams hops for 10-15 minutes, then pour into a keg using two paint strainer bags and the filter on a carboy funnel. Figure the keg could handle the warm beer and I'd put it on gas/put in the kegerator while the keg was hot and let the kegerator finish chilling. I initially worried about creating a vacuum as the keg was sealed and cooled down but then I figured keeping it on gas would keep the pressure in there to prevent a vacuum. Would that be a good idea or should I just let the hop water cool first then keg?

Also I have a TON of Cascade hop pellets. Would Cascade be a good single hop for hop tea? If not I have some really old Mosaic in the freezer or some Simcoe pellets that are old too but sealed up in the freezer. Outside of that I have a bit of Centennial, Cluster, noble hops (really not thinking those would work too well), Amarillo whole cone, Magnum, Columbus whole cone, and that's about it.
 
I've read that you should use 2 grams hops per gallon of water. Add the hops at 170f and let them steep for 10-15 minutes or so. Also I read that lemon juice should be used to drop the PH down to 4.6.
I use closer to 10 grams per gallon, added just like that. I'm not sure lemon juice is a good idea, as the sugar will make it more perishable. Straight lactic acid might be better.

Don't know about Cascade; you'd have to try it. I had good luck with Strata and Nelson Sauvin, so-so with Calypso, and Polaris was nasty. To generalize ... maybe super-fruit-forward hops are best?

And again, you'll need to let it sit for a couple of days to mellow before drinking it.
 
I use closer to 10 grams per gallon, added just like that. I'm not sure lemon juice is a good idea, as the sugar will make it more perishable. Straight lactic acid might be better.

Don't know about Cascade; you'd have to try it. I had good luck with Strata and Nelson Sauvin, so-so with Calypso, and Polaris was nasty. To generalize ... maybe super-fruit-forward hops are best?

And again, you'll need to let it sit for a couple of days to mellow before drinking it.

I just found a ton of mosaic in the freezer. Hoping to get this kegged up either tomorrow or Wednesday evening. Figure it’ll sit till the end of the weekend at the very least for cold conditioning/carbonation time. I have a good bit of lactic acid and have no problem using that. Lemon juice sounded interesting but if your experience is better with lactic acid I’ll go that route. Thanks for the help!
 
I use closer to 10 grams per gallon, added just like that. I'm not sure lemon juice is a good idea, as the sugar will make it more perishable. Straight lactic acid might be better.

Don't know about Cascade; you'd have to try it. I had good luck with Strata and Nelson Sauvin, so-so with Calypso, and Polaris was nasty. To generalize ... maybe super-fruit-forward hops are best?

And again, you'll need to let it sit for a couple of days to mellow before drinking it.
+1 on Nelson. Mosaic is good too though.
Also +1 on letting it rest for a couple of days. First time I made hop water, the hop bite was so strong that I thought it would be a dumper.
 
+1 on Nelson. Mosaic is good too though.
Also +1 on letting it rest for a couple of days. First time I made hop water, the hop bite was so strong that I thought it would be a dumper.

Should I use a floating dip tube or just the regular keg dip tube? I have both and am not partial to either. Thinking the floating dip tube might be better here but that’s just a hunch
 

Latest posts

Back
Top