LVBen
Well-Known Member
Well, no. IBU are "International Bittering Units" and one IBU
is 1 part per million of isomerized hop oils. Typically this is
measured with a UV spectrophotometer (the stronger the
absorbance, the more oil). One part per million is equivalent
to one milligram in one liter. 100 milligrams would be somewhat
more than 5 drops, assuming 20 microliters per drop and a
density 10% less than that of water. I would expect the solubility
limit in water to be more like 1 weight percent, or 10 grams
(10,000 IBU) in one liter. I say one weight percent because
that's typically the solubility of oily solvents like toluene in
water, and the hop oils are actually more polar.
Ray
No, you are wrong about an IBU being 1 part per million of isomerized hop oils! Though, I was also wrong about the light absorption. It is actually light reflection that is used to determine IBUs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Bitterness_Units_scale#By_bitterness
In reference to the IBU scale:
"This technique was adopted at the same time as another method based on measuring the concentration (in milligrams per liter; parts per million w/v) of isomerized α acids in a beer, causing some confusion among small-scale brewers.[12] The American Society of Brewing Chemists, in the introduction to its methods on measuring bitterness, points out some differences between the results of the two methods:"
I believe that you are one of the confused homebrewers referenced in the Wikipedia entry.